Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Can humanity unite to fight climate change?

Forming bonds in times of crisis

Posted on: November 15, 2019 7:10 pm
by: David Suzuki

Reimagining and acting to create a better world can be a deeply positive experience. In the act of coming together, we can rewire the status quo so that taking care of each other becomes the priority. (Photo: David Suzuki Foundation via Flickr)
The climate and ecological crises touch each of us to varying degrees. Some carry the emotional weight of worrying about what kind of diminished, unstable world we're leaving for our children while others are directly, physically affected by climate-fuelled disasters like storms, wildfires, droughts and changing wildlife patterns.
Our responses to these crises also vary. Most people know the traditional reactions to crises: fight, flight or freeze. But as climate scientist and activist Susanne Moser says, "We keep talking about the three Fs but there is a fourth one, and that's the one that actually helped us survive. The forming of bonds, or the be-friending. That's the piece that got to us to cooperate as a species and recognize that we have greater advantage when we work together as opposed to everyone for themselves. This is biology. It is in the genetic history of our species. We are here because we cooperated. It's part of us."
Naomi Klein's book The Shock Doctrine examines how capitalism takes advantage of disasters, always ready to profit from the destabilization they create. On the flip side, a new phrase has emerged to recognize the human capacity to co-operate in the face of calamity — "disaster collectivism" — described by writer Rebecca Solnit as "the sense of immersion in the moment and solidarity with others caused by the rupture in everyday life, an emotion graver than happiness but deeply positive."
This term has emerged from the displays of compassion, altruism and creative solution-seeking that blossom when climate disaster strikes communities. News reports are full of stories about neighbours and strangers going out of their way to share food, rescue pets, locate loved ones and help rebuild what has been lost.
Acute stress may actually lead to greater cooperative, social, and friendly behavior.
Although disaster collectivism was coined in 2018 in conjunction with the dizzying increase in climate-caused calamities, the phenomenon of the potential of positive reaction to stress has been documented by scientists. A 2012 article in Scientific American, "How the Stress of Disaster Brings People Together," points to studies that found, "acute stress may actually lead to greater cooperative, social, and friendly behavior."
Margaret Klein Salamon, founder and executive director of U.S.-based The Climate Mobilization, argues that society actually needs to enter "emergency mode" in which "individuals and groups function optimally during an existential or moral crisis?—?often achieving great feats through intensely focused motivation."
The climate and ecological crises are manifest in destroyed homes and livelihoods during floods, hurricanes and tornadoes, drastic declines in wildlife populations and the disappearances of vast tracts of forests consumed by increased wildfires, but they are ultimately symptoms of the underlying crisis of our societal failure to take responsibility for our impacts on the planet so that it can continue to provide us with stable, life-supporting ecosystems. It is a crisis facing us all, that we created and to which we must respond.
Although we sometimes see our economy as an absolute, as something apart from us, it is our creation, and it can be recreated if we recognize the planetary harms it sets in motion.
The systems we've been using to structure the way we extract resources need to be rethought. Although we sometimes see our economy as an absolute, as something apart from us, it is our creation, and it can be recreated if we recognize the planetary harms it sets in motion.
Ideally, the fissures in the wall that has upheld business-as-usual operations provide an opportunity for us to come together, equipped with tools to redress, repair and rebuild. Some of the fixes will be technological, like better ways to make renewable energy sources accessible and affordable everywhere, but what is mainly needed is a new vision that sets limits to better manage the pace and reach of our historically unrestrained plundering of the planet's offerings.
Reimagining and acting to create a better world can be a deeply positive experience, as Solnit highlights. In the act of coming together, we can also rewire the status quo so that taking care of each other becomes the norm.
As Barry Lopez observes in his book, Horizon, "Our question is no longer how to exploit the natural world for human comfort and gain, but how we can cooperate with one another to ensure we will someday have a fitting, not a dominating, place in it." Change isn't easy, but when people come together for the good of humanity and Earth, we can accomplish great things.


https://davidsuzuki.org/story/forming-bonds-in-times-of-crisis/












18 comments:

  1. too little; too late!?

    U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Sunday that the world’s efforts to stop climate change have been “utterly inadequate" so far and there is a danger global warming could pass the “point of no return.”

    https://www.ktva.com/story/41390139/un-chief-warns-of-point-of-no-return-on-climate-change?utm_content=bufferf852e&utm_medium=social&utm_source=MP+facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

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  2. "Our main enemy right now is not our political opponents.
    Our main enemy now is physics...and we cannot make deals with physics. -- Greta Thunberg address before U.S. House of Representatives

    https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10157271654209934&id=13341879933

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. https://www.ktva.com/story/41437450/climate-activist-greta-thunberg-is-time-person-of-the-year?utm_content=buffercb5e0&utm_medium=social&utm_source=MP+facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

      Delete
  3. We have the common vision of a humane,inclusive,and sustainable world.

    If we all want the same thing, why is it so difficult to achieve?!

    It has never been more important for humankind to work together.

    Our survival depends upon it!

    ReplyDelete
  4. COP 25 ends without agreement(no consensus on climate action)

    World leaders refuse to agree on climate action.

    The leaders of the nations respect no sovereignty and no authority other. than their own.
    populist regimes are distrustful of multinational institutions such as IMF,Nato,UN.
    They see the subordination of their group's interests to a larger group organization as posing a threat to their sovereignty and independence.
    Ceceding from a larger group such as Britain's exit from the European Union is regressive and disintegrative.

    We are at a crossroad in human evolution where failure to unify as a species and cooperate (toward achieving the common vision of a humane,inclusive,and sustainable world) is a threat to our continued existence. Solvig climate change requires collective/multinational global action!

    What is needed is a world government that can resolve disagreements and conflicts between nation states ,and rule for the common good of all humanity.

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    Replies

    1. Nothing meaningful was achieved at this conference.
      No action plan to limit greenhouse gas emissions

      Worst polluters refuse demands of most vulnerable nations
      They want to develope/grow their economies without constraint

      if each country is only willing to act in its own national interests
      ,global problems will not be solved

      Delete
  5. https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/as-it-happens-monday-edition-1.5397734/december-16-2019-episode-transcript-1.5399544

    : Global climate talks in Madrid were supposed to wrap up on Friday. Instead, they went into the early hours of Sunday morning and still those two extra days weren't enough to arrive at a meaningful deal. As the final gavel of the UN's COP25 summit fell, the only thing everyone could agree on was the scale of the disconnect between the world's biggest polluters and the voices demanding change. Many of those voices come from civil society organizations who were attending the summit as observers. And in the final hours of the marathon gathering, some of those observers had a chance to take the mic. Adam Currie was among them. He's a youth climate organizer with Generation Zero, and was one of many young people desperate to see change come out of Madrid.

    SOUNDCLIP

    ADAM CURRIE: We are tired of governments siding with the polluters. We are tired of our lives being negotiated away for money. The people are tired of being ignored while a handful of wreckers and bullies negotiate in bad faith. We know that until we get them out of power, they will continue to sabotage our future. Our government spent two weeks focused on carbon trafficking above all else. A few of them focused on cheating while trafficking. But they all thought of convoluted schemes which are unjust and ineffective. Yet you ignore that clear and simple solutions like leaving fossil fuels in the ground. It's really not complex! We need to stop frying our planet and we need to provide support to those who are staring down the barrel of the climate crisis. The barrel of devastation.

    KG: Youth climate organizer Adam Currie speaking at the COP25 summit in Madrid, where negotiators failed to find common ground on regulating a global carbon trading market. Mr. Currie was one of many young people from around the world to attend the summit. And one of many to go home disappointed by the delegates' failure to live up to the COP25 hashtag "TimeForAction." Kera Sherwood-O'Regan is an Indigenous climate campaigner from New Zealand.

    SOUNDCLIP

    KERA SHERWOOD-O'REGAN: As Indigenous peoples, we come here every year -- often on our own dime -- to advocate for our peoples and for our lands because it is what must be done. We are constantly forced to fight for our rights to be included. Our knowledge can not be upheld if our rights are not upheld. You treat negotiations like a zero sum game where you make deals behind closed doors, trading off our rights for the profits of the very corporations who cause this problem in the first place. But you forget that we cannot negotiate with nature. When you silence us, you deny yourselves the learning from our ways and you continue to sideline those who have real solutions for all communities. We are experts on climate. We are the Kai Tahu -- the stewards of nature. We know the legitimacy of our voices. And it's about time that you recognized it too. Hear our stories, learn our histories, stop taking up space with your false solutions and get out of our way.

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    Replies
    1. we must convince our elected representatives to prioritize the health of the planet and its creatures (including those yet to be born)over short term,often harmful economic interests.

      Delete
    2. Earth's ecosystems are the unforseen beneficiaries of the Corvid-19 outbreak.


      Efforts to stop tbe spread of Corvid-19 and deal with this global health crisis are dramatically changing human behaviour in ways that unexpectedly benefit the planet's health.

      In response to public health official's prescriptions to minimize direct personal contacts and physical social interactions(social distancing/self-isolation ),people are adjusting their lifestyles and work habits in ways thst also reduce greenhouse gas emissions and their carbon footprint.
      Flight restrictions have drastically reduced air travel.
      Factory closures have reduced atmospheric pollution.
      People have stopped buying/spending/consuming nonessential goods--sending the economy into a tailspin.
      People are re-assessing their values/priorities and the importance of material/economic pursuits.
      The preservation of human health and wellbeing takes precedence over the pursuit of wealth/profit.


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    3. blindsided by mother nature : sometimes people need a bit of a nudge to change their behaviour. Corvid-19 is providing that nudge!
      No one foresaw that a virus would depopulate the planet and impose an unexpected solution to climate change and global ecological disaster

      Delete
    4. economic degrowth:

      https://www.eenews.net/stories/1062743761?fbclid=IwAR2AZ2Kw1vMsxREnSG3P3WfKtM239pW7n3zqahF2SGNzLi0TXL8RcBUWU1g


      "COVID-19 may deliver some short-term climate benefits by curbing energy use, or even longer-term benefits if economic stimulus is linked to climate goals — or if people get used to telecommuting and thus use less oil in the future," Jason Bordoff, a former climate adviser in the Obama administration and the founding director of the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, wrote in Foreign Policy last week.

      "Yet any climate benefits from the COVID-19 crisis are likely to be fleeting and negligible," he added. "Rather, the pandemic is a reminder of just how wicked a problem climate change is because it requires collective action, public understanding and buy-in, and decarbonizing the energy mix while supporting economic growth and energy use around the world."

      Delete
  6. Hottest heatwave in Australian history

    https://globalnews.ca/news/6321529/australia-roads-melt-heatwave/ bill dality

    https://globalnews.ca/news/6321529/australia-roads-melt-heatwave/?utm_source=GlobalNews&utm_medium=Facebook

    ReplyDelete
  7. Can we turn back the approaching darkness of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse - war, famine, pestilence and death.

    Ask Australians if the apocalypse hasn't already arrived!
    They. are living it!
    It is happening now!

    We are witnessing Hell on earth...and it is happening now(a present reality)!!

    ReplyDelete
  8. America burns as widespread
    record-breaking fires ravage California,Oregon,and Washington. 


    **************** 


    The personal reality of climate change: a true story


    A husband and father is at work when he hears of a wildfire approaching his neighbourhood.

     He rushes home to help his wife 

     son evacuate. 

    As he nears his neighbourhood he sees that the fire has already swept through and houses are in flame.

     As he turns onto his street he stops abruptly at the sight of a woman lieing in the street. 

    She is badly burned. 

    He tells her he will take her to the hospital...but first he must go on to find his wife. 

    With her dieing breath she whispers ,
    "I am your wife!" 


    Later he finds out that his son was foiund in a burned out vehicle where he had sought refuge and huddled together with his dog until they were both incinerated!


     ****************


    This is just one example of the terrible cost of climate change.

    But even those not directly impacted by the fires have been affected by the smoke and poor air quality blanketing much of
    Ca nada and the US.
    Not only is people's physical health impaired by the bad air , but also their psychological wellbeing



    ReplyDelete
  9. "World on Fire"
    https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/longform/world-on-fire-a-new-cbc-edmonton-podcast

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  10. Dead animals everywhere for a thousand square miles as out- of- control ffires ravage one of the planet,'s most diverse ecosystems

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/brazil-fires-threaten-pantanal-1.5728682?__vfz=medium%3Dsharebar
    A huge wetland is burning in Brazil, and the fires are …
    https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/brazil-fires-threaten-pantanal …
    The world's largest tropical wetland is not supposed to burn. And yet, Brazil's Pantanal is on fire. Some 25,000 square kilometres have already been destroyed, and experts say it's going to get worse.

    Brazil's Pantanal wetlands on fire - in pictures ...
    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2020/sep/…
    2020-09-17 · Brazil's Pantanal wetlands on fire - in pictures Forest fires burn in Poconé in the state of Mato Grosso.

    ReplyDelete

  11. The idea of "the common good"!

    https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-23-ideas/clip/15836298-common-good-or-what-if-this-gets-bigger

    ReplyDelete
  12. Global problems require that we work together as a team. It is in every nation's self-interest to work together to solve global warming. Toward this end we must strengthen the role of the UN so that humanity can fulfill its. collective responsibility to safeguard the health of the planet for future life.

    ReplyDelete