Radical Ideas for Combatting Climate Change – #2: A Year for the Earth

One approach to combatting climate change that would produce great results in a short time and leave an indelible impact in the public’s consciousness would be a sabbatical year for the Earth.  During this year, a massive labor force would be trained and engaged in building the nation’s new energy grid using all renewable energy.  For this labor force, and for the public who followed their efforts, this year would be like no other—it would form a break from the tedious routines that blur one year with the next, and would be a year that they would recall with pride in years to come, a year that cemented their place in history alongside the Greatest Generation as they worked to save the planet.  This labor force would come from two sources: members of the military who could be spared for the work, and all students of a certain age.

It is widely known that the United States spends more on defense than the next seven countries combined (in other years it has been more than the next ten or twelve).  Much of that money goes toward employing a bloated armed service, many of whom are stationed abroad in peaceful countries.  Many billions of dollars are also spent each year on expensive military equipment, much of which is unnecessary, and even at times startlingly inefficient (like the F-35 Join Strike Fighter).  Imagine what could be accomplished if this budget were to be maintained for this sabbatical year, but redirected towards a national green grid. 

The Army Corps of Engineers, a natural fit for this undertaking, would be requisitioned for it, and the members of the other armed services who can be spared from their duties for a year would work alongside them.  Engineers from each branch should be given leadership and planning roles so that the entire project is not dominated by the Army Corps of Engineers or any other single group.  Members with or without technical expertise can be trained according their capacity and given meaningful work to do in the year building the grid.

The money typically spent on multi-billion-dollar warships, aircraft, and ordnance would be used instead to purchase or manufacture the materials needed for a new green infrastructure.  The military may wish to create its own solar panel production facilities and the like, or if we insist on maintaining the current military-industrial complex with its handful of behemoth defense corporations who run billion-dollar industries manufacturing modern tools of destruction, the money can be given to those companies to produce these green energy technologies instead, with the additional hope that when the year is complete, these companies will continue to manufacture renewable energy tech in America rather than reverting 100% to military production.  There is also the preferable option of giving the money that would usually go to defense manufacturers to emerging American green technology companies, instead, helping to boost a more humane business sector and put our green tech companies into a position to produce large quantities of needed materials in future years.

The nation’s intelligence chiefs have long concluded, and have warned the administration many times, that climate change is a serious security threat, and one that needs to be addressed.  The most effective and just way the nation can begin to grapple with this security threat is by controlling our own emissions here at home.  A year of building our grid to help eliminate our reliance on climate-destabilizing fossil fuels is clearly within the mandate of defense.  Since 2001, we have spent nearly two decades fighting costly wars fighting Islamic terrorism, while doing little to mitigate the threat that has been at least partially responsible for Hurricanes Sandy, Harvey, and Maria, along with the rampant wildfires in California and the flooding that has shaken the Midwest and destroyed miles of crops along the Missouri River.  As the intelligence chiefs have demonstrated, the unchecked threat of climate change will continue to bring natural disasters of increased ferocity and destructive capacity, and the destabilization unleashed by droughts, sea level rise, and other disasters elsewhere will create waves of millions of refugees and eventually generate wars over increasingly scarce resources.  The sensible policy is to act now and act urgently.  A temporary reapplication of the military would go a long way.  In addition to building a new energy grid powered by renewable sources, much could be done to construct physical defenses against floods and sea-level rise.

The other untapped pool of resources for this project is the nation’s millions of students, all of whom will be affected by climate change in their future.  (Some of them are certainly being affected by it already, particularly if they live in areas hit by flooding or wildfires.)  Many among them are already starting to feel the specter of climate change coming between them and their futures.  The aptly named Extinction Rebellion captures the angst and foreboding of the younger generations as they watch the world unraveling before their eyes while their governments do little to address the crisis.  Their involvement in the year-long sabbatical for the Earth would make a tremendous impact in creating a green energy grid for the country, and would make them an active part in a better future that holds more promise for them.

During this sabbatical year, high school students (and possibly university students) would not go through a regular year of schooling, but would instead be involved in working directly to build the grids.  Students would continue to receive an education as they worked, and they would gain valuable real-world, hands-on experience, with much of their education taking place outdoors for the year.  Teachers would incorporate mathematics and engineering into the projects students worked on, and environmental science and engineering would be taught for the year.  History classes would include a history of environmental policy in the United States and elsewhere, teaching students how we have arrived at the critical situation we are now in, while English classes would include hallmarks of American environmental and civic writing like Thoreau’s Walden and “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience,” and would include opportunities for students to write to newspapers, legislators, and publish their own blogs.

There are precedents for both this massive mobilization and the incorporation of student work into the country’s efforts at saving itself.  In World War II, the economy was mobilized nearly overnight to produce war materials for the US’s efforts in Europe and the Pacific.  Whole industries were created and many women joined the labor force, while students helped in their own ways at school through donation drives and resource conservation initiatives.  The successful concerted effort the nation made in a time of war shows that we can do the same to combat an even greater threat, a dangerously destabilized planet.

In Japan, during World War II, students worked on a number of labor projects instead of continuing their normal path of education.  Students in Hiroshima were out trying to create firebreakswhen the atomic bomb was dropped.

In Nigeria, the Igbo population traditionally incorporated themselves into three-year “age groups,” where people between the ages of, say, 12-14, 15-18, and 19-21 were each treated as a group that performed vital community functions.  The group of 15-18 year olds might be assigned to, say, clear a path for a road, while an older group might have been in charge of organizing a community festival.  Each three-year age group within a village was a cohesive unit and would be given a project to work on together, so that vital work got done and everyone was able to contribute to the well-being of the village.

My own grandfather grew up on a farm in Maine, where he was exposed early to hard work and creative problem solving.  He then went to school with the Christian Brothers, where he and his fellow students actually helped to build the school they would learn in.  My grandfather, who was trusted by the school staff due to his extensive experience on the farm, was given control of land-leveling machinery, and even dynamite, and led his classmates in creating a baseball field, among other projects.  Students in suburban and urban America tend to be sheltered and kept away from outdoor work, heavy machinery, and real-world independent projects, but all that is required is the opportunity to engage in meaningful work for these habits to be reversed.  Just because they have not done anything like this yet, does not mean they are not capable of doing it.  Looking at the experiences of young people in other times and places shows that they are up to the challenge, and will thrive under it.

Rather than “losing” a year of school, these students will live what might be the most memorable and meaningful year of their young lives, in which they play a vital role in preserving their own future and the planet we all live on.  They will gain valuable skills, an appreciation of the crisis they face and the roles they can play in solving it, and a greatly expanded worldview.  The real-world, hands-on experience they will receive will only benefit them in the future when it comes time for college.  Imagine all that they will be able to put on their resumes.              

It will be said that these ideas are “impractical,” or politically unpopular.  But where have our practicality and our political popularity gotten us?  We have brought our planet to the brink of utter catastrophe by choosing to focus on business and maintain our quietly destructive routine, which we are now afraid to break.  An article in New York Magazine, David Wallace-Wells’s “The Cautious Case for Climate Optimism,” contained suggestions for a number of possible “long-shot” technological solutions to avert the worst possible effects of climate change. One of these “solutions” was to deliberately release prodigious quantities of sulfur into the atmosphere, clouding the entire earth, changing the color of the sky, and blocking much of the sun’s rays in order to prevent future warming.  The long-term effects of such a move, of course, are unknown, and could potentially result in extinction events to rival climate change itself.  Why are we more willing to engage in geoengineering, tampering with the laws of nature, which we have not written and will never fully comprehend, rather than social engineering, revising the laws made by man for the benefit of man, our ephemeral, intangible creations whose generation is recent and whose duration is uncertain?  Why do we feel as if it is the Earth that must change—and it is indeed changing for the worse right now, under our direction—rather than us?

Radical Ideas for Combatting Climate Change – #1: Long-Term Student Strike

Climate change is a global crisis that requires a mix of national and international solutions.  All nations need to be in agreement on the issue and committed to doing the most they can, but the specific plans for decarbonization and moving towards a sustainable economy are to be made at the national level, with each nation deciding how it can use its renewable resources to lessen and soon eliminate dependence on fossil fuels, how infrastructure can be redesigned to support a green grid, what policy changes will accomplish their climate goals, and how they can incentivize their citizens to reduce their impact on the environment. 

It is no secret that many nations are nowhere near making the changes that are necessary for the world to hold global warming to 1.5° Celsius over pre-industrial levels. 

Dirty industries are resisting the transition to clean energy, and, at least in the US, are buying politicians to take their side against the planet’s and to smear efforts to move the country in a seriously sustainable direction.  Other politicians are concerned about political liabilities, and want to avoid radical change that may upset certain constituents.  Trump and the Republicans have committed themselves to an all-out assault on the Green New Deal and have yet to come out with a reasonable alternative that would at least meet the goals of the Paris Agreement (which Trump has vowed to pull us out of, anyway).  The “Green Real Deal” proposed by Republican Congressman Matt Gaetz seems to offer little other than deregulation and an opening up of federal lands for “renewable energy experiments” that is likely just going to open them up to fossil fuel interests, as Trump has been doing in a number of recent environmental rollbacks.  A number of states are moving forward on plans that will accelerate their transition to clean energy, but in many cases, like that of New Jersey, their energy plans for the future do not seem likely to succeed in making the rapid, drastic reduction in emissions that is required.

For many of these politicians, business continues as usual, and climate change (if they even believe in it) is something to be handled a little bit at a time, with more attention being devoted to issues that somehow seem more pressing.  The most effective means of getting their attention and forcing them to deal immediately with the climate crisis is a nationwide strike.  These strikes need to be national in their goals, as policy change can only really be affected within one’s country—the citizens of Senegal can’t change US policy, or vice versa—but must be carried out within countries all over the world, with strike leaders sharing goals and ideas across borders.

We are already seeing symbolic strikes from students around the world. These tend to be symbolic, one-day strikes, or in Greta Thunberg’s case, a one-day-a-week strike.  These have captured some media attention but have not yet compelled national or international change.  What students need to do—and this is a big ask—is to initiate a massive, unending, national strike, refusing to go to school until their demands are met.  High school students seem the best suited for this, figuring that college tuition is so expensive these days that university students are not going to pay to not go to classes, and that students of middle school age and lower are too young (but if middle school students want to join in, by all means, they would be welcome).

Why students?  For a number of reasons.

  1. They are already in the vanguard on this.  We aren’t seeing many symbolic strikes from adults, only the youth.  They are the mostly likely, then, to be willing to engage in a prolonged strike.
  2. Youth strikes have a strong historical precedent.  Walkouts, strikes, and sit-ins were common in American universities in the 60s and 70s as students fought for civil rights and an end to the Vietnam War, and university protests triggered a near revolution in France in 1968.  Young people are passionate and often looking for a way to get involved and make a difference, and these kind of direct actions offer that chance.
  3. The young do not have the responsibilities of the old, and are relatively unencumbered.  Yes, we know what today’s high school students are “going through”—they are certainly dealing with far more pressure about college than previous generations faced, and are sometimes made to feel like every test is a life-or-death matter—but they do not have rent, a mortgage, or a family to take care of, the responsibilities that often make adults shy away from speaking out or taking a stand.  Students’ immunity to serious consequences frees them to act in the way we should all be acting.  They may get grounded, and they may incur their parents’ anger, but if it is a truly massive strike, they will be in good company, and will be able to commiserate with their friends.  In terms of school discipline, they will be protected by their numbers, and will be able to say, “They can’t suspend us all.”  Besides, they are voluntarily suspending their education—what then does the school have to threaten them with?
  4. It is their future that will be most affected.  They will outlive their parents (assuming climate chaos doesn’t jeopardize that) and will be left dealing with a destabilized climate for themselves and for any children they may have.  Logically, they will take the issue more personally than older generations, and should be acting to gain a saner future. 
  5. Going through the motions at school doesn’t make sense when the future they are to inherit is actively being undermined by the ecological devastation that continues to get worse on a daily basis.  The Earth continues to warm, and emissions continue to rise, and working one’s way through high school to get into a good college so one can get a good job and provide a good life for one’s family years down the line means running on a straight course like a racehorse with blinders on while a tsunami sweeps toward the track.  Adults are pushing students to continue through their studies as if nothing is amiss, as if the future they are headed for will not see a spike in catastrophes, destabilizing population shifts, and competition for scarcer resources, and it is time for students to call them out on it.  A nationwide strike would show that students will not allow themselves to be led like docile animals to the slaughter.
  6. Students are better at calling out B.S.  Young people, having not yet become fully a part of the adult system, are not yet corrupted and restrained by it, and are better able to see its absurdities.  While adults—worn down by years of drudgery and acceptance of life in what they inevitably call the “real world”—worry about repercussions in their careers, or what the neighbors will say, and so often keep their heads down and their mouths shut, or rationalize their absurd situations to themselves, the young (being apt to rebel and be discontent anyway) are keen to point out the flaws in the system the adults in their lives are trying to groom them to inherit.
  7. Students under 18 are cut off from most political participation, and direct action is their only means of shaping the societies they are a part of and the nations that are making decisions that will affect their futures.  When a system acts against their future and denies them even a token chance of fixing it in the official political process, they have the right and the incentive to launch into angry, purposeful action on their own terms.
  8. The voices of the young can have a powerful impact on the conscience of the old.  To tell one’s parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, teachers, legislators, governors, heads of state, “You are not leaving a future for me.  You are destroying the planet I have to live on,” is a raw, powerful statement that has the power to shame them into acting rightly.  Telling one’s leaders, “Your cowardice and corruption are robbing children of the hope that is their birthright” is a ringing statement they ignore at their own peril.  The young have the power to make the heavens echo the truth of their elders’ shame.
  9. A resolute strike carried out by students long enough will either a) force adult leaders to meet their demands, or b) force adults who genuinely have the students’ best interests at heart (such as parents, other relatives, and teachers) to advocate vociferously for their demands to be met, or to go on strike themselves until students’ demands are met.  Half-heartedness will die beneath a sustained student strike.

The logistics of the strike are up to students.  They may wish to go to the school building every day and demonstrate outside.  They may wish to “occupy” the school, entering the building and having “sit-ins” in common areas, without going to class.  They may wish to demonstrate elsewhere, perhaps outside local or state government buildings.  They may want to plan trips to flood the state or national capital with protesting students. 

While on strike, students should do a number of things:

  1. Reinforce one another and remain strong in their solidarity.
  2. Present a serious public image.  They must not allow the inevitable claim of the public that the students “just want to get out of school” to have any shred of truth.
  3. Create a list of demands for making their schools sustainable, and spend time fundraising to help meet these demands.  They may wish to consider: solar power installations, renewable energy credits, waste reduction and composting, greener transportation, and more efficient energy usage, among others.
  4. Clean up their communities, whether on the school campus, on local streets, or in parks and nature preserves.  This work will make a positive difference on the local environment, strengthen bonds between students and nature, and convince the public of students’ sincerity.
  5. Students should hold themselves accountable environmentally in their personal lives, at school, and at demonstrations.  They should be walking, biking, taking public transit, or carpooling where possible to school and to demonstrations, and should make sure that any demonstrations leave no litter behind.
  6. Educate themselves on ecological ethics, environmental issues, and activism.  Special attention should be paid to local environmental issues that may tie into climate change.
  7. Carry on relevant studies where possible or desired.  Continuing coursework outside of school would be wise, especially if students intend to take an AP exam (or similar) at the end of the school year.

Students who take part in a successful strike for the climate that changes public policy will have much to be proud of.  They will know that they will be on the right side of history, and hopefully the history of the future will be brighter for their actions.  Their single-hearted action will be the wake-up call the world needs.  They are the only hope for initiating larger strikes among adults, or bringing forth the necessary changes before adult strikes are necessary. Also, if students go on strike and receive promises that their demands will be met, they must make sure those promises are kept.  Students must make it clear to the authorities that they will go on strike again if the authorities fail to carry out promised plans, and will hold up the evidence of those broken promises for all the world to see.  If a second strike is necessary, students will already know the ropes and will be seasoned veterans, but they might also find themselves fighting against “strike fatigue.”  Some students may not want to go through it all again and would prefer to regain a sense of normalcy in their lives.  They must fight through it so that their initial efforts will not have been in vain.  They must show the adult world, which has largely been content to maximize short-term profits while laying waste to the Earth, that they will not be placated with false promises and will not allow a return to “business as usual.”

Why Aren’t More People Environmentalists?

It seems the problem of the climate crisis would be solved if more people—at least an overwhelming majority—were environmentalists.  If those in business and in government cared for the environment as much as the average environmentalist does, most of the problems environmentalists fight against would not exist in the first place.  But beyond that, assuming that there was a split in society, and the majority of the public were attentive, passionate, outspoken environmentalists, and politicians and business leaders were not, those same politicians and business leaders would presumably not commit the ecological crimes that they might like to, because public outcry would mean the end of their political career and the demise of their business.  There is a lot of presumption here, including the presumption that this majority would act on their feelings and their principles and not go along with something because it was expedient or because they had not found a way to carry on with their lives without it.  But let us carry forward with the idea that, if the bulk of the population were outspoken environmentalists, most of the problems we are contending with, such as climate change, would be rapidly resolved and would cease to be repeated.

It is obvious that the bulk of the public does not fit this description today, which means we are still dealing with a slew of environmental problems, and those problems are either not being resolved rapidly enough or are actually accelerating.  A more environmentally active and aware population would be the key to solving our problems, and is something to be desired.  We must ask ourselves a key question, then: What is keeping people from becoming environmentalists?

1) Disinformation.  At the extreme end of the spectrum, you have those who do not believe that climate change, the most pressing environmental issue of our time, is real.  These are people who have been misinformed by Republican talking points, pseudoscience, conspiracy theories, and flawed studies, all promulgated initially by fossil fuel interests.  They break down into two groups.  One group comprises average, likable people who have been passively misled by their party of choice (or inheritance—I don’t believe “choice” indeed plays a role in every citizen’s political affiliations).  They may say things like “I don’t think all the science is in yet.”  They tend to adhere to the Republican line on other issues, but wouldn’t see themselves as actively “anti-environment.”  I have to think that a book like Nathaniel Rich’s Losing Earth would change their minds on the climate issue, unless they are in the fossil fuel industry and have a vested interest in denying the reality of climate change.  Then there are the really worrisome cases, often found trolling YouTube comment sections, the sort who modify their cars to belch more smoke.  There is an element of “I’m smarter than the mainstream” here (in the same way that many white supremacists feel “superior” even though they have little reason to).  They are convinced that global warming is a hoax and enjoy actively harming the environment and harming or maddening those who believe climate change is real.  These people are fortunately a minority, and a lost cause who will be damned by the future.  They seem to have no concept of being dependent upon the planet they live on.  One would like to exile them to space and see how they survive there.

Note that action on the environment and climate change was once bipartisan in the seventies and eighties.  Also note that Abbie Hoffman, never a darling of the right wing, was able to (while in disguise and in hiding from the FBI) assemble a coalition of environmentalists and conservatives who did not consider themselves environmentalists in order to protect the St. Lawrence River. So there’s always hope for bridging those areas of disagreement, or skirting around them to work on what’s important.

2) Environmentalism is seen as “anti-business.”  Some of this carries over from the preceding category.  Many people who condone rollbacks of environmental standards see themselves not as “anti-environment” but as “pro-business.”  They believe that business is being hamstrung by the environmental movement and that the nation is suffering as a result.  They neglect the fact that industrial business had a 150-year head start, trashing the earth for profit long before environmental standards were introduced.  They got used to business operating without hindrance and do not take seriously the painful legacy industrialization has left the planet.  They seem to believe that businesses would operate within reasonable limits on their own, with no serious damage being done to air, water, climate, people, plants, or animals, and that environmental legislation is unnecessary and damaging to the economy.  They are quick to dismiss the well-publicized environmental disasters of yesteryear as a thing of the past and often point out that “those companies employed a lot of people.”

3) Our lives are too busy.  From here on down, the reasons for people not being environmentalists have less to do with hostility towards environmentalism and more to do with lifestyle.  One obvious factor in today’s world that keeps people from becoming active environmentalists is a lack of time.  With a list of duties that include a full-time job, keeping a marriage going, raising children, maintaining a social life, taking care of the house, and any other things that make for a normal life, it can be hard to find time to commit oneself to following environmental issues, attending and organizing demonstrations, writing letters, signing petitions, participating in cleanups, and greening one’s life.  I imagine nearly everyone has some amount of free time in spite of the abovementioned duties, but active environmentalism is a time commitment, and there are other things clamoring for that time, not the least of which is R&R (more on that later).

4) Not enough social pressure.  I was going to write that views on YouTube for zero-waste lifestyle tutorials are completely dwarfed by makeup tutorials by someone like Olivia Jade or Kendall Jenner, but I found that wasn’t entirely the case.  While the average video featuring Kendall Jenner has about 4 million views, and there are a ton of videos featuring her (why?), there are some zero-waste videos featuring Lauren Singer, whose five years of trash fit in a mason jar, that are equally popular.  Does it help that they are both pretty?  Regardless, I’d argue that there are more people aspiring to look like Kendall Jenner than there are to live like Lauren Singer. 

There is more social pressure to dress nicely, look good, have a well-paying job, be dating or in a relationship, and to keep up with popular TV shows than there is to be an environmentalist.  Some of those pressures directly squelch environmentalist tendencies.  Dressing nicely means buying new and buying often; working that job may mean supporting a company whose environmental practices leave something to be desired; watching those TV shows means less time for the environment.  (I myself am looking forward to an episode of Breaking Bad after finishing work on this article for the night—I resisted the pressure to watch it when it was on, but somehow caved ten years later while planning a trip to New Mexico.)  If you don’t live in the city, there is social pressure to own a car and use it to get everywhere.  In the suburbs, you feel conspicuous when you bike or walk anywhere, like you aren’t “fitting in.”  Some of it may be pure, silly self-consciousness, but sometimes you’ll be actively hooted at by a group of adolescents in a car.  By contrast, nobody ever glares at you to get out of your car and find some other means of transport.  The same goes when you buck the average American diet.  Eat a chicken burrito and no one asks you anything.  Mention that you are vegan and you are immediately asked about your reasoning, your sources of protein, and your desire for bacon. 

There is little social pressure to cut down on waste, go vegan, or to attend environmental actions.  You are free to do those thing if you want to, but there is no expectation from anyone that you will.

5) Consumerism.  By its very nature, our consumerist culture and economy expect and encourage people to want more, more, more.  Advertisements hawk products you never knew you needed.  Companies track you online to solicit you more effectively.  Apple comes out with a new version of the iPhone every year and somehow people still want it.  A large segment of the population is employed by companies that contribute little to people’s actual well-being, and yet we laud those useless jobs and the useless companies that create them.  The free market is often free of social (and certainly environmental) purpose, but it’s what we have, and it is defended by the vast majority.  Because we don’t want to end up homeless and begging on the streets, we take our meaningless jobs and we thank the companies that give them to us, and we defend the consumerist system they are a part of. 

Consuming less (or, a nearly impossible ideal in America, consuming only what we need), buying used, repairing and reusing what you already own, and refusing to be led by the nose to the latest expensive corporate trough that has been laid out for the public, are all undesirable, in the eyes of business and the government it is wed to, and advertisement and the aforementioned social pressure unite to prevent most people from doing them.

6) The perception of environmentalism as a sacrifice.  In a consumerist culture, the idea of environmentalism seems to suggest to many a life of extreme sacrifice.  Part of this comes from having been overindulged and never asked to reckon what the impact of one’s life on the environment is.  It breeds, especially in America, a sort of knee-jerk reaction against the idea of “giving up” anything, whether that is meat, a gas-guzzling car, the practice of driving everywhere (no matter how short the distance), single-use bottles, plastic straws, or wanton electricity or heat usage.  Many refuse to contemplate giving up their “right” to buy and dispose of food and beverages in single-use plastic form, anywhere, although the simple step of using reusable water bottles, coffee mugs, bags, and containers for leftovers or bulk bin items would eliminate billions of single-use items that end up in the trash every year.  The requirement of foresight (“If I’m going to the store, I should bring a bag”; “If I’m going to get coffee on the way to work, I should bring a mug”) is something many Americans kick against, as if the Constitution guaranteed them freedom from the need for it.  News segments, YouTube videos, and public initiatives have been tackling the perception of environmentalism as requiring sacrifice, gently assuring their audience that they can make small, meaningful changes that will make a big difference.  Some people then settle for these small changes, like turning the lights off when they leave a room, and feel good about them, reassured that they are doing something and don’t have to go farther. 

Real lifestyle changes are a harder sell, and there is the perception that environmentalism means a life of deprivation.  “I would die if I went vegan” is something I’ve heard too many times.  People tend to overestimate the difficulty and disruption of lifestyle changes that would lessen their negative effect on the environment, and also fail to see the benefits that such changes bring.  A dietary change like veganism brings a wealth of health benefits, a much smaller ecological footprint, and a deepened connection to animal life.  “Now I can look at you in peace,” said Kafka to the fish at an aquarium he visited.  “I don’t eat you anymore.”  There is indeed a spiritual peace that comes with a deepening devotion to the earth.  Weaning yourself off the drug of consumerism, with its cry in the blood for more, more, more, brings with it a liberation from want.  Rather than pining for the latest gadget one has denied oneself, one realizes it was never needed in the first place.  You can turn an indifferent eye to advertising and the keeping-up-with-the-Joneses technological arms race and see the game for what it is.  Committing yourself to a cleanup brings with it the feeling of a day well spent; joining the fight for a sustainable future brings with it courage, self-confidence, and the intrinsic reward of fighting the good fight.

              7) Avoidance of depressing reality/A sense of powerlessness.  Most of the news today about the environment is bleak and utterly depressing, so it’s no surprise some choose to avoid it.  News that carbon dioxide levels are at the highest ever recorded, or that we have only ten to twelve years to get our act together, or that Paris just hit 108 degrees this summer and Greenland lost billions of tons of sea ice in a day, or that Donald Trump is still President and still rolling back emissions standards and endangered species protections while opening up nearly every last protected space in the country to fossil fuel interests, can ruin a whole day and haunt you for weeks on end.  It forces one to think about a future that is many times worse than the present.  It forces you to realize that we may fail, in large part because people with power are doing everything they can to oppose progress on climate change and are determined to continue “business as usual” with the fossil fuel companies, their idea of “business as usual” being business as it was circa the 1950s before any kind of environmental protections were put in place.

Couple that with a sense of powerlessness that comes from decisions being made on a global scale while you are just one out of several billion, and are without a seat in power, and you may end up deciding to avoid the issues.  Despair may overwhelm instead of forcing you to act, and you then turn to an escape just to try to stay sane.  Some people appear to have written off the future, assuming it will be terrible, and have decided to watch all the TV they can, while they can.

8) Entertainment narcotization.  Ours is an entertainment-driven culture.  One might almost say that in America, entertainment is the highest good.  We worship the stars of the entertainment industry more than people who are working to save lives.  Even Donald Trump was elected partially because the news media found him to be a source of entertainment.  This endless thirst for entertainment and diversion keeps us from thinking deeply about our lives, and what kind of life we would most like to lead, considering it from beginning to end.  It also certainly keeps us from doing much about the environment.  If we were forced to live without the benefit of entertainment (or at least were offered it in much smaller doses), the seriousness of the climate crisis would catch up to us and we would be driven to act on it.  As it is now, many people are so engrossed in entertainment that they know little about the ecological crises we are facing, or they know of the terrors we face and turn to entertainment to get away from thinking about them.  Entertainment is psychologically necessary, and I think if environmental activists and climate scientists never allowed themselves to have fun and to stop thinking about the perilous state of the environment for a while, they would probably die of stress and heartbreak.  A balance between meaningful engagement and R&R is what is needed, and it is sorely lacking in our culture.  Generally, when given free time, Americans elect to spend nearly all of it on one form of entertainment or another, while the planet deteriorates unseen in the background.

9) Not enough news coverage.  It seems to me that there has been an uptick in news about climate change, lately, due to increasing awareness and the increasing severity of its effects around the globe.  There could be more, and it is fighting for airtime with celebrity scandals (today it’s an old Sarah Silverman sketch featuring blackface), but at least it’s getting out there.  Most of the news doesn’t offer the public a constructive way to approach the issue, though.  We hear that things are getting bad, and are going to get worse.  We hear about the failure of leaders in the US, China, and elsewhere.  But due to the preponderance of national and international news, we seldom hear about local issues citizens could tackle to mitigate damage to the environment or reduce contributions to climate change in their area.  Our news is largely homogenous, and on television, most of the local news comes in the form of fires and sensationalistic crime scene footage.  The average citizen is unaware of new power plant construction projects in their state, for example, or what the state legislature is doing about the proposed plastic bag ban that was mentioned several months ago and then dropped.  We are exposed to more information than ever, but little of it is information we can act on or that has meaningful application to our lives.  To get involved in environmental issues at the local level, one generally has to seek out the news and local environmental groups themselves; there is little presentation of relevant information and activism opportunities that reaches the public.

10) Passive versus active environmentalism.  If any form of environmentalism is encouraged in America, it is the same three R’s I was taught in fourth grade: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.  Environmentalism is seen as an affair of the home.  You should turn the lights off when you leave the room, bring a reusable bag to the store, and separate your recycling from your garbage.  I’ve heard a number of people state the single fact that they recycle as evidence that they care about the environment, as if that weren’t essentially mandatory or at least a basic expectation of everyone.  Those who are more serious may look into getting solar panels on their home, improving their home’s energy efficiency, or decide to eat more local or vegetarian/vegan.  Whatever steps people decide to take, environmentalism is treated as essentially a private matter.

There is little discussion of taking environmentalism into the public forum, of going from a “passive” stage of attempting to reduce one’s footprint in various ways to an “active” stage of getting involved in environmental issues.  No one is really taught this sort of environmentalism in school, and most Americans don’t really engage with politics outside of voting once a year, if that.  It’s a big jump to go from monitoring your own consumption to following environmental issues, attending rallies, writing letters, and calling leaders.  Even if you take the plunge and begin doing those things, spreading awareness to those around you is often another matter it may take some time to get comfortable with.  We Americans are uneasy about getting friends, family, and colleagues on board.  Many hardly see their neighbors, and seldom hold serious conversations when they do.  We don’t want to alienate people at work.  We don’t want to become one of “those people” on social media who end up having their friends unfollow them.  We don’t want to be seen as a “preachy vegan.”  We agree to disagree on politics with family and discuss it as little as possible.  The result is that we wage sometimes lonely battles and don’t bring the reinforcements to the fight that are desperately needed.  In any public arena, numbers are important.  When it comes to reducing our national footprint, numbers are needed.  We need to find ways to share our best practices, share our knowledge of what is being done to the earth, especially locally, and to share our sense of urgency in a way that grows the number of environmentalists and encourages new members to keep recruiting to the ranks.

Thinking about obstacles to an embrace of environmentalism is a first step.  Thinking of ways to overcome them is the next one.  Wherever you are on your journey, think about how you can go farther, and how you can bring others with you.  Then do it.