Sir David Attenborough to 60 Minutes on climate change: "A crime has been committed"

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by solar-cabin
image for Sir David Attenborough to 60 Minutes on climate change: "A crime has been committed"

Sir David Attenborough was 28-years-old when he convinced his bosses at the BBC to let him travel the world and document his explorations. He has perpetually been on the road ever since.

For nearly 70 years, the knighted Briton and his teams of filmmakers have traveled to some of the most remote places on earth to explore the natural world.

"I want [people] to know…not the human story particularly, but the story of life on this earth, how it how it developed," Attenborough told 60 Minutes.

Now 94, Attenborough has witnessed the evolution of the natural world more closely than most.

Attenborough studied geology and zoology before embarking on a career in television and film. Ever since, he has been an animal advocate, conservationist, and serves as an ambassador for the World Wildlife Fund.

For much of his career, Attenborough chose not to preach conservation in his films. In 2002, the naturalist told 60 Minutes correspondent Ed Bradley in an interview that his role was to show an "objective depiction of the natural world."

"The most important job is persuading people that the natural world is complex and wonderful and one of the most precious things we have," Attenborough said to 60 Minutes in 2002. "And if you're going to do that, then every time you do it, you show the facts, you end up by saying, 'And it's all disappearing and it's all your fault,' people will stop viewing."

Until recently, Attenborough's films shied away from making sweeping declarations about the planet's changing climate.

Attenborough's latest project includes a book and film both titled, "A Life on Our Planet." The documentary premiers on Netflix on October 4. He calls this latest project his "witness statement," and on 60 Minutes told correspondent Anderson Cooper "a crime has been committed" against the planet.

"We're both in broadcasting, if you're going be telling something as though it's true, you better be sure it's true," Attenborough said to Cooper. "So I didn't say anything much about the world being in ecological peril until I was absolutely sure that what I was talking about was correct."

Attenborough during the shoot for this week's 60 Minutes story

Attenborough no longer minces words nor leaves his viewers wondering where he stands on the issue of climate change. In the new film, he laments Earth's decline and states emphatically, "Our planet is headed for disaster."

Despite his stark warning about the planet's peril, Attenborough told Cooper it is not too late to salvage it, if countries work together and societies alter their behavior. The nonagenarian remains hopeful for the future.

"There's a huge movement around the world of people from all nations, young people who can see what is happening to the world, and demanding that their government should take action," Attenborough said. "And that's the best hope that I have."

The video above was produced by Keith Zubrow and Sarah Shafer Prediger. It was edited by Sarah Shafer Prediger.

Photos and video courtesy of Silverback Films, WWF and Getty Images.

Meatslinger on September 28th, 2020 at 13:32 UTC »

If I lived with a roommate, broke open the gas main and siphoned it for my own uses and then left it pumping unspent fuel into the house, and just otherwise trashed the place and left it in an unlivable, toxic, condemned state, I’d be in a world of legal and criminal trouble.

But do the same thing to the planet we all have to share and you get accolades and articles praising your shrewd business acumen. The highest corporate achievers are the very same ones poisoning us to death and dooming our children to short, miserable lives on a dying world that will eventually snuff them out catastrophically.

grpagrati on September 28th, 2020 at 10:13 UTC »

By the time our grandchildren will be old enough to sue us we'll be dead. The perfect crime

solar-cabin on September 28th, 2020 at 09:47 UTC »

From the article:

" Attenborough no longer minces words nor leaves his viewers wondering where he stands on the issue of climate change. In the new film, he laments Earth's decline and states emphatically, "Our planet is headed for disaster."

Despite his stark warning about the planet's peril, Attenborough told Cooper it is not too late to salvage it, if countries work together and societies alter their behavior. The nonagenarian remains hopeful for the future. 

"There's a huge movement around the world of people from all nations, young people who can see what is happening to the world, and demanding that their government should take action," Attenborough said. "And that's the best hope that I have."