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#climateactivism

2 posts2 participants0 posts today

It is stunning how little awareness there is in activist circles regarding the use of #FCKINGGoogle.

Stop sending me open letters for #palestine, queries rgarding #climateactivism etc. from #googledocs. They end up in my garbage instantly, no matter the content.

If you have not even BASIC awareness of the danger you put me and others in by exposing us to #SurveillanceCapitalism, if you have no idea on how much you feed the #policestate with that information, give your very opponent an edge in your dear cause; if you have not even investigated a tiny tiny bit what privacy friendly alternatives there are out there, what are you even doing as an activist?

@CryptPad
@digitalcourage
@Framasoft
#privacy #activism #Google #fascism

Replied in thread

@billyjoebowers We all know why this works especially in difficult times: #Humans are pack animals by nature, #social beings. They want to belong to something. But #loneliness and #divisions are increasing.

Give people places/opportunities where they can co-operate for something good and get to know people (e.g. Third Places).
Imagine selling #climateActivism as "everyone will be doing it"! Why don't we use this methods for the good?

wbur.org/news/2025/05/08/bosto

Neill said two men came to his door. One flashed a badge that looked legitimate to Neill, and said he was with the FBI.

"My immediate reaction was to say, ‘I don't talk with the FBI,’” Neill said. The man said, “OK,” and Neill shut the door. Two other activists described similar visits in interviews with WBUR.

h/t @universalhub (whose post on this yesterday did not appear into my UHub fediverse feed)

www.wbur.orgBoston-area climate activists report visits from the FBILocal climate activists are on edge after people claiming to be FBI agents visited at least six at their homes on the same day in Greater Boston in March. Weeks later, the motivations behind these visits remain a mystery.
#Fascism#Boston#FBI

My wife's latest blog explains that a global survey shows 89% of the world’s population wants their government to do more on Climate Change.

People feel trapped in a “spiral of silence” because they believe they are in the minority. But we are *not* and each of us can and must do more to move the situation forward.

Her blog looks at why we must find our courage, urgently. We can’t afford to wait any longer.

agrandmothersdream.com/what-mo

We CAN do something about Climate Change · What More Can I Do? - We CAN do something about Climate ChangeWhat more can each of us do? We all have skills. We just have to believe they are important and act. Action brings courage.

#The89Percent Project is a global #media collaboration aimed at highlighting the fact that the vast majority of people in the world care about climate change and want their governments to do something about it. Coverage started on #EarthDay and will lead to the #COP30 UN climate summit in Brazil.

#Media, #newsrooms, and #journalists can join with their stories! 89percent.org/

The 89 Percent ProjectThe 89 Percent ProjectBetween 80 and 89% of the world’s people want their governments to be doing more to address climate change. Let’s tell their stories.

"People are instinctively drawn to majority views and are also more likely to do something if they think others are doing it too. Making people aware that their pro-climate view is, in fact, by far the majority could unlock a social tipping point and push leaders into the climate action so urgently needed." New data against misperceptions: theguardian.com/environment/20

The Guardian · Activate climate’s ‘silent majority’ to supercharge action, experts sayBy Damian Carrington

#German #ClimateActivist faces expulsion from #Austria after ban

AFP Apr 7, 2025, Updated Apr 8, 2025

"Austria has banned a German climate activist for two years, she said on Monday, adding she would fight the decision, which could see her expelled from the Alpine EU member.

"#AnjaWindl, who has been living in Austria for seven years, became known for her #protests against #ClimateChange, including glueing herself on streets to stop #traffic with the #LastGeneration group.

"In a decision Windl received last week, the Federal Office for Immigration and Asylum issued the two-year ban, giving her one month to leave the country.
"The ban was issued after the German activist was found to pose a 'danger for the #PublicOrder and security', according to the decision seen by AFP.

" 'This is highly problematic from a democratic perspective,' Windl, a 28-year-old psychology #student, told AFP, adding she would appeal the ban.

" 'We are moving toward civilisational #collapse, and instead of holding those responsible accountable, it is those who have peacefully advocated for the preservation of our livelihoods" who are targeted, she said.

"Her lawyer, Ralf Niederhammer, said he did not know of any other political activist being banned from Austria. Windl faces no criminal charges, he added."

Read more:
homenewshere.com/national/news

Surely it depends what JSO's aims actually were?

"The “#radicalflankeffect” shows that when radical #activists push boundaries, they often make #moderatevoices in the same movement appear more reasonable. Recent #research on #JSO found that even when the group provoked #publicanger, support for moderate organisations such as #FriendsoftheEarth increased."

Being hated worked for #JustStopOil
theconversation.com/being-hate

#ClimateAction
#climateactivism
#climatechange
#fossilfuels
#climateprotests

The ConversationBeing hated worked for Just Stop Oil
More from The Conversation UK

Hello from post-Equinox heat wave here in the sacred Mojave.

We see with the return of the sun also the return of young tree leaves, bees, dragonflies, and so much more. The cover crops I failed to grow last year are sprouting en masse in newly finished infiltration basins, irrigated with greywater from the communal house, and I've even seen mushrooms that I've inoculated into straw beds fruit after rains. So much of this feels like hope. Our young chickens are enjoying their first unsupervised forays into their little fenced run (until they're big enough to trust foraging), and we saw our first Great Horned Owl a few weeks ago.

Our website is live, and I hope you'll join us if you haven't already. We're releasing our first newsletter Monday, trying to put to digital paper Equinox contemplations, and bring you along on this journey with us.

rancholibertad.com

It's free, and we appreciate your support.

We are also trying to get a few trees in the ground before it gets too hot. If you feel up to monetary support to help us with purchasing saplings, we don't have our own ko-fi or paid tiers of the newsletter offering, yet, but we can accept donations (or purchases that support the ranch) through Siin's ko-fi:

https://ko-fi/sigillosacro

We appreciate & love you all, being to being. Stay safe out there.

Siin & Star

Rancho de la LibertadRancho de la LibertadA pioneering desert and community regeneration project located in Wonder Valley, California.

"n his timely new book, French climate activist Clément Sénéchal argues that the environmental movement itself is also partly to blame. Pourquoi l’écologie perd toujours (Why Environmentalism Always Loses) is a survey of the increased pessimism among ecologists, such as could only be expected from someone who has devoted the first years of his adult life to the cause. The book charts how Sénéchal, a former campaigner with Greenpeace France, lost faith in the multinational NGO — and the broader mode of environmental politics in which such groups are embedded. “As I broach middle age, my generation finds itself in an ontologically degraded natural world, in a negative reality,” Sénéchal writes in the introduction. “We still have our lives to lead, but it seems like they’ll only play out in a continuum of dead-ends.”

For the author, the original sin of political ecology lies in its failure to establish itself as a durable mass movement, picking up where broad-based struggles such as the labor movement, feminism, and anti-racism leave off. Despite ever-present warnings about climate change, environmental politics and policy remain the preserve of well-educated and genteel urban dwellers, the “new ecological class” as the late philosopher Bruno Latour lauded in a recent pamphlet. This demographic’s concern and sense of urgency is undoubtedly sincere. But its domination over the movement’s main organizations — from legacy NGOs such as Greenpeace, Oxfam, and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) to the tepid Green parties of western Europe — has been politically catastrophic. Since the 1970s, when that organizational ecosystem first took form, environmentalism has diverged from what Sénéchal views as its natural home: in a working-class politics that incorporates the defense of the environment into the critique of capitalism."

jacobin.com/2025/03/environmen

jacobin.comWhy Environmentalists Are Still LosingDissatisfaction at established green parties and environmental NGOs has fed the rise of more confrontational forms of activism. The task can’t just be to raise awareness but to mobilize millions of people in fighting for their own interests.