Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Climate Change

Why Did Climate Activists Ruin Any Chance for Real Change?

83 replies

Waitingforfriday75 · 01/11/2024 15:42

A few years ago, there was a time when climate change was front and centre – every media outlet covered it, and it felt like a real movement. Greta Thunberg made her unforgettable speech at the UN Climate Action Summit on 23 September 2019, and I genuinely thought that change was coming. But instead of focusing on what mattered, so-called “climate activists” wasted everyone’s time by blocking roads, throwing soup at paintings, and carrying on with antics that alienated everyone. Now people hate climate activists, and the entire climate emergency feels like it’s no longer on anyone’s radar.

These activists squandered the momentum we had – the world’s attention was theirs for the taking. They could have organised events to inspire positive change. Imagine if they’d held a massive climate festival across London’s Royal Parks, with vegan picnics, community pledges, workshops on sustainable living, and activities to get people actively involved. Instead, their pointless stunts only fed the media’s obsession with “disruptive activism.” Now many of them are either in jail or entirely sidelined, and people are left with the bitter aftertaste of a movement that once felt hopeful.

And here we are in 2024, amidst relentless climate catastrophes, and yet no one seems to care. Every month, another disaster hits – devastating floods in Valencia and British Columbia, hurricanes, wildfires everywhere, thousands dead from floods in Afghanistan, Pakistan, the Philippines. Yet where’s the outrage? The sense of urgency? People have become desensitised, and it’s because the movement that could have made a difference lost the plot entirely.

I’m honestly at a loss. How can we get people to change daily habits for the planet now? The interest is gone, and the once-growing support for climate action has soured. We needed a rallying call, something to draw people in positively, but instead, all we got were empty gestures and headlines that did more harm than good.

What a terrible waste of an opportunity to make real, meaningful change.

The world isn’t asking for grand sacrifices. Small shifts in everyday choices – buying less, reusing more, choosing sustainable options – could collectively turn the tide. But somehow, we’ve normalised a culture that values seasonal excess over the long-term well-being of our own children.
So, as people flood stores and scramble online for deals, it’s worth asking: What will these presents mean if the world they’re brought into is increasingly uninhabitable? It’s not about guilt-tripping anyone but waking up to the reality that without urgent action, we’re robbing our kids of a future just to fill the space under a tree this year.

OP posts:
midgetastic · 03/11/2024 11:10

We haven't made huge gains - except in carbon emissions , unfortunately we need to be shrinking them not growing slightly less quickly

The floods in Spain are heartbreaking

midgetastic · 03/11/2024 11:11

And blaming activists? Gee just another weak excuse for not changing behaviour

LameBorzoi · 03/11/2024 22:29

BrickBiscuit · 03/11/2024 10:47

LameBorzoi
DARVO is a tactic to avoid accountability for wrongdoing. The video is wrong. Optimism is what frees the fossil industry from proper scrutiny.

"We have actually made huge gains. We just need to keep building on them."
We have made small, insufficient gains. The comparative reset required to get to where we need is beyond our reach due to DARVO’s success. We should be building protection against extreme climate, but haven’t even started.

I'm not saying that what we are doing is enough.

What that video shows is that is that beating climate change is now very feasible due to advances in technology. All we need now is the political will - this is the opposite of letting Big Oil off the hook.

It's worth making noise about this, because a brighter future is now very possible. We will see climate effects, and we do need to mitigate, but it's no longer apocalyptic.

The more change we make NOW, the less disruption we will see.

BrickBiscuit · 04/11/2024 00:56

"We will see climate effects, and we do need to mitigate, but it's no longer apocalyptic."

That’s a relief to the Valencians then.

LameBorzoi · 04/11/2024 02:29

BrickBiscuit · 04/11/2024 00:56

"We will see climate effects, and we do need to mitigate, but it's no longer apocalyptic."

That’s a relief to the Valencians then.

Oh, there will be effects. But 10 years ago, it looked as if we were either going to go extinct, or civilisation would be knocked back to the stone age. We now have the means to avoid that.

Geranen · 04/11/2024 02:47

Snorlaxo · 01/11/2024 18:17

I agree with a lot of your points but not vegan picnics. A lot of vegan products are not environmentally friendly or healthy (lots of airmiles and highly processed ) My personal food philosophy is more about eating local and veggie being better than vegan tbh.

Governments can do more but they prefer short term projects because they yield results before the next election cycle and reelection is their focus.

Bullshit, sorry. You need to do more research.

WestwardHo1 · 04/11/2024 13:37

Bullshit, sorry. You need to do more research.

That’s a relief to the Valencians then.

Why are people so bloody rude? It's such a shame. If there's one issue in the world which needs people to pull together :(

BrickBiscuit · 05/11/2024 00:28

Why are people so bloody rude? It's such a shame. If there's one issue in the world which needs people to pull together :(

But that’s the trouble - head-in-the-sand optimists and business-as-usual corporates are not pulling together, they’re pulling against the solutions. Sorry if abruptly calling that out is rude.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread