Good evening.
Earlier this year, I did something
I have never done before in my life,
something I never thought I would do.
I got arrested.
(Applause) (Cheers)
Yep, that's me up there,
being carried away by four policemen
from Oxford Circus
during the Extinction Rebellion
protests this April.
Now, I suspect that, some of you
may be wondering why on earth
a respectable, middle-class, 71-year-old,
(Laughter)
granny like me would do such a thing,
especially at a time of life when many
my age are settling into retirement,
enjoying the grandkids
and maybe planning the odd cruise.
Well, the answer is really very simple.
I am afraid, and I am angry.
I am afraid because I've been
listening to the climate scientists,
who tell us that time is running out
to stop this beautiful
Goldilocks planet of ours
from tipping over into irreversible
climate and ecological disaster.
I fear for the future
of children now alive,
let alone those still to be born,
and I am angry, very angry,
with those in positions of power,
who could do something about it
but who seem to lack all political will
and absolutely any sense of urgency.
If eminent scientists,
whose knowledge I respect,
tell me that all that I love is in danger,
well, I'm sorry, I'm going
to do something about it,
even if it does mean getting
into trouble with the law.
Now, I suppose at this point I ought
to be giving you some facts and figures,
but quite honestly, I don't see the point.
Facts and figures
just don't seem to cut it,
those same eminent scientists
have been giving us facts and figures
for decades now,
and nothing seems to change.
Carbon levels in the atmosphere
continue to rise,
and the fossil fuel industries continue
to flourish with business as usual.
Well, OK, I'll just give you one fact.
The last four years
have been the hottest ever recorded
since records began in 1850,
and 2019 is looking set to top the lot.
Now, this does not mean, yipee,
we can all holiday
on the coast of Cornwall.
No, it means, extreme weather events,
it means flooding and draughts
and wildfires and dying coral reefs
and food shortages,
and thousands, if not millions
of climate refugees
fleeing their uninhabitable homes.
Estimates vary over how long we've got
before we reach that 1.5 degree increase
in average global temperatures
beyond which we dare not go.
Some say we have as much as 10-11 years,
others a good deal less.
Whatever the case,
surely there can be no denying
that we are facing an existential crisis,
the like of which, humanity
has never faced before.
That is why I want to use
my TEDx talk tonight
to call out to my generation,
the baby boomers.
The school children
are in the streets right now,
protesting against their stolen futures
and demanding urgent action,
and we should be with them,
out there with them, in solidarity.
After all, it has been on our watch
that the worst of all this has happened.
So, baby boomers,
consider this your call-up.
We need an army of rebel retirees.
The earth, your children
and your grandchildren need you.
Or else one day you might hear
one of them say to you
'And what did you do
in the climate crisis, Grandma?'
Now, I'd just like to say a few words
to that younger generation.
Well, only one word really.
'Sorry.'
You have every reason
to be very angry with us.
All I can say is, that we did not realise
what we were doing at the time.
But some did,
and they will have to answer to you
and the court of future generations.
When I join your youth strikes,
and I read your placards,
and I hear your impassioned words,
it moves me to tears.
You and Greta Thunberg
have my total support,
so please, talk to your parents
and your grandparents.
Explain to them just what's at stake
and get them to join you on the streets.
And now, a few words to my sons'
generation, the ones in the middle.
You have demanding jobs, young families,
and yes, elderly parents to care for.
Your lives are busy and stressful,
and time is at a premium.
But when you do have a moment,
you must be concerned about
your children's and your own future.
Why not show your parents this TEDx talk
and see if you can enlist their support?
I know that some of you
have taken the very difficult decision
not to bring children into a dying planet,
and I really respect that decision,
though it makes me very sad.
Others of you do all that you can
to keep your carbon footprint to a minimum
but have little time for activism.
I do understand.
I didn't either at your age.
Allow me to share with you
just a little bit of my story.
I have to confess that I'm a latecomer
to activism of any kind.
Although I was a teenager in the '60s,
I never got involved with Ban the Bomb
or the Greenham Common Women,
and my very first march
wasn't until 2003 against the Iraq War.
But during my 50s and 60s,
I have grown increasingly concerned
about the environment.
I can't deny that it was my love
of animals that first drew me in.
I grieved for that poor iconic polar bear
in the melting ice of the Arctic
and the terrified orangutans
in the burning forests of Indonesia.
And closer to home,
I mourn our own disappearing wildlife.
And then, on top of all that,
there is the sheer
outrageous injustice of it all.
That those who have done
the least to cause this problem
are even now suffering its worst effects.
In 2009, I could bear the pain no longer.
We moved from France to Bristol,
just so that I could get engaged
in environmental activism,
because for me, activism
is the antidote to despair.
And so for the last 10 years,
I have dedicated myself,
along with others,
to campaigning for life on earth.
And that is why I so want to call out
to more of my generation,
many more, to get on board.
I love this quotation by Maggie Kuhn.
She founded the Gray Panthers
in America, and for me it says it all.
'The old, having the benefit
of life experience,
time to get things done,
and the least to lose
by sticking their necks out,
are in the perfect position to serve
as advocates for the larger public good.
We must act as the elders of the tribe,
looking out for the best
interests of the future
and preserving the precious compact
between the generations.'
She's right, we do have the benefit
of hard won life experience
and with it a certain amount of wisdom.
This is something only
the elderly can offer,
so let's give up striving to be young.
This youth-obsessed society of ours,
now, more than ever,
needs the wisdom of wise elders.
I will never forget the words
of a young man who said to me
that when he saw old people lying
on the bridges in London last November,
he felt as though it gave him
permission to be there.
Age does confer a certain amount of wisdom
so let's not be afraid to use it.
We also have something else
that many others do not have:
time.
So much so, that some of us feel lonely
and isolated and lacking in purpose.
Age UK has estimated
that there are over 1.3 million
lonely retirees
in this country at the moment.
Don't be lonely; get involved.
Extinction Rebellion
has a group called the XR Elders,
and in Bristol some of them
call themselves the Aged Agitators.
Here is a picture of them, marching
through the streets of London this October
in their splendid silver cloaks.
They brought dignity and gravitas
to the proceedings,
and they did not risk arrest.
(Cheers) (Applause)
I can promise you, you will never
feel lonely on a demonstration.
And you never know,
you just might find your tribe.
Maggie Kuhn also says that we have
little to lose by sticking our necks out,
and I certainly found that to be true
when I got arrested.
All that I risked was 12 hours
in the local police station
and a 70 pound fine.
The police treated me
with the greatest kindness and respect.
Now, I do realise
that as an old, white woman,
I have a certain privilege here,
something that not all
sectors of our society can enjoy,
so all the more reason to use it.
Seeing older people, get arrested
has a particularly powerful effect:
it breaks the stereotype of the activist.
But of course,
you don't have to get arrested.
There is so much else
that needs doing behind the scenes.
There's office work
and catering and legal observing
and welfare and media and driving.
So much else.
But if you do choose to get arrested
and to lay your body on the line,
it certainly makes an impact.
In the Native American culture,
there is something called
the 7th generation principle.
It holds that for every decision we make,
we must take into account
its effect on our descendants
seven generations into the future.
The elders of the tribe
were the custodians of that principle.
Sadly, in our mad, materialistic world,
we've lost that role.
So, let us reclaim our rightful place
as the elders of the tribe,
and with it find our tribe, our community,
our sense of identity and purpose.
We are living in a time
of unprecedented, dramatic change.
We, the elders, now more than ever
have a key role to play
at this crucial time.
Future generations are counting on us.
So please join the rebellion,
support the youth strikes
and do all that you can
in the remaining active years
you have left to work for a safe earth.
We owe it to the children,
to leave them the best possible legacy.
Indeed, the only thing
they will ever really need,
a diverse, sustainable
and inhabitable planet.
(Applause)