Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Australian children want Australia to take action on climate change: it’s about their future!

We underestimate young people because it’s convenient, SMH, By Caitlin Fitzsimmons, April 28, 2019

“……I’m not remotely surprised that nine-year-olds today are writing about climate change and even the Paris agreement in their school work.

Of course, they are – climate change is an existential threat for Generation Z. Did you think they wouldn’t notice?

In a recent incident that made the newsthe NSW Department of Education ordered Ramsgate Public School to remove two letters from students published in an online newsletter.

The children had written letters about climate change, notionally to Prime Minister Scott Morrison though the letters weren’t sent, as part of an exercise in persuasive writing.

A department spokesman told The Sun-Herald the letters were written after a geography lesson about the Great Barrier Reef. The spokesman said there was no problem with the lesson or the letters themselves but because they were addressed to the Prime Minister and were critical of government policy, the publication of the letters breached the Controversial Issues in Schools policy.

The incident was reported in The Daily Telegraph, which quoted two right-wing think tanks and a conservative academic in a story about how teachers are ostensibly subjecting children to a political agenda in the classroom and “brainwashing young, immature and vulnerable children with their politically correct ideology”.

The same rhetoric was used to belittle the children and teenagers in the school student strike for climate – even the 17-year-olds who were nearly of voting age were dismissed as “pawns”.

Last week, Swedish climate change activist Greta Thunberg, the girl who started the worldwide school strike movement, addressed the British Parliament.  Predictably, people who don’t want to hear her message choose to attack her instead – they mock her appearance and stern manner, her Asperger’s, claim she is paid to protest, and dismiss her on the basis that she has only just turned 16.

If you would prefer to listen to an adult who has studied the issue then by all means do so – they will tell you the same as Thunberg. The difference is that Thunberg’s youth gives her message about the future a certain moral clout.

Climate change is a tough issue for teachers and not just because they are hamstrung by policy………

Among the surveyed teenagers, the vast majority (86 per cent) view climate change as a threat to their safety, with 73 per cent saying it affects the world “a lot” now and 84 per cent saying it will affect the world “a lot” in the future.

Three out of four want Australia to be taking action on climate change, to lead by example and play our part in stopping its worsening effects. Only 8 per cent believe we shouldn’t take action because of negative effects on the economy and only 5 per cent that we are too small a nation to make a difference. Only 4 per cent do not believe climate change is both real and caused by human activity………

Young people and all future generations are the ones who will inherit a vastly depleted natural world. The only way to counter that moral authority is to call them “pawns” in a debate they couldn’t possibly understand.

Or we could hear the message and act. As Thunberg says, we need to act like the house is on fire – because it is.

April 29, 2019 - Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming

No comments yet.

Leave a comment