How Different Generations Talk About Climate Change | Hot Mess

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 23 ก.ย. 2020
  • PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to: to.pbs.org/DonateMESS
    ↓ More info and sources below ↓
    Peril & Promise is a public media initiative from WNET telling human stories of climate change and its solutions. Learn more at: www.pbs.org/perilandpromise/
    Like this video? SUBSCRIBE to Hot Mess! ►► bit.ly/hotmess_sub
    Over the last few years it feels like young people have taken over the climate movement. They’re out striking, suing national governments, occupying congressional offices, and taking to the streets. And according to polls, they care more, with 70% of young adults saying they worry about global warming compared to 56% of people over 55.
    But of course - climate action isn’t new - people have been marching, protesting, and demanding change since the 60s and 70s. People who were grandparents today were fighting for the climate when they were young people, and many are still at it today.
    It made us wonder: What’s changed since the early days of the environmental movement? How are the stakes different today? And what’s the best way to speak up about climate change?
    Connect with us on:
    Twitter: / hotmesspbs
    Instagram: / hotmesspbs
    Facebook: / hotmesspbs
    Hot Mess T-shirts!:
    store.dftba.com/products/hot-...
    -----------
    Host: Joe Hanson, Ph.D
    Writer: Miriam Nielsen
    Creative Director: David Schulte
    Executive Producer: Amanda Fox
    Producer: Stephanie Noone
    Editor/Animator: Matt Donaldson
    -----------
    Produced by PBS Digital Studios
    Theme Music: Eric Friend/Optical Audio
    Music: APM
    Climate activists, youth activists, generations, old people, young leaders, sunrise movement, zero hour, jamie margolin, grete thundberg, elders for climate action

ความคิดเห็น • 130

  • @dianewallace6064
    @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    I am in my fifties and have always been an environmentalist since I can remember. I am a Chemist now. I became re-energized to change my life (to help the climate) in 2004 when I heard how SONOR was hurting whales and watching the "Six Degrees could change the World" 2006 movie. I hope the next generation can have a bigger impact than my generation did but, yes, I have to keep doing my part. For example, I have a huge milkweed garden for pollinators and Monarch butterflies.

    • @sodalitia
      @sodalitia 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      3 questions:
      Do you have kids?
      What does the company you work for does?
      Which bank do you keep money and your pension?
      Unless you really honestly answer those questions you didn't do nothing for the climate.

  • @adamlabus9979
    @adamlabus9979 3 ปีที่แล้ว +59

    Its relieving to see that the enviromentalist organiser girl has a little bit more knowledge than: plastic bad, reusable straw good
    Guys if you didnt understand my point was that I totally agree with her I also dont like how everybody takes enviromentalism as buying "eco friendly things"

    • @mktemple476
      @mktemple476 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      LOL! Statistically,, straws make up a very tiny percentage of the waste in the sea. The single biggest problem is fishing related. So, your reusable straw does less good than not eating fish. Science education is a Good Thing when it comes to climate change. Plus, there are legitimate reasons to stay with single use items like straws-less chance of disease transmission. VERY relevant right now. And personally, I will never stop using single use straws since I'm a double organ transplant recipient, I'll have a compromised immune system for the rest of my life.

    • @Kumar731995
      @Kumar731995 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Its okay to use single use straws if you have no choice but trying to rub it on all people makes us looks like fools. Does not matter of its a tiny pecent of total waste. The same reasoning can be applied for each person's contribution to the total waste by human beings. I would say we have to make better choices "as much as possible" without resorting justifications and encourage others to do. A city will look clean only if everyone agrees to their part eventhough its tiny compared to the whole task of keeping it clean. In the end we all suffer and we are in this together.
      Reusable straws are still considered waste so I did not write the above with the intent that reusable > single use.

    • @David-di5bo
      @David-di5bo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      At least Boba tea is a drink where you actually need a straw. The people insisting on a straw for their can of Diet Coke never made any sense.

    • @cspicer77
      @cspicer77 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Many reusable straws (and bags) generate more CO2 than many plastic straws

    • @GeneralArmorus
      @GeneralArmorus 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@cspicer77 It seems like having a simple reusable receptacle is rocket science.

  • @mktemple476
    @mktemple476 3 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    Gen X voice - My middle school science teacher warned us about 'global warming'. And I'm scientifically literate enough to know it's not about 'saving the earth'. It's really about 'save the inhabitants of earth'. I think if we started framing the problem as more of a threat to the people, we might be able to make more headway. But that's my opinion.

    • @someoneontheinternet580
      @someoneontheinternet580 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      The right communication is definitely important

    • @HebaruSan
      @HebaruSan 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Nah, the people opposed to doing something aren't confused by the messaging. They don't want to lose money.

    • @someoneontheinternet580
      @someoneontheinternet580 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      HebaruSan Many surely are, but there are others that really don’t see the problem, because they think we destroy our own economy and our wealth because of climate change when it really is about saving it on the long run. Maybe with a different wording they would see the problem.

    • @mktemple476
      @mktemple476 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@HebaruSan -This is true, but they're being very short sighted. As in, less than 5 to 10 years. Once they reealize how their shortsightedness is killing their children, grandchildren, and so on, they might be interested in the long term financial gains of investing in sustainability.

    • @DapperHesher
      @DapperHesher 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, it's about not leaving a post apocalyptic hellscape for your children and your childrens' children, etc. I think we all know the sun is going to swallow the Earth eventually. That's not really the message here.

  • @TheGFeather
    @TheGFeather 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    I'm similar in age to you Joe. I grew up with Kids Save The Earth club and the environmental advocacy campaigns of the 80s and 90s. I grew up with Bill Nye and really bad Saturday morning cartoons showing the effects of industrial pollution. And I am *that* person in my group of friends who always has their own water bottle/cup/straw/take away container/cutlery. And I am *that* person who will talk about environmental issues at the drop of a hat, and feels zero shame about it. I write science-y songs and perform them unapologetically to anyone in earshot.
    But I'm so damn tired of this still being a fight. It's difficult to see people of my generation who grew up with all the knowledge at their disposal, who still don't care. It's frustrating and exhausting to know that all the little things I can do over a lifetime aren't even a drop in the bucket. It's disheartening living in a place (Saskatchewan) that is actively seeking to do more oil and gas extraction when we are the sunniest and windiest province in Canada, in prime position to be a national leader in renewable energy. It's even more disheartening that our provincial government is so secure in its power base that they can act without concern for the opposition.
    I do what I do because it's important to me, but I can't help but feel pretty helpless in the grand scheme of things.

    • @stax6092
      @stax6092 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      As a fellow Canadian in the same age group I get how you feel.
      I know it is tough, and exhausting just know that as a mentally ill person often struck by the inability to act I appreciate everything you and people like you do for me.

    • @Kumar731995
      @Kumar731995 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      We are with you buddy. Keep doing what you are doing. The only way we change people is by action and leading by example. I know its hard especially with the way USA is going with regards to climate but we just have to hold on and believe in it. Humans came alive on the better side many times before and this wont be any different. Cheers!

  • @PremierCCGuyMMXVI
    @PremierCCGuyMMXVI 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    It dose make me happy there’s still people in this world that don’t believe in conspiracies and are willing to stop climate change so we have a great future :)

  • @Blake-Urizen
    @Blake-Urizen 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Thank you for genuine balance. What has changed? Older activists had only the science, current activists have obvious climatic impacts on weather. It's hard to deny the reality of increased extreme events.

    • @merrilthompson9916
      @merrilthompson9916 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      yes, so lets stop denying them! Better still, lets CONTINUE to do all the little things we can (or BIG things too!) - a 1980s film called 'Orinoco Flow told the story of how just a few drops and a few drops and a few more drops came together - and eventually, with a mighty roar, became a dynamic force of a river which smashed through the hated mighty dam that threatened the local environment. All started by one young indiginous boy.

  • @icewink7100
    @icewink7100 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I'm 19 and a member of the Sunrise Movement, trying to do what I can to make a difference.

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Good - keep doing what you are doing. We all can make a difference. As a Chemist, I fear that within 200 years the atmosphere will be too oxygen poor to support large mammals due to permafrost methane thaw. Stephen Hawking feared that Earth will become 250 degrees like Venus due to runaway effects prior to "tech"ing our way out of it.

  • @angelofuchs1249
    @angelofuchs1249 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    What does my generation has to add?
    "The future is ashes, lets party today."
    In my youth this was the gist of the conversation. It doesn't matter what we do, nobody is listing anyway. We are doomed and nothing is gonna save us.
    So I myself just decided to try to not be part of the problem as far as I personally can and try not to be too doomstruck.
    Looking forward to braking the cycle, but so far - nothing, still doomed.

    • @someoneontheinternet580
      @someoneontheinternet580 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      At least you try ☺️

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I agree we are doomed but as Scott Wallace-Wells says we can try to reduce total temperature rise. I hope we can avoid a Venus 250 degrees F scenario. Within 200 years the atmosphere will be too oxygen poor to support large mammals due to permafrost methane thaw. Thanks for posting your comment. It helps to know what young folks are thinking of climate change.

  • @LisaBeergutHolst
    @LisaBeergutHolst 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Adults expecting (their) children to take care of them (e.g. solve the climate crisis) is a classic role reversal that's a hallmark of our society. Elisabeth Young-Bruehl examined this phenomenon in depth in her book _Childism._ Worth a read.

  • @lamegoldfish6736
    @lamegoldfish6736 3 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    With Climate Change, I am really encouraged by the young folks. It seems they get it better.

    • @Quintinohthree
      @Quintinohthree 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Unfortunately by the time the young ones are a majority it'll be too late to prevent major harm and reverse course. We need everyone right now or it will be too late.

    • @oldineamiller9007
      @oldineamiller9007 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Giacomo Campanelli
      Troll!

    • @adamlabus9979
      @adamlabus9979 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @Steve Kay I wont spit hard facts at you but this is really stupid conspiracy you should probably wake the fuk up

    • @oldineamiller9007
      @oldineamiller9007 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@adamlabus9979
      You are wrong. Steve Kay and me, we rely on the climate science.
      We will get a temperature drop of 0.5 degrees til 2030.
      I know you and your fellow alarmists don't like that because it doesn't fit your narrative.
      However nature does that and you have to learn nature don't care what you want. It follows its own rules, that you obviously ignore.

    • @oldineamiller9007
      @oldineamiller9007 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Rolf Jander
      Ok. Go ahead! Prove me wrong.

  • @sodalitia
    @sodalitia 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    This video misrepresented the eco movement of the boomers. They didn't rly protest climate change back then, but air pollution and nuclear weapons.

    • @David-di5bo
      @David-di5bo 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, he kind of sounded like a global warming denier there. They love to talk about Rachel Carson as a way to discredit today's climate scientists. (Yes, bizarre).

    • @cedrickulacz8468
      @cedrickulacz8468 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@David-di5bo Rachel Carson? Care to extrapolate please?

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I am a late boomer and we did care about paper pollution (litter), air pollution and nuclear war (as you said). Nuclear war has not gone away but folks think it has. We also cared about the population explosion which did happen and no one cares because there is enough food to eat. Humans are literally "locusts" on the Earth (7.8 billion humans, less than 1/2 billion cats, less than 1 billion dogs). When I was a kid, we called this the "Greenhouse" effect or "Greenhouse Gases" instead of climate change. We also worried about the hole in the Ozone layer.

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@cedrickulacz8468 She raised awareness about DDT which caused raptor eggs to be thin and not viable.

    • @gavinathling
      @gavinathling 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@dianewallace6064 The population explosion has been disproven. Population will (not might - will) level out at 11 billion people unless something changes. See "Don't Panic: The Truth about Population" on Curiosity Stream.

  • @LisaBeergutHolst
    @LisaBeergutHolst 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    8:04 "[The fossil fuel industry] trying to get us to blow out our little matches while they're taking a blow torch to everything..." Great quote!

  • @merrilthompson9916
    @merrilthompson9916 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Climate change started for me in the 60s, when working for personality Mike Walsh at Radio 2SM, when we ran a radio campaign against Plastics! No beginning is too small, you dont know what the next stepping stone will be?

  • @yeopazman
    @yeopazman 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Humanity still doesn't understand that these small amount of people will never reach critical mass, because EVERYBODY has to join in internationally. That means borders have to disappear. Nations have to either disappear or cooperate. Even if everybody in the USA goes carbon neutral or carbon negative, there is the rest of the world that won't make a difference. Look at the EU. I live here now and realize that by recycling, all I am doing is shipping plastics and other "recycleables" to Africa and Southeast Asia, where I am originally from. I stopped recycling to keep the trash in Europe. USA did it with China before that. Nothing that USA nor the EU does makes a difference except for creating waste for other nations. "Leaders" are a minority, people in "westernized" nations have a voice and freedom and money to choose alternatives. In Europe, people really don't care and they still use diesel motors despite the NOx. IKEA uses 1% of all timber! ONE COMPANY! To build cheap, disposable furniture! I honestly think that if EU or the USA wants to keep using Africa for electronic wastes and Asia for plastic wastes, they should PAY them and set up recycling infrastructure. Or keep it in your own backyard and create your own infrastructure so "we" don't have to deal with the western philosophies of wanting the newest iPhone every year.

    • @yeopazman
      @yeopazman 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Going carbon neutral is easy. People who work and live in the "western" cities can use bikes. Small CC motorcycles and mopeds create less traffic. Manufacturers are still not going hybrid or full electric. Stop burning coal or do "clean" coal powerplants. Forget Nikola Tesla and his "miraculous" contribution where power plants are allowed. Do the Edison way and have each house power their own by renewable DC power. That was the original plan anyways. There are so many things wrong that can be "righted" by simple switches. LED lighting. Bicycles. Weekly instead of daily deliveries. Do we need things ASAP? For some reason, the world worked before. When I order things from the other side of the world, it still takes 1.5 months. A camel can do the same trip in the same time a container ship burning tons of diesel fuel does.
      This topic makes me so angry, because the solutions are so simple, yet people are WAY too selfish to give up some modern comforts. Malaysians used to use wooden houses with a simple airflow architecture to keep ourselves cool. Then European colonization "bricked" everything. Then you have hot buildings that need to be A/C-ed. Stupid pointless downward spiral.
      I'm not blaming Europeans for the troubles they caused. I am just saying that in historical exploitation of the world, they ended up leaving their trash behind. Clean up your own messes!

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@yeopazman Agreed

  • @newsinspace7174
    @newsinspace7174 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great video and insight!

  • @oafkad
    @oafkad 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The reason for putting the pressure on young people is that you don't stay young for long. So if you convince people that only the youth can save the world then, when those young people grow, they'll stop trying. It's a great system for perpetuating the problem.

    • @qwerty_and_azerty
      @qwerty_and_azerty 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      That’s a great insight! Thanks for sharing.

  • @theonionpirate1076
    @theonionpirate1076 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    May wanna double check that pie chart for 70% ;)

  • @samanthabailey02
    @samanthabailey02 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you

  • @dryzalizer
    @dryzalizer 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    70% young vs. 56% old is less of a difference than I expected. Could really be that some older people have given up since they've seen how the world works and how those in power have done so little to fix the problems.

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      No. The phrasing was about being worried about climage change. Giving up doesn't fit that at all.

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Yutani_Crayven In that case you might have a lot of older people who aren't worried, because they assume they'll be dead by the time its boot connects with our groins.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Brilliant video

  • @jim4859
    @jim4859 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I think the efforts of environmental activists are too scattered (and weak). The strategy used by the tobacco companies is the same one being used by the oil companies and others. Sow doubt and confusion, take charge of the public debate. fight everything in court, be the big money behind politics. Is there any doubt that smoking is harmful and people die from it (and besides it makes them stink). That battle has not only been lost, but new smokers sign up every day. The battle for the environment is much more complex and the money behind destroying it is bigger than big tobacco. I haven't lost hope, but in the battle for hearts and minds a new SUV trumps the collapse of an ICE sheet.

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Exactly there is far too little coordination at this point only drastic action is going to be able to really advert the worst ramifications that haven't already passed the point of no return. There needs to be a sweeping restructuring of power which requires a major organized response. The governments in charge are largely owned by these corporate giants which is the largest source of the problem as they have all the money and resources at their disposal which they have focused entirely on keeping their status quo through disinformation. The biggest problem with getting a proper movement in place is that there are a lot of selfish shortsighted people in power since human hierarchical structure tends to empower these individuals enabling them to gain and abuse even more power.
      Logically and ethically I can't think of any effective ways to avoid things from getting even worse at least as long as human psychology is allowed to play a dominant role in decision making. I don't know the solution aside from there will not be a single solution.

  • @supercharger5727
    @supercharger5727 ปีที่แล้ว

    Are grandparents who were born when climate change started actually know more than we do because they remember the days when news reports of a heating climate

  • @ronaldgarrison8478
    @ronaldgarrison8478 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I gave this video a like mainly not because of what it said, but because of a whole bunch of ridiculous things it did not say, which I hear over and over.

  • @lidiastarkova2323
    @lidiastarkova2323 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video! We need to act ASAP! Question to Joe Hanson and the team: are you, guys vegan?

  • @ladybirdstarshine4692
    @ladybirdstarshine4692 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Unleash the peaceful beast!!!✊😁

  • @mizukiminowa7835
    @mizukiminowa7835 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Unfortunately almost all governments only care about ruling over taking money is all they care about. Which is why I think that we need a strong leader to look towards. Not just any person but someone who can prove to be a strong leader

    • @mikeharrington5593
      @mikeharrington5593 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yes. Unfortunately the corporate billionaires control the media & they largely "select" the candidates available to the people to vote for, & thereafter they largely control the successful politicians who do their bidding for financial reward. Individual idealism is largely looked upon as a weakness, & thus tends to be exploited by the more pragmatic & hard nosed decision makers who have the power to ignore & discredit ideas which don't match their agenda.

    • @mizukiminowa7835
      @mizukiminowa7835 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mikeharrington5593 you see you need to have power or how should I say this you should have true strength that comes from the heart not just physical or having nuclear power. Power isn't evil never has been, it's the intentions of man that's been dangerous from the start. So that's why at least to the point where I can get I wanna have enough strength to at least protect my loved ones like my friends. I'll risk my life for them any day. Not to mention enjoy it

  • @Fabelot1
    @Fabelot1 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    "Don't listen to me, listen to the empiric evidence!"

  • @AM-du7si
    @AM-du7si 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I am 17 y/o, and will be getting my bachelor's in Climate Change Science in 4 1/2 years. I will do everything I can to make a positive difference on the world.

  • @tarttooth6022
    @tarttooth6022 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Help us, Obi-Boomer Kenobi. You're our only hope.

  • @canyadigit6274
    @canyadigit6274 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    New vid!

  • @CJ_McK
    @CJ_McK 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    in my opinion, people only pollute because its cheaper. if carbon footprint was a mandatory part of the cost (like tax) but for breathable air. i think people would be a lot more eco-friendly.
    doesn't need to be all at once, just a sliding scale that increases over the next 50 years or so.
    getting that law passed at a global scale is a whole different issue, but i believe the concept is sound.
    age - 24
    (I'm probably not seeing the full picture, thoughts? opinions?)

  • @Leimholz1
    @Leimholz1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    30 years ago, when I was a teenager, we/I knew about climate change.
    Did we do enough about it? No.
    So we gotta get up off our arses and stop just talking about it!
    We - adults - need to act on climate change. Now!
    Otherwise coming generations will hate us for what we've done - with good reason.

  • @MyJam
    @MyJam 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    It doesn't seem like anything of substance was said here.

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Right? It's ok to only have 1 representative of a demographic if that demographic is 80% on one side -- as was the case with the youth here. But the title can't claim to "explain" how different generations talk about it if no kind of talking is actually presented or analyzed. Only 50% of people over 55 years old care and yet they only had one person there - a lifelong activist - and she said the same thing as the youth activist. No kind of analysis of why old people don't care in such staggering numbers was presented at all.

    • @sodalitia
      @sodalitia 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Yutani_Crayven Its the green washing of positive thinking. The facts are that majority of boomers position on climate change is abhorrent and backwards. They don't care, because they won't be affected by the consequences. Give me american dream and fetch the bill to those jobless youngsters.

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Whats more to say of substance that has not been said? "Where are we going and why are we in a hand basket?"

  • @0815michik
    @0815michik 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You only talked about old and young. Where is the big middle?
    Btw did you hear of the Egyptian historian *Ibn Khaldun* (fourteenth Century AD)? He suggested that generations run in a cycle of four different types. The 1st generation is revolutionary and brings about significant change, followed by a generation of order and stability. The 3rd generation focuses on pragmatism and comfort, while the 4th generation is one of inquiry and cynicism. This pattern isn't set in stone, but it can be seen how each generation is influenced and responds to the one that came before it. It also depends on the culture and topic of the generations. Only because they are born in the same place and time doesn't mean they can't be of a different culture in different positions in the circle.

  • @elgracko
    @elgracko 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    all of the energy in fossil fuels and in life´s carbon bonds (like say in wood) mean that life has generally had cooling effect on the planet, 'terraforming' it, right?
    like all the sun's energy used up in animal locomotion would have otherwise been absorbed by the planet as heat, yeah?

  • @stax6092
    @stax6092 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I still don't understand how we went from "Global Warming" to "Climate Change", as it were I always understood climate to be the broader aspect of the weather whereas "Global Warming" is indicative of the actual issue of the climate getting warmer. I have always seen calling Global Warming as "Climate Change" as tiptoeing for no real good reason.
    Largely because the Climate was always going to change, but the speed at which it is warming is the fault of Governments, Companies, and Humans alike. It baffles me that people still curtail to the sensitivity of people that would call you an "alarmist" when your house is on fire.

    • @David-di5bo
      @David-di5bo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Global warming is causing the climate to change. Climate is more than just temperature: it is wind, precipitation, ocean currents, etc. Warming causes these patterns to change, and these changes will have much greater impact on humanity than just the temperature rise alone. Hence, climate change is the preferred term because it captures the full scope of what we are dealing with.

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Because warm water currents like the Gulf Stream (there is also a warm Alaska, Norwegian, and Brazilian stream) will stop due to desalination of ocean water caused by fresh water from melting ice. This stop of warm water streams will cause land temperatures in the northern USA, Alaska, Europe and southern South America to fall. [See the movie "The Day After Tomorrow" (2004)] Since Scientist don't know how falling and rising temps will manifest on land, they had to change the name from "global warming" to "climate change".

    • @sodalitia
      @sodalitia 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The simple answer is: We didn't. The term "climate change" was used in science paper is early 60ties long before the global warming. Also climate change and global warming mean two completely different things. It's only deniers that love getting into the "sudden change" of global warming into climate change buzzword. Just don't play the word games with them. We don't have time for it.

  • @jmuld1
    @jmuld1 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Older people ask why do you believe this and find nothing.

  • @stevenhanson6057
    @stevenhanson6057 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The Paw Patrol generation. If you care more and think hard enough, problem solved.

  • @secondnuts
    @secondnuts 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    +1 for the algorithm

  • @yegfreethinker
    @yegfreethinker 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I don't really agree what he said about older people not caring about the environment more we're just not so reactionary as Great Thunberg. Don't disguise subjectivity as objectivity

  • @mikeg9b
    @mikeg9b 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I think young people do have a special responsibility to push climate action. As a person gets older, they get a full-time job. They get married and have a family. They get used to the way things are and stop feeling urgency about change. Young people aren't encumbered by all those distractions. When I was younger, I used to care about things. I had passion in my ambitions. I'm 51 years old now and have been beaten down by life. I still care about things in an intellectual way, but the passion is gone.

  • @_jake_hill_
    @_jake_hill_ 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love the earth as it is, and climate change is bad for us. However, restricting fossil fuel use in the US will increase it elsewhere unless everyone agrees and takes responsibility for their own offenses. It's the tragedy of the commons, and the more that governments track, trace, and regulate, the more our planet suffers. This movement needs to come from the lowest level up to the top. Everyone needs to make better choices. Boba tea? Blaming Republicans for climate change when they're trying to hold China accountable? These things don't help. Buy less gas and electricity.

  • @keepmoving1185
    @keepmoving1185 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Humans are too dumb to save themselves. Let the doubters go to florida

  • @allissonmueller2342
    @allissonmueller2342 ปีที่แล้ว

    Take your mask OFF. You're videochatting!? ??

  • @Pierluigi996
    @Pierluigi996 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Well.. I think you vote whit your money so buying plastic or something that is linked with climate changes is like pointing your finger to others and saying they are the problem but instead you are also contributing to the problem..

    • @someoneontheinternet580
      @someoneontheinternet580 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      just because she isn’t perfect doesn’t make her message less true (ad hominem) and secondly: it is not easy in this time where EVERYTHING is packed in plastic to live completely without it and without anything that has a climate impact. We can change, but the transition of each individual takes some time. At least she tries and advocates appropriate actions, which is better than buying plastic and not even care, because latter won’t change anything.
      But maybe she should have worded it differently, to make the message clearer

    • @sodalitia
      @sodalitia 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      'voting with your money' is such a bs argument. Money is not a ballot paper and economy is not elections. People have virtually no choice when it comes to how majority of products are made or packaged. The whole idea of 'carbon footprint' as consumer responsibility was invented by BP and we all are in some kind of Stockholm syndrome taking the blame for what corporations are doing. Manufacturers should bear the environmental costs of their industry. Hoping that collective mass change in consumer behaviour will save us is just another form of green washing.

    • @mikeg9b
      @mikeg9b 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The climate problem is too big for individual consumption choices to matter. The focus should be on changing government policies.

  • @WDCallahan
    @WDCallahan 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Why was 'just a girl' wearing a mask?

    • @qwerty_and_azerty
      @qwerty_and_azerty 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Because she was filming in the hallway of her college/university, not at home. Wearing a mask in public is a good idea, and may even be mandatory at her school.

    • @dianewallace6064
      @dianewallace6064 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@qwerty_and_azerty Thanks, I was wondering because I thought "surely she is 6 feet from the camera" but your explanation makes sense.

  • @peacewillow
    @peacewillow 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    when i was young we had the 'give a hoot, don't pollute' owl and the native crying over litter.
    both became jokes.
    environmentalism doesn't work because people don't want to give up the comforts they've become accustomed to.
    don't blame the corporations for your poor choices, like the plastic cup.
    are corporations responsible for most environmental destruction?
    of course, but those companies are kept in business by the individual consumers who can't live without a bunch of useless toys and knickknacks.
    only when enough people decide to turn their backs on consumerism and overconsumption will anything start to change.
    respecting the earth is a lifestyle choice, not a cause to believe in. 🌎💕

    • @gasdive
      @gasdive 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Environmental responsibility doesn't mean giving up creature comforts. That's a propagandist lie, and an obvious lie. Just look at the old East Germany, an environmental disaster, vs West Germany. Which was more polluted, and which was more comfortable?

    • @StompinPaul
      @StompinPaul 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      I get the logic behind that, but there's an issue I see with it: advertising is a way companies affect what we want or don't want. Lobbying and political support affect the way our political leaders talk and what they talk about. Mass media has a huge impact on our public discourse.
      Every company has the motivation to influence our desires, and many of them have the means.
      Not to say people have zero influence. And you're probably right that if we could get everyone (or enough people and enough wealthy people in particular) to live better lifestyles we could probably solve the problem. It's just that many corporations will be very opposed to this change, and put a lot of money and effort against it.

  • @Sancarn
    @Sancarn 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    As much as I agree with climate change, the youth of today rarely have any workable solutions which take into consideration the wealth of issues fixing climate change has. Imo we don’t need more people shouting, we need well thought out, economically stable ideas.

    • @kahyaulim75
      @kahyaulim75 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      From what I see the youth is more on going out there and protesting, spreading information while the slightly older generations are the ones who already know how to push the society towards a more sustainable future. With that said, yes there are bad apples in every generation

    • @qwerty_and_azerty
      @qwerty_and_azerty 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The youth has good ideas. The street is just not the place to enumerate your “12-point plan” (so to speak). If they didn’t go into the streets, they wouldn’t get any media attention. Without the attention, no one is going to listen to their detailed plan. Is their plan perfect? Probably not. But no one is letting them have a set at the table to discuss the fine details of it, where it’s strong and where it’s weak. So they shout in the street to try to get enough attention to eventually get a seat at the table.

    • @Sancarn
      @Sancarn 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@qwerty_and_azerty I don't personally believe this is true. I myself am a "youth" (mid 20s), and I find that people are definitely willing to discuss the problems that arise, but most protestors my age don't have solutions. My sister in law, a protestor, put it well "You try to understand the root cause of a problem, we just see problems and protest that they need fixing". It's like... Great! Tell us something we don't know. Protesting that there is a problem is great and all, but if you bring no real solutions to the table nothing is going to change.
      It's like Greta's speech "people are suffering, people are dying, you've ruined my life and my future" - Great! Not only is this likely hyperbolic. It's also not like "ok, what do we need still need fossil fuels for, which industries don't need fossil fuels, how much energy generation do we need, how much is that going to cost, how do we scale that with the lowering cost of renewable energy, when are the deadlines/ETAs... etc. etc.". Their current strategy seems to me like "There is no plan, there is no compromising, it is the end of the world, how dare you do this to us."
      Quite honestly, to me it just feels like a bunch of babies crying for their parents to fix the difficult problems. It's not very useful to anyone.

    • @qwerty_and_azerty
      @qwerty_and_azerty 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Sancarn People like Greta aren’t there to propose policy, they are there to get attention. In a way, yes, they are whining to their parents to fix the problem- because their parents are the politicians who can fix the problem, and the kids are too young to get elected.
      If Greta went up there and talked about fossil fuel numbers and dates, deadlines, and estimates, she would have gotten exactly ZERO attention from it and you wouldn’t even know her name.
      For one concrete example that is heading in the right direction (though I’ll admit it’s not a complete solution), see The Green New Deal proposed in the US. It’s sponsored by AOC, who became a congressperson in her late 20s. Sure, she’s a bit older, but not much. That thing got attention because it’s an actual bill proposed in Congress. If Greta had made her speech about the policy details of that deal, no one would have listened. I’m pretty sure Greta has some good policy ideas, but no one cares to hear them precisely because of her age.

    • @Sancarn
      @Sancarn 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@qwerty_and_azerty As I've said elsewhere already, I disagree that politicians can fix the problem... Leaving it up to politicians is will leave policies which have fatal flaws and are technically impossible. I also disagree that young people can't make an impact on policy. If young people organised and made a central open source policy infrastructure and then fought for that specifically they'd definitely get a lot of media attention! Of course a call to emotion is always required, but don't call to emotion and propose no viable solution...
      The green new deal is a decent start, although indeed it looks like many claims are totally unrealistic. But that's the sort of thing they should be driving for.