Culture Why I Quit Being a Climate Activist - TL;DR: Because not enough melanin

https://www.vice.com/en_ca/article/...g-a-climate-activist?utm_source=vicetwitterus
https://web.archive.org/web/2020020...g-a-climate-activist?utm_source=vicetwitterus
(Archived)

The climate movement is overwhelmingly white. So I walked away.

In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan battered Southeast Asia, killing 6,300 people in the Philippines alone. The three-storey surge rolled over parts of the city of Tacloban, hitting my family’s neighbourhood the hardest. Schools that were designated storm shelters entombed those taking refuge from the rising waters. My aunt, like many women in the Philippines—a country made up of 7,000 islands—can’t swim. She, my uncle, and cousin were missing or presumed dead.

We only found out they survived after three grief-ridden days, from a family member who had made his way through the ravaged province with the military. Their home and the fish farm they depended on for their livelihood were devastated, and they still haven’t fully recovered.

As a climate activist in Berlin, I felt required to tell my Filipino family’s experience during speeches and rallies because this form of “storytelling” was the only thing that would move a mostly white European audience to an emotional response of climate urgency—even though it was exhausting telling the story, especially since any mention of hurricanes in the news gives me anxiety.

But after a while I realized I would only be called upon when climate organizations needed an inspiring story or a “diverse” voice, contacts for a campaign, or to participate in a workshop for “fun” when everyone else on the (all-white) project was getting paid.

Whenever I would question the whiteness of these spaces and how strategies didn’t take race into account, I would be met with uncomfortable silences. The last time, at a nationwide movement-building workshop last April, I was asked, “Well then, why are you even here?”

So I decided not to be there anymore. After four years of helping organize direct actions, speeches, workshops, and countless video calls, I started hiding and declining requests. I was burned out.

I felt guilty—like I was letting my people down. But I also felt let down by the lack of support when I had gone to the streets. I stopped talking to people who didn’t relate, including friends who were telling me to come join them now that the marches were becoming more popular. I was also in bed sick a lot. I stayed at home from climate marches telling people my knee was injured and kept to myself, needing to regain all the energy I had put into organizing.

Even being present doesn’t always mean being seen or heard. Last week Ugandan activist Vanessa Nakate found herself cropped from a picture and dialogue as the only African on a youth panel in the Davos World Economic Forum. She said the erasure “showed how we are valued.”

Many other climate activists of colour have described similar experiences of tokenism. Māori and disability rights campaigner Kera Sherwood-O’Regan (Kāi Tahu iwi from Te Waipounamu) found that as an Indigenous person at the UN climate conferences, organizers would suggest showing support and “passing the mic,” but the same people would be the ones taking up space in negotiations and speaking to the media.

At the same time, because I am Filipino-German and look ethnically ambiguous, it’s hard for me to emphasize the urgency or danger of climate activism as a Filipina—I am German too after all. Similar to what Colombian American climate activist Jamie Margolin said, my presence “toed a line between inclusion and exclusion.”

When I voiced my exasperation on Twitter, Jefferson Estela, a 21-year-old activist with Youth Strike 4 Climate Philippines, replied, “People are expecting us to do so many things, but when we ask for support no one hears us. White activists can protest whenever they want because they have homes, jobs, a huge amount of freedom of expression. BELIEVE ME, WE WANT TO DO BIG THINGS, but what's stopping us? A future and life that is at risk.”

Climate activism in Germany is mainstream thanks to the longevity and popularity of the German Green Party, which was formed in 1980. But generally the German climate movement is a white space, where there is little awareness of global inequality in the climate crisis.

Sometimes it’s the seemingly little things, like climate action meaning “die-ins,” lynching reenactments, or dancing in the street to disrupt public transport.

Sometimes it’s being asked time and again what whiteness, capitalism, and inequality have to do with climate change.

Other times it’s more major, like how activists here promote veganism as the single biggest way to reduce their carbon footprint, but ignore how people have been killed after protesting against the sourcing of plant-based foods like palm oil on Indigenous lands.

The movement’s failure to address these inequalities is ultimately why I found myself needing to walk away.

In recent years, the Philippines has had the highest number of environmental defenders murdered, where arrests and disappearances have been attributed to combating “communist insurgency.” Targeted groups include the Filipino research NGO I volunteered with during the UN climate conference in Bonn, Germany, and the Filipino women's collective Gabriela, which I also worked with in Berlin before I stepped back.

Anti-racism and anti-capitalism need to be made part of organizing. If “Green” policies fail to consider anti-racism and migrant rights, how is any person of colour supposed to feel voting for them or organizing in the same spaces?

Fortunately, there is now a growing BIPOC Environmental & Climate Justice Collective in Berlin, where we share these experiences of being silenced or tokenized and work together on how to link anti-racism and inequality in climate justice.

As Sherwood-O’Regan said, “As we grow and climate change becomes a harsher reality, privileged activists need to learn to de-centre themselves and meaningfully support Indigenous, disabled, queer, global south, POC, and other marginalized people who are on the frontlines of climate change.”

We need to feel respected and feel valued in our climate activism. Until the rest of the movement understands that our stories may also provide solutions, I am sharing my activism on my own terms.

- End of Article -
 
This is the Simpsons episode when Lisa wanted to play football.

"That's right! A woman of color wants to join!"
"Oh, that's great: we want to welcome all voices, if you have a experience of being excluded, we want to know!"
"...yeah, and... erm... we should make people understand white people is guilty!"
"Indeed! That's why many of us, white people, are part of this, we wanna make our part to solve what our ancestors did!".

639px-lisacrying.jpg


We should name this after Lisa, Lisa Simpson Syndrome, when you join a club expecting to be the wokest voice but everybody else is as woke as you are.
 
Isn't this the fault of PoC for not participating? How, specifically, is this the white man's fault? Human caused Climate Change is one of those important issues you should research heavily before you choose a side to stand on. If anything the pettiness of this article just makes PoC seem lazy, as if they want Whitey to do all the work.
 
I'm not a supporter of it because they are full of shit and they use whatever data they get to further their narrative while ignoring previous faulty narratives. Take this wiki entry for an example:

The 2019 Atlantic hurricane season was the fourth consecutive year of above-average and damaging seasons dating back to 2016. It is tied with 1969 as the fourth-most active Atlantic hurricane season on record in terms of named storms,[nb 1] with 18 named storms and 20 tropical cyclones in total, although many were weak and short-lived, especially towards the end of the season.

I distinctly recall being told by climate speds that climate change would cause us to have fewer but bigger storms. So the 2019 season kind bucks that right? I'm sure they explain it though...oh they won't? Oh but guys it was above-average and ties 1969. Good thing we had a network of satellites to track storms in 1968..oh wait...or 1888 oh right not then either.

Another example is the glacier in Greenland that was always pointed to as a harbinger of global demise! It started adding ice. The response from climate speds: It is only temporary.

Yes dipshit the climate is temporary. That's the fucking point. We are still coming out of an ice age and in the future there will be another ice age.

I swear climate change spedery is just a fear of change and desperation to cling to mommy's skirt.

My biggest gripe with with the climate change activists and their groups is that always seem to turn into doomsday cults where they worship the apocalypse more than they are trying to change anything. The biggest offenders are Extinction Rebellion, I don't know what they think they will accomplish with their methods, the only thing they seem to achieve is making people hate climate change activists.
 
Why did Vice to shit. I remembered back in 2011 and 2012 watching those Vice documentaries about Liberia, Pakistan, Libya, etc. and how much of a shithole those place were back then, well they still are kinda shitholes is but you get my point. They made entertaining a good content as far as it seems a long time ago.

How did it end up being woke trash that it is today? I heard even Gavin McInnes (who is pretty right winged) co-founded it too.

This shit is just appalling.
 
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This is why I don't do IRL activism, whereever you go it's just filled with sjw spergs who get nothing done and if you push back against it you're called a bigot or whatever else
 
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Speaking as someone who is environmentally conscious, shit like this is why I feel any efforts are gonna be in vain. A swathe of these ‘activists’ don’t really care about the planet, it’s just the dressing of the day for what their real interests are, like dismantling capitalism or building a Queer Latinx Utopia. If fossil fuel companies aren’t funding these people already I suggest they do, they’re very good at inserting themselves into movements and destroying them from within due to their obnoxious attitudes and personalities.
 
If anything the pettiness of this article just makes PoC seem lazy, as if they want Whitey to do all the work.

IF? Lol, that's exactly what these woke PoC want: "yeah, despite my parents have money and I had all best education, I'm oppressed because of white people so give em more money as reparashions".

true is that normal non-white people have jobs and don't have time to lose in this shit.
 
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