Most of the politicians and policy makers who wield the power to reverse the climate crisis are likely not going to suffer any serious consequences. They will be long gone when the youth of this world grow up.
Sixteen-year-old Swedish student Greta Thunberg began a student strike in 2018 to demand action to prevent further global warming and climate change. She started a movement that quickly spread among students worldwide, who went on to organize and lead their own #FridaysforFuture strikes.
“Why study for a future,” young people say, “when it may not be there?”
I’ve been following these students, most of them high schoolers, as they walk out of school every week to speak up for their futures. I’m in awe of how organized, motivated, and inspiring they are. Now, one year later, they’re saying, “Adults, we need you, too!”
“Multigenerational activism is what we badly need,” Bill McKibben, a well-known environmentalist and founder of 350.org, said on Twitter.
He’s right. Today, September 20, is the chance for adults to join young people in potentially the biggest day of action for the climate ever.
In the U.S. alone, more than 450 climate strikes have been planned, and globally 117 countries are taking part. Find one near you.
“Young people bring the energy to the movement, but older generations have the wisdom for us to make progress and stymie the climate crisis,” says 17-year-old Jerome Foster II, a high school senior in Washington, D.C. who has been speaking alongside Thunberg this week with #FridaysforFuture.
“Many adults feel like this is out of their control, and they won’t be here when the worst happens,” says 16-year-old Hannah Testa, a sustainability advocate who’s striking today in Atlanta. “But we are going to face the consequences.”
Jamie Margolin, 17, a Colombian American high school senior in Seattle and founder of Zero Hour who has also been in D.C. this week, says it’s important for parents, in particular, “to strike and model for their children what it looks like to stand up for justice and to have courage in the face of dire situations.”
Dulce Ceballos, 18, who has been organizing the Bay Area Climate Strike at the San Francisco Federal Building today (where I’ll be ), is taking her two brothers to today, although her parents can’t go. “My mom is a cook and my dad is a gardener,” Ceballos says, “so it’s hard for them to take even a few hours off work.”