Though today’s politicians show little interest in addressing the ongoing climate crisis, the impetus for progress toward a healthier planet might be more attainable than ever. Despite the failings of their predecessors, a growing number of young leaders have vowed to take action. Like other members of their generation, they have shown a willingness to make sacrifices for collective progress, including when it comes to protecting and preserving the environment.
Along with more conventional political strategies, direct action has grown more practical and pragmatic than ever. If the Black Lives Matter movement has shown evidence of anything, it’s that mass street action yields results. The majority of the country finally seems poised to address the centuries-long injustices faced by black men and women, while protests have also inspired a desire to resolve other urgent issues. Just as the plight of marginalized groups needs immediate redress, so too does the unjust treatment of the planet at large, to slow the literal storms brewing on the horizon.
Looking at the rise of lengthy droughts, mass extinctions, the melting of the poles, and “once in a generation” natural disasters that now seem to be an annual event, it can be easy to lose hope. But change could be around the corner, and it might actually come sooner rather than later.
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