“This is the moment” + opportunities to take action!
Ryan Hagen
Huge sustainability nerd. Writing a book! Founder, Crowdsourcing Sustainability. Empowering people to help reverse global heating asap. Write newsletter for 200,000+. TEDx & UN recognized | Speaker | LinkedIn Top Voices
Surprise! I know I just sent you a newsletter two days ago. But this one is more time-sensitive than usual so I wanted to get it out as quickly as possible.
Two things for you today:
Did you know?
A whopping?29%?of Americans say they would “definitely” or “probably” join a campaign to convince elected officials to take action on climate?if they were asked to by someone they like and respect.
But only 1% are currently active in such campaigns.
That means there are?93 million people?in the US (28% of the population) who are sitting on the sidelines right now, waiting for their names to be called.
It’s time to start calling on these wonderful people – our friends, family, and broader networks – to join us.
And if you’re one of the people who simply hasn’t been asked to help yet, consider this your official invitation ??
Climate Changemakers
This is a core part of Climate Changemakers’s theory of change.
Climate Changemakers is an organization for anyone who is concerned about climate change and wants to take?effective?climate action with others. You don’t need to prepare or have any prior experience to join them. In fact, 67% of volunteers have never taken action before joining Climate Changemakers!
It’s a community of people striving to spend one hour a week advocating for strong climate policies and working to elect climate champions.
And they’re good at what they do!
They’ve gotten policymakers to make commitments and co-sponsor bills, newspapers to publish their Letters to the Editor, key stakeholders like CEOs to hear their customers’ climate concerns, and much more.
Perhaps key to their success, they’re committed to being non-partisan and focus on high-leverage, no-brainer policies that are science-based and rooted in justice.
Take action with the Climate Changemakers community
There are some awesome actions lined up for today, tomorrow, and next week!
From Gabrielle:
“On the 27th and 28th we will continue to advocate for the removal of fossil fuel subsidies and the inclusion of climate provisions in the Build Back Better Act that will lead to 50% emissions reduction by 2030. We will offer two ways of doing this:
1) scheduling and preparing for meetings with congressional staff, or
2) calling and emailing our members of Congress.
On November 2nd, 3rd, and 4th, we will be hosting a special week of action centered on the COP26 conference in Glasgow. We will reach out to local businesses we know and ask them to sign onto a joint letter pledging alignment with the COP26 emissions reduction goals as a business and calling on elected leaders to do their part.”
You can find more details on the events and them to your calendar?here!
I’m personally excited to be joining for an hour of climate action tomorrow, Thursday the 28th at 5 pm PT.
Hope to see some of y’all there!
The podcast!
In this episode with Dr. Eliza Nemser and Gabrielle Jorgensen, we cover the awesome work Climate Changemakers is doing, tips for crafting and personalizing your climate story, the reconciliation bill, eliminating fossil fuel studies, democracy reform, and more!
(Eliza is the Executive Director and Co-Founder of Climate Changemakers. And Gabrielle is the Advocacy Director. Recorded on October 14th.)
It was an absolute pleasure getting to know Eliza and Gabrielle.
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Timeline
0:00 Intro.
1:00 Eliza’s and Gabrielle’s climate stories.
7:35 Climate Changemakers’s theory of change.
10:30 Examples of work – what’s it like to participate in action with Climate Changemakers?
15:20 Gabrielle’s advice for people on how to craft and personalize your own climate story (super important!)
19:25 How can people get involved and what does that look like?
22:45 The reconciliation bill (aka the climate bill).
30:15 How can people help now? What actions are coming up and what’s the strategy behind them?
33:30 Policy priorities! Eliminating fossil fuel studies, democracy reform, voting rights, keep it in the ground act, and the filibuster.
46:15 Final messages and calls to action.
Favorite quotes
“This is the moment we need to actually roll up our sleeves and get involved.”?– Eliza Nemser
“Effective advocacy takes longer than a couple clicks. It just does…This is a practice of civic engagement – in the name of climate action.”?– Eliza Nemser
?
“You start from this building block level of being able to put climate advocacy into your own words – take a policy issue and kind of find yourself in it and that will give you the confidence to really speak from the heart…really speak about it in a way that touches the people in your community or whoever your audience is.”?– Gabrielle Jorgensen
Gabrielle’s advice on crafting and personalizing your climate story:
“Think of the space that you occupy, and how you identify yourself. So maybe it’s your profession, maybe it’s your relationship to other people – like you identify as a parent or a granddaughter or whatever relational space you occupy. Your geographic area – maybe you live in a coastal city, maybe you live in an agricultural community where you’ve been experiencing drought lately.
Orient yourself relationally and geographically and vocationally and think about all of the ways that climate change could really touch your life in any of those circles. If you’ve oriented your reason for caring about climate change in that personalized way you can then just pretty simply connect it to the policy issue.”?– Gabrielle Jorgensen
“Finding yourself in a policy – figuring out your why you care, how it impacts you – that is incredibly important work, in part, because there are empirical data showing that, in terms of an end goal of influencing decision maker opinion, what works is personalized authentic messages. What doesn’t work is high volumes of generic messages…it also really just helps you become a more effective communicator in your daily life and and then do that work of getting the people around you to care more and be more motivated to to join in as a change-maker.”?– Eliza Nemser
“We all need to get involved and be part of the solution…those of us who are really climate conscious, climate concerned need to do more than vote.”?– Eliza Nemser
Again, hope you enjoy the convo and hope some of y’all check out an hour of action with me and the Climate Changemakers community!
Take care,
Ryan
P.S. Crowdsourcing Sustainability is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit run by myself and 5 wonderful volunteers.?If you believe this work is valuable, please consider?investing in us?so we can keep increasing our climate impact.?Our 2021 budget is $78,198. So far we've raised $23,478. Large or small, your donation is deeply appreciated!
If you're unable to comfortably give financially, sharing the newsletter with a friend also helps a lot! (email newsletter?|?this LinkedIn newsletter)
Sign up for our main sustainability newsletter here?to receive every newsletter I write when I write it and get access to the growing Crowdsourcing Sustainability community on slack where you can connect and collaborate with others working to reverse global warming!
Finally, you can find us on all the socials?here, as well as listen to the podcast and other good stuff.
(This article was originally published here on Crowdsourcing Sustainability.)
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3 年??????????
Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
3 年Thank you. I am involved in a few climate Activist groups including 360 with who ill be with Friday at the Downtown St Louis Federal Reserve to pressure fhem to stop all future fossil fuel projects I will check thus group out. .
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3 年Ryan, is there a way to count carbon foot print in realtime for an average person, or a small company and townships? how do we know we are doing better if we dont know where we are? If we look at ourselves as little wee ants, contributing to a nest of activities how do we value the weight of what to do next? or what not to do? some things are very obvious... but what is not obvious, not publicly aknowledged and enforced is where the bigger issue is. can you start a mathematical challange to bring forward at the COP26 that can help every citizen look at and publically aknowledge how they are contributing to the crisses? my neighbors mow their lawns to the ground, my yard is 12 °C cooler in the heat of summer. they are burning yard waste that cools the gound and feeds entomology and sustains wildlife. individual municipal bylaws enforce these practices. how can citizens be forced to be accountable? if they are accountable at home they will be accountable at work. it is the percieved participation that needs to be addressed locally to contribute to real quantifiable change.