Monday, February 18, 2019

News item

I republish Monbiot article - how do you value your life against the life of your grand children??

Why older people must stand in solidarity with the youth climate strikes.
By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 15th February 2019

The Youth Strike 4 Climate gives me more hope than I have felt in 30 years of campaigning. Before this week, I believed it was all over. I thought, given the indifference and hostility of those who govern us, and the passivity of most of my generation, that climate breakdown and ecological collapse were inevitable. Now, for the first time in years, I think we can turn them around.
My generation and the generations that went before have failed you. We failed to grasp the basic premise of intergenerational justice: that you cannot apply discount rates to human life. In other words, the life of someone who has not been born will be of no less value than the life of someone who already exists. We have lived as if your lives had no importance, as if any resource we encountered was ours and ours alone to use as we wished, regardless of the impact on future generations. In doing so, we created a cannibal economy: we ate your future to satisfy our greed.
It is true that the people of my generation are not equally to blame. Broadly speaking, ours is a society of altruists governed by psychopaths. We have allowed a tiny number of phenomenally rich people, and the destructive politicians they fund, to trash our life support systems. While some carry more blame than others, our failure to challenge the oligarchs who are sacking the Earth and to overthrow their illegitimate power, is a collective failure. Together, we have bequeathed you a world that – without drastic and decisive action – may soon become uninhabitable.
Every day at home, we tell you that if you make a mess you should clear it up. We tell you that you should take responsibility for your own lives. But we have failed to apply these principles to ourselves. We walk away from the mess we have made, in the hope that you might clear it up.
Some of us did try. We sought to inspire our own generations to do what you are doing. But on the whole we were met with frowns and shrugs. For years, many people of my age denied there was a problem. They denied that climate breakdown was happening. They denied that extinction was happening. They denied that the world’s living systems were collapsing.
They denied all this because accepting it meant questioning everything they believed to be good. If the science was right, their car could not be right. If the science was right, their foreign holiday could not be right. Economic growth, rising consumption, the entire system they had been brought up to believe was right had to be wrong. It was easier to pretend that the science was wrong and their lives were right than to accept that the science was right and their lives were wrong.
A few years ago, something shifted. Instead of denying the science, I heard the same people say “OK, it’s real. But now it’s too late to do anything about it.” Between their denial and their despair, there was not one moment at which they said “It is real, so we must act.” Their despair was another form of denial; another way of persuading themselves that they could carry on as before. If there was no point in acting, they had no need to challenge their deepest beliefs. Because of the denial, the selfishness, the short-termism of my generation, this is now the last chance we have.
The disasters I feared my grandchildren would see in their old age are happening already: insect populations collapsing, mass extinction, wildfires, droughts, heat waves, floods. This is the world we have bequeathed to you. Yours is among the first of the unborn generations we failed to consider as our consumption rocketed.
But those of us who have long been engaged in this struggle will not abandon you. You have issued a challenge to which we must rise, and we will stand in solidarity with you. Though we are old and you are young, we will be led by you. We owe you that, at least.
By combining your determination and our experience, we can build a movement big enough to overthrow the life-denying system that has brought us to the brink of disaster – and beyond. Together, we must demand a different way, a life-giving system that defends the natural world on which we all depend. A system that honours you, our children, and values equally the lives of those who are not born. Together, we will build a movement that must – and will – become irresistible.
www.monbiot.com




10 comments:

  1. Follow the money, remove the money, tax the money.

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    1. Well as you know Tabor we are in the middle of Brexit. The money in the form of the rich entrepreneurs are fleeing the country at the moment for safer havens. Just announced that Honda company in Swindon is closing as well in 2022... https://news.sky.com/story/honda-to-stun-ministers-with-closure-of-swindon-factory-11641154

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  2. An excellent way to put the discussion-whose life do you value more. thanks--

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    1. Sometimes Monbiot is very pessmistic, but even he sees a ray of hope in the young. Also he is a damn good writer ;)

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  3. Much food for thought in the article Thelma. As Tabor above says - money, money, money. Why as a society have we put money in front of everything.

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    1. Did it start in the 60s? everyone just climbed on the bandwagon and off we went. Property of course is and was the first canditate, that nice little earner which has turned us into blinkered capitalists I suppose.

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  4. YES! Sometimes Monbiot just cuts through and puts it so clearly. I hope we can support the kids in this and do what we can to change the attitudes and behaviour and challenge the power of the greedy. In his book Out of the Wreckage, Monbiot points out that people do not change attitudes as a result of hearing new facts, but need a new story to believe in. He proposes a new narrative of belonging and of the commons to replace the neoliberal narrative.

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    1. He is always eloquent but words also need action of course. Love your enthusiam for change. Of course we need to be optimistic but the world order seems to be changing, especially politically. I suppose you have seen his video on wolves and yellowstone - changing the river.

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  5. We were the generation that was going to change the world. We did some amazing things, but we lived for the here and now with little thought of how it would affect tomorrow. Now we have left our grandchildren with a mess.

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  6. Correct of course, it was not done deliberately by the vast number of people, it basically just happened, this scrabble to the top. But it dragged in its wake a whole lot of bad action and greed (and thoughtlessness) which we are now paying for.

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