We're on a planet aflame (or as Greta Thunberg would say "Our house is on fire.") and those least able to escape, least able to build-back - are already experiencing the droughts, floods, fires and failed crops that lead to suffering, death, upheaval, war, migration. There is no justice for them and won't be unless those with the power to act decisively on climate-harming industries, actually do something. The impacts of our changing climate don't stop in the South, as we've seen with floods and fires in Europe and America, it's coming for the rest of us if we don't act now (even as I type that I realise how sick I am of reading that call for action year in year out).
Since deciding to stand as Co-Leader of the Green Party along with Martin Hemingway, my research and conversations clearly have come to increase the focus on political issues alongside the usual environmental ones. Someone questioned whether an environmental campaigner could be a politician; I wondered how long it will take till politicians, wet round the ankles or sweating in the heat, have no choice but to become environmental campaigners.
"So is focusing on the climate emergency enough - surely it's just a single issue and leaves out all the other stuff of life?"
It's not just enough, it's everything. The trashing of our life-support system threatens and impacts every life in every way:
-it's about labour and unions and how we represent, support and
train people for alternative industries, as dangerous ones are brought to an
end
-it's about international relations and co-operation in order to achieve
GLOBAL solutions together and in turn, build better relationships that will
serve us in the future
-it's about land ownership, land use, housing and
agriculture as we transition to safer more sustainable provision of homes that are
of a standard that reduces costs and minimises impact. And agricultural
solutions that improve conditions, reduce food miles and toxicity
-it's about
inclusivity – the climate crisis is happening to our shared planet and we need to
fight for the whole, not just parts of it and we need to act together, whatever else we disagree on
-it's about elections and striving
for Green Councillors who raise the issue in their Councils; ensuring the
climate crisis remains the focus around which decisions are made ie: planning
applications they choose to progress or reject need to come with a
clear answer as to the impact on nature, bio-diversity, climate, the
environment etc
-it's about healthcare as we seek to prevent the worst of
the pollution in our air that already takes too many lives and we need to value
our NHS and its staff for the incredible value they provide
-it's about social
support that takes people above the poverty line with a Universal Basic Income and
opens the way to further education, training and jobs so they don't have to work in fossilised industries of the past
-it's about
education that tells the truth of our past, our present and our potential futures
and training that is fit for the world we live in today; providing the skills
that will be needed for all the tomorrows
It's about every aspect of our
lives that are entirely intertwined with our life-support system on earth. There is no justice, no opportunity, no inclusion, no children and no anything on a planet without a life support system. We need to empathise wit each other's plight - we share it.
...
"The climate does not change within decades unless something fundamental is broken. We need to concentrate what dwindling resources we have left as a civilization, as societies, on fixing problems we have no idea how to fix yet. Anyone know how to stop flooding? Not just deal with the damage of the floods — but prevent the flood? Anyone know how to reverse a planetary tipping point?" Is This the Beginning of Runaway Global Warming? | by umair haque
Thank you Tina, I believe that you are so right that in the very near future as our food, water and air become ever more degraded we will all be forced to recognise that the single issue of climate encompasses everything.
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