April 2019 will be remembered, hopefully, as the time that
environmental issues and climate change really started to be taken seriously by
many ordinary people.
Extinction Rebellion started in 2018 but really hit the headlines
in April 2019 when thousands of people occupied parts of London in peaceful
protest about climate change, loss of biodiversity, the risk of human
extinction and the collapse of our fragile ecosystem.
Protests also happened around the world in places like Melbourne,
Adelaide & Sydney in Australia and across Europe in places like
Berlin, Brussels, Madrid & Lausanne.
The events in London lasted 11 days and by the end of the
protests 1,130 people from all walks of life and all ages had been arrested.
The police presence was large and heavy handed but the protests were non-violent
and relatively peaceful.
The scale of protests shows the depth of feeling that is
circulating amongst ordinary people about the issues that are facing us as a
species. Many of the people who took part in the protests are not environmental
activists but ordinary people – men, women and children of all walks of life
who want change.
And change needs to happen soon. For far too long we have
ignored the cries from our planet – ice sheets melting at an alarming rate; sea
levels rising; global warming; the destruction of our rainforests; the
poisoning of our rivers and lakes; and ultimately our own demise.
The youth of the world are having their future decimated by
those who are in power and they are finally rising up and saying that enough is
enough. They are no longer prepared to stand by and watch our planet be
destroyed for profit as global corporate capitalism continues to drive the
international economy.
There have always been people who have spoken out about the
destruction of our planet; people like David Attenborough, Jane Goodall,
Vandana Shiva, Arundhati Roy, George Monbiot and many more and another we can
add to the list is a 16 year old Swedish schoolgirl called Greta Thunberg. She
has travelled the world over recent months and spoken with politicians here in
UK and also at the United Nations. She has also been nominated for the Nobel Peace
Prize.
Why has it taken a 16 year old to wake people up to the fact
that climate change is a major problem and we have very little time left to
change things? Those who try to discredit her are resorting to vicious personal
attacks but in the end they know they are losing the argument.
There will always be climate change deniers but in the end
they will be proved to have been wrong. They are finally running scared because
they know that the tide is turning against them and people all around the world
are finally waking up to the issues that face all of this that live on this
planet.
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