Twenty Things YOU Can Do To Address the Climate Crisis!
Getting your mind around climate
change is hard. Confronting it requires us to deal with the ways that
coal, oil, and gas have shaped nearly every aspect of our world, from
our built environments to our economic systems — even our ideologies and
patterns of thought. But that doesn’t mean there aren’t concrete
actions each of us can take, right now. Here are 20 examples of things
YOU can do (some details are US-specific).
1. Reorganize the mode of production so that surplus and capital is distributed equally throughout society, and workers have decision-making power over their labor.
2. Find out about fossil fuel projects
being built or proposed in your neighborhood (most of which can be found
in the records of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission or the Environmental Protection Agency) and mobilize your community against them. Read these excellent resources on how to start organizing your community and spread them far and wide.
3. Understand that while climate change
affects us all, there are specific populations who are more vulnerable
than others — these are low-income communities, communities of color,
coastal communities and communities on the frontlines of fossil fuel
extraction. Find a frontline organization near you and offer to support
their work. Ask them what kind of help they need and take direction from
them.
4. Lay off the policeman, the commodities trader, the real estate agent and the speculator in your head.
5. Read about what the crisis could potentially look like — go HERE or HERE or HERE or HERE or HERE — and think about what this could mean for you personally, or for people and places you love.
6. After you’ve read about the crisis,
let yourself feel grief. Don’t ignore your feelings, either through
resignation or through forced optimism. Feel what you feel.
7. Talk about your feelings with your
family and friends. Talk about what matters to you, about what the
climate crisis threatens in your life. And when they are ready, talk
with them about taking action. You will learn things that you didn’t
know about your loved ones, and you will discover allies in unexpected
places.
8. Find out if your local politicians
have ties to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Call out
any politician that participates in or is a member of groups designed to
give corporations the power to write the law.
9. Become an active voice in your
community, writing letters to the editor in local papers and building an
internet presence to spread information.
10. Do not fall into the trap of feeling
contempt for your fellow human. These feelings are guaranteed to
undercut your work. If you encounter resistance, consider carefully
where that resistance comes from. Radical empathy is not only good for
the soul, it will actually make you a more effective activist.
11. Look in the mirror. Do you see
someone with job security? Someone who is in a position of privilege
within your society? Think about how you can use this privilege to
destroy the systems that created it — for instance, you may have less to
lose than others by getting arrested for nonviolent civil disobedience.
12. Stay awake — there are all kinds of
great resources for staying up-to-date about the climate crisis, and
the more you know, the better you will be able to understand this
moment.
13. Build resilience —
support spaces that are growing food, going off-the-grid, or
supplanting the capitalist state in providing for our basic human needs.
If you are able to do so, consider building these spaces yourself.
14. Don’t blame the poor — don’t blame
the worker whose industry job is the only job he could get, don’t blame
the woman who buys carbon-intensive food for her family because that’s
all that her budget and her neighborhood has to offer, don’t blame the
big family in the developing world that doesn’t have access to family
planning. The poor are not the problem. If you need to blame anyone,
blame the ruling class that controls the options available to poor
people in the US and around the world, and whose policies, consumption
habits and ideology are far, far more responsible for the crisis.
15. Again — don’t blame the poor. Seriously.
16. Walk by yourself at night under the
dark sky. Recognize that you only have one life, that you have more
power than you realize, and that there is a grace and a joy that comes
from using that power for something bigger than yourself.
17. Recognize that the climate crisis is
complicated — no one person is going to solve it by themselves, and any
“list” that suggests as much is probably lying, or at the very least
advancing an individual-based value system that sounds suspiciously like
advertising.
18. Go ahead and make changes to your
consumption habits. But also remember that no slave was ever freed by
individuals choosing to purchase products that are free from slave
labor.
19. Truly addressing the crisis will require building people power on a scale that the world has never seen before.
20. Build that power. I wish you so much more than luck.
Patrick Robbins is a writer, researcher and activist based in Brooklyn. He is currently working with Sane Energy Project toward the goal of an entirely renewable New York, and was an active member of Occupy The Pipeline from 2012 to 2014.
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