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Why I protest for climate justice

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    Pat Mitchell: It's so great
    to see you, my friend.
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    Jane Fonda: Hi Pat.
    It's great to be with you.
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    PM: Jane, for the ones who may not
    have seen the extraordinary coverage
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    around the world of Fire Drill Fridays
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    and the impact that they have already had,
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    talk to us about the origin of this idea,
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    this particular response
    to the climate crisis.
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    JF: I was very inspired by Greta Thunberg,
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    the Swedish student,
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    and by the young school climate strikers.
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    Greta says, we've got to get
    out of our comfort zone.
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    We have to behave like our house
    is burning, because it is.
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    And so she really struck a chord in me,
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    and then, learning that just about
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    a hundred percent
    of climate scientists agree,
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    they agree that a drastic
    emergency is upon us,
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    that it is human-caused.
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    But they said,
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    we can do something about it.
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    We have the time, the technology,
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    the tools.
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    We have everything we need
    except political will
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    to meet the challenge,
    and it's an enormous challenge.
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    We have 11 years, many say, a decade,
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    and I thought,
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    Oh I'm so lucky
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    that I am healthy and living
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    in a decade where we who are alive
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    can actually make the difference.
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    We can make the difference
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    as to whether there's going
    to be a livable future or not.
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    What a glorious responsibility we have.
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    We have to step up to the plate,
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    and when you're famous,
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    there's a lot of things that you can do.
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    You have a bigger platform.
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    So I decided that, like Greta,
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    I was going to put my body on the line
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    and move to the center
    of American power, Washington, DC,
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    and have a rally every Friday
    like the students do,
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    and we work with the students.
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    They speak at my rallies
    and I speak at their rallies,
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    and that after we speak,
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    we engage in civil disobedience
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    and risk getting arrested.
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    Civil disobedience is a powerful tool
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    that has changed history many times,
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    both in the United States
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    in the '60s during
    the Civil Rights Movement,
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    of course in India with Mahatma Gandhi,
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    and I didn't know in the beginning
    if it was going to work or not,
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    but it's made me very happy
    to see what's happening.
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    PM: It's also led to your being arrested
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    multiple times, actually,
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    spending at least a night or two
    in Washington, DC jails,
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    and while all of us I think recognize
    the emergency and the actions
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    that you so kindly mentioned
    others have taken,
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    I'm not sure that we
    would put our bodies at risk,
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    our lives, our careers,
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    and our lives on hold
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    as you have done.
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    Do you have any concerns
    about that at this point?
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    JF: Well, I realize that not everybody
    can leave work and go
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    and do what I'm doing,
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    but I must say that
    requests are pouring in,
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    not only from around the United States,
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    but from other countries,
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    people who want
    to start Fire Drill Fridays,
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    and the people who are coming
    and getting arrested with me
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    and engaging with civil disobedience,
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    many of them have never done it before,
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    and they find it to be transformative.
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    But the fact is that there are
    so many things that people can do,
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    starting with talking about it,
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    expressing how you feel about it
    and talking about it,
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    even when it's uncomfortable,
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    at a holiday dinner table
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    and maybe Uncle Bob doesn't agree,
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    but you know maybe Uncle Bob
    is worried about his grandkids,
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    maybe he loves birds.
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    There's always a way in with people
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    to get them to feel concerned
    about the climate crisis.
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    Of course, voting is very, very important,
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    and we have to vote for the people
    that are the bravest,
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    the boldest of our elected officials,
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    because the task ahead of us,
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    all over the world, but certainly
    here in the United States,
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    we have to get rid
    of this current administration,
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    and we have to elect people
    that are really brave,
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    that will step up and do
    the bold actions that are needed,
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    the way Franklin Delano Roosevelt did
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    during the 1930s,
    during the Great Depression,
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    when he really changed
    a great deal about American society,
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    and that's what is needed now.
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    PM: So Jane, we should also explain,
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    because many people who are here
    are thinking, what can they do?
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    Can they come to Washington
    and join you in this action?
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    We should explain, not everyone
    who participates in Fire Drill Fridays
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    is under threat of being arrested.
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    There are other parts
    of what you're doing,
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    like you are currently
    in the Greenpeace Offices in Washington.
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    So explain what else
    is a part of Fire Drill Fridays,
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    and how we could participate
    in civil disobedience
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    without the risk of getting arrested.
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    JF: First of all, you want to try
    not do anything as a lone individual.
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    You know, it's by our powers combined.
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    There's strength in numbers.
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    There's also community in numbers,
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    and one of the hardest things
    about what we're facing now
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    is this is a collective crisis
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    coming at a time when
    the whole notion of the collective,
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    of the commons, of the public sphere
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    is being eroded quite deliberately
    by neoliberalism and conservatism.
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    And so reconnecting with groups of people,
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    like-minded people in a common action,
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    is solace to the soul.
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    It gives you such strength.
    It's a great antidote to depression.
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    So find out what organizations
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    that are concerned about
    the climate crisis are in your area.
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    Of course, Greenpeace has chapters
    all around the world.
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    And even if you just start yourself,
    have house parties,
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    invite people over
    to talk about what's happening.
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    Find an article that you can all read
    and discuss together.
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    Obviously, if there's
    a climate action where you live,
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    try to join it.
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    It's not necessary
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    to engage in civil disobedience
    and risk getting arrested,
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    but it is going to become
    the normal, I think.
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    It feels like it is here in DC
    with Fire Drill Fridays.
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    People seem to want
    to come back and do it again.
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    My grandkids just
    got arrested last weekend.
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    (Laughter)
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    It was a transformative experience.
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    My fellow actors Sam Waterston,
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    who was a self-described centrist,
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    he had never spoken at a rally
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    or risked getting arrested,
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    and he was arrested with me.
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    Last week I see that he was arrested
    at the Harvard-Yale game.
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    He sent me a picture
    of himself in handcuffs,
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    saying, "Now look what you started."
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    People, you know, we're at
    a point I think in this crisis
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    where people are looking
    to take the next step.
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    They want to put their bodies on the line,
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    as Greta Thunberg has exhorted us to do,
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    and they find it very rewarding,
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    and they want to do it again.
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    So I think that this is good,
    what we're doing.
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    I met with the Senate Task Force
    on climate crisis a few weeks ago,
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    and I asked the senators,
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    is there something else
    we should be doing?
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    Should we be doing more?
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    And Senator Ed Markey said to me,
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    "You're building an army.
    That's what we need.
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    Make it bigger.
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    We need pressure from the outside."
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    And I think that that's true
    all over the world.
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    People need to be amassing
    armies for the climate,
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    armies for the environment,
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    in the streets,
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    shutting down governments if necessary.
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    I'm thinking of Brazil right now.
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    You know, we can't allow
    the burning our precious rainforests.
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    PM: And as you have done
    so many times in the past, Jane,
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    you are leading these changes.
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    Eventually, one assumes,
    especially the fans of Grace and Frankie,
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    that you will go back to your life
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    and resume that program.
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    But will Fire Drill Fridays continue?
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    JF: Well, there's been
    such an interest in it,
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    as I said, from all around the country,
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    people asking if they can start one,
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    and, you know, I have
    a lot of celebrity friends
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    who haven't for scheduling reasons
    been able to come to DC,
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    so, you know, we're thinking about
    maybe doing it in Los Angeles,
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    but I just want to correct one thing.
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    I'm not leading.
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    It's the young people,
    it's the students that are leading.
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    It's always the young people that step up
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    with the courage, and it's pretty amazing,
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    because they're risking a lot.
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    It's pretty brave to take
    a Friday off from school.
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    You could get bad grades.
    You could make your teachers mad.
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    But they're doing it anyway.
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    There have been millions of them
    at a time, all around the world,
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    and they're saying,
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    "Don't let us have to deal
    with this by ourselves.
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    We didn't create this problem.
    Come and help us."
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    So Grandmas unite!
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    PM: And you are in a city
    that is probably more divided
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    than it has been in a very long time,
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    the polarities that exist there
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    and in many other places around the world
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    has kept our collective strength
    from being unified and used,
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    and in that way you have been leading us.
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    What would success look like to you
    from Fire Drill Fridays?
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    JF: Well, I can just speak
    as a citizen of the United States.
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    Success would look like
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    every state stops
    all new fossil fuel expansion,
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    because if they keep drilling
    and fracking and mining,
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    the problem will just get worse
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    so that no matter what
    we do with windmills
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    and solar collectors and so forth,
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    we'll never be able to catch up.
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    We have to stop all new expansion.
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    The other thing is,
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    they would phase out
    fossil fuel emissions gradually,
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    making sure that the workers
    who would be impacted
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    would be retrained at union wages
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    and get good new union jobs.
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    There are going to be so many good jobs
    with the Green New Deal,
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    building windmills and solar collectors,
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    retrofitting all the houses
    in this country, for example,
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    laying a new energy grid.
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    There's tens of millions of jobs
    waiting to be unleashed,
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    and that's the other thing
    that has gotten me mobilized.
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    A Green New Deal is a framework
    for how to take ourselves into the future
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    in a way that's sustainable and equitable.
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    So that just gives you such hope,
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    because if we do it right,
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    it's going to be a win-win for everyone,
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    and that has to be the case,
    or it won't work,
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    because to make it work,
    everybody's going to have to be involved,
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    and in order for everybody to be involved,
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    they have to see something
    in it for themselves,
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    and that's what a Green New Deal does.
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    PM: Jane, you, as always
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    (Applause)
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    as you have done
    so many times in your life,
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    you have taken risk
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    and you have stepped up
    to the front lines.
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    Do you leave this experience
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    with any new learning
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    or a new level of commitment,
    hope or optimism?
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    JF: Yeah, I am optimistic.
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    People in this country
    are really scared about the climate crisis
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    and they want to do something
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    but nobody has asked them.
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    We just have to ask them.
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    We have to get organized, you know?
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    And we can do that.
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    So I feel very hopeful.
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    I must say that I am going to go
    back to work on Grace and Frankie,
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    but part of my heart
    is going to be with Fire Drill Fridays,
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    and I hope I can continue with that.
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    I just think that we do
    have to build an army.
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    This coming year is the critical year.
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    What happens is going to be so important,
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    so we have to be sure,
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    especially someone who is healthy,
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    who feels relatively young,
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    who has a platform,
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    we have to use it
    in every possible way we can.
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    And if I didn't have that,
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    then I would find other little ways
    that I could do it:
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    talk to my neighbors, talk to my friends,
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    talk to my family,
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    join an organization.
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    That's how, also, as I've said,
    to stave off depression
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    is to do something active.
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    PM: Jane, at 81, you are modeling
    what that can be like for sure,
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    and I think we just recruited a new army.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you very much, my friends.
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    Stay safe.
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    Thank you for all that you have done
    for the planet and so much else.
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    Join me in thanking Jane.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why I protest for climate justice
Speaker:
Jane Fonda
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:15

English subtitles

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