Rebellion, Revolution and Radical Change: We can save ourselves, but we have to demand it today, not tomorrow
The Extinction Rebellion protests that have now been ongoing in London since 15th April have been amazing to watch - heartening to those of us who are increasingly gripped by fear over how the world will look by the time we reach our parents' age (if we even get that chance) - but have also, through the opposition that they have received, helped to highlight exactly why the challenge of tackling the growing climate crisis may well be beyond us. My posts up to this point have been proposing single, specific (albeit large-scale) policy changes in a particular policy area, but today's will go beyond that, and into the need not just for revolutionary policy, but for a revolution in the philosophy of what it means to be a citizen of an endangered world, and how the economic and political structures we currently exist within may well need to be the next major casualties of climate change. We face a world of hunger, hardship and destruction if we continue down this p...