精东影业 Presents: How to Get Off Fossil Fuels Quickly鈥攁nd Fairly
When analyzing the Green New Deal, author and plant scientist Stan Cox says it has two distinct parts: 鈥淭he 鈥榥ew deal鈥 part is pretty good, with its provisions for job and income guarantees, for economic justice and racial justice, and for Indigenous rights and workers鈥 rights,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he 鈥榞reen鈥 part of the Green New Deal, in contrast, is inadequate. It鈥檚 inadequate to the point of even being self-defeating.鈥
Rather than cutting greenhouse emissions 鈥渁s much as is technologically feasible,鈥 as the Green New Deal suggests, Cox calls for a direct mechanism to drive fossil fuels out of the economy entirely. This is the central theme in Cox鈥檚 new book: 鈥: Ending the Climate Emergency While We Still Can.鈥 In a teach-in co-hosted by Yes! Magazine, Cox discussed the current ecological crises and tangible steps toward sustainable and equitable resolution.
Cox was joined by his colleagues from The Land Institute in Salina, Kansas: writer and teacher Aubrey Streit Krug, who directs the Ecosphere Studies program; and Wes Jackson, founder and president emeritus of , and an early leader in the sustainable agriculture movement. Together they broke down the history, policy, and societal shifts they think will be necessary to make just and lasting change.
To understand why we, as a species, have not been successful at turning the current corner, Wes Jackson looks back at deep history鈥攈umans began with agriculture and discovered highly dense carbon along the way. 鈥淲e end up with an industrial economy, and we become increasingly a species out of context.鈥 To put people back in the ecological context in which they belong, Jackson says, we should embrace constraints rather than try to outsmart them.
To do so fairly will require concerted effort and collective action. It requires people to not just care about human communities and the more-than-human world, but to care for them, Aubrey Streit Krug says. 鈥淚f we were able to begin to figure out how to value care work,鈥 she says, 鈥渢hat would be part of a radical reorientation toward justice, and it would also be building the kind of social capacity we need to start and sustain change.鈥
Watch the entire conversation above, or read the transcript here.
Breanna Draxler
is a senior editor at 精东影业, where she leads coverage of climate and environmental justice, and Native rights. She has nearly a decade of experience editing, reporting, and writing for national magazines including National Geographic聽online and Grist, among others. She collaborated on a climate action guide for聽Audubon Magazine that won a National Magazine Award in 2020. She recently served as a board member for the Society of Environmental Journalists and the Northwest Science Writers Association.聽She has a master鈥檚 degree in environmental journalism from the University of Colorado Boulder. Breanna is based out of the traditional territories of the Coast Salish people, but has worked in newsrooms on both coasts and in between. She previously held staff positions at聽bioGraphic, Popular Science, and聽Discover Magazine.
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