Applause at Global Summit as Ocasio-Cortez Calls Climate Crisis 'Consequence of Our Unsustainable Way of Life'

Authored by commondreams.org and submitted by mvea

Freshman Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez advocated for a Global Green New Deal to combat the climate crisis that humanity has created with an "unsustainable way of life" during a speech that closed out the C40 World Mayors Summit in Copenhagen on Friday.

"It is not a coincidence that the truth is controversial. None of this is a coincidence, because climate change is not a coincidence or a scientific anomaly."

The New York congresswoman took her first trip abroad as an elected official to deliver the closing keynote address at the event organized by mayors of major cities around the world who are committed to taking ambitious climate action.

Ocasio-Cortez's speech—described on social media as "rousing" and "awe-inspiring"—touched on costly and destructive extreme weather events, journalists' inadequate reporting on climate issues, politicians' unwillingness to pursue bold enough policies to meet the goals of the Paris agreement, and what actions and reforms she believes are necessary on a global scale.

"The climate crisis is already here," she said. "On this note I speak to you not as an elected official or public figure, but I speak to you as a human being—a woman whose dreams of motherhood now taste bittersweet because of what I know about our children's future, and that our actions are responsible for bringing their most dire possibilities into focus. I speak to you as a daughter and descendant of colonized peoples who have already begun to suffer."

Watch (Ocasio-Cortez's speech starts at 18:00):

AOC GOES GLOBAL: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) delivers the keynote address at the C40 summit on the climate crisis. This is her first international trip as a lawmaker. https://t.co/d7trnnHP7D — NowThis (@nowthisnews) October 11, 2019

"It is not a coincidence that these disasters get relatively little media coverage, and that even less of the coverage dares to mention climate change," said Ocasio-Cortez, referencing Hurricane Maria's devastation of Puerto Rico. "It is not a coincidence that the truth is controversial. None of this is a coincidence, because climate change is not a coincidence or a scientific anomaly. Climate change is a consequence. It is a consequence of our unsustainable way of life."

"Because it is unsustainable to organize our society as we have, centered on prioritizing personal gain and profit over any and all human or planetary considerations," she continued. "It is unsustainable to naively believe that building a wall can shield ourselves from humanity's collective destiny. It is unsustainable to promote amnesia around gross injustices and ignorance of our past—to abdicate responsibility, simply because it was our ancestors who committed them and not us."

"Our children bear responsibility for our inaction, despite the fact that they didn't make the choice," Ocasio-Cortez said. "And frankly, it is unsustainable to continue to believe that our system of runaway, unaccountable, lawbreaking pursuit of profit, whose inequality is so socially destabilizing that it is giving rise to authoritarians who burn our forests and challenge the democracies that listen to basic science, and to think that that has nothing to do with this."

The congresswoman's remarks were welcomed by members of the audience—including Daniel Zarrilli, chief climate policy adviser to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who shared some highlights from the speech on Twitter:

"She got a rockstar welcome in that audience," Nicholas Reece, a city councillor from Melbourne, Australia, told The Guardian. "There's just something about her which is really mobilizing and electrifying people around the world, particularly young people."

The Guardian reported that "from the moment she began speaking, the main hall at the summit became completely still, and when she finished, the ovation she received far exceeded that received by the veteran climate campaigner and former Vice President Al Gore, Denmark's prime minister, Mette Frederiksen; or the U.N. secretary general, António Guterres."

Congresswoman @AOC: "Our greatest choice is to move toward a cooperative, collaborative world that aligns with scientific consensus whose economies center around and benefit the middle and lower classes." #TheFutureWeWant — C40 Cities (@c40cities) October 11, 2019

After speaking to the mayors, Ocasio-Cortez addressed the People's Climate March in Copenhagen, where she urged the activists to "make sure the politicians sweat a little bit" and specifically called out U.S. President Donald Trump and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who maintain a friendly relationship and have both garnered global condemnation for their environmental policies.

"We have to face the oil and coal industry, the CO2-emitting industry, Wall Street, Bolsonaro, Donald Trump," Ocasio-Cortez reportedly said, eliciting cheers from the crowd. "We can't and won't win by staying home."

"It is so incredible," said Ocasio-Cortez, "to see the thousands of people out here in the rain, under umbrellas, doing whatever it takes to fight for our future and ensure that we have a just and equitable planet for all people and our children."

Bigbigcheese on October 15th, 2019 at 18:26 UTC »

Economists 30 years ago: Hey, why can't we use that incentive system of profit and personal gain to solve the problem? I'm sure a carbon tax will help!

Economists 30 years later: Guys plz...

kuroimakina on October 15th, 2019 at 17:15 UTC »

A problem I see with all this is you’re never going to get anywhere by telling people “you need to sacrifice your quality of life.” Not going to happen.

But, at the same time, do we really have to sacrifice so much? We do need to stop with all the single use plastics and such, but, when it comes to things like AC, driving, etc - that can be more easily solved. Switch all energy to solar, wind, nuclear, etc. things with little to no carbon footprint, things that are renewable (or efficient enough to last until energy storage is solved, in the case of nuclear). Switch all cars to electric. Boom - you can now drive your cars, crank up the AC, etc without worrying about your power usage causing tons of CO2.

Then for meat, we are making great strides in lab grown meat, as well as meat substitutes. Just push those.

You won’t get very far saying you need to sacrifice your quality of life. But if instead you can say “we should do this, your quality of life will be essentially the same or even better, and it has a bonus of being good for the earth,” you’ll get a lot more people on board. We can still live pretty damn good lives if we take advantage of technology.

TryingPatiently on October 15th, 2019 at 14:49 UTC »

The ideal of constant growth and expansion has to end.