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I sit here, laptop in lap, breathing into the anxiety that this moment of uncertainty and mild terror at what might be coming all balled into one, trying to hold on to every spark of hope from the last few months. Trying to be grounded in reality and lead from a place of imagination, joy, and optimism. The UNFCCC is not structured in a way that will actually solve the climate crisis. COP29 was by and large a failure. Soon a climate change denier, bent on giving a green light to the billionaire class to continue to pillage and harm, will move back into the White House. Extraction, colonialism and harm continue despite global outcries.

Winter is the season that I spend planning and preparing for spring and the garden. This winter must be our season of planning and preparing, because, as Timothy Snyder says in his pamphlet On Tyranny, we must not obey in advance. And, as I learned from a group of Hamline students this fall, it is not enough to simply oppose something. In our planning and preparing we must consider what we are for.

So, be prepared for severe weather or anything else that we might face. Pack a go bag. Make sure all of your important documents are in a safe, dry and secure place. Use encrypted communication channels. Make sure all your loved ones know where you will reconnect.

And then let us turn to imagining and building the world we wish to see, because that is the most profound act of resistance we could engage in. What is our collective vision of how we might reorganize our lives to be in right relationship with each other and the land? How could we reorganize our economy around the needs of many and away from consumerism? What does it look like? Sound like? Smell like? Taste like? Let’s get clear about what we are working toward. And then let us step into that in all the ways that we are able, no matter how small or insignificant it might seem.

As Fred Hampton once said,

“We’re gonna have to do more than talk, We’re gonna have to do more than listen. We’re gonna have to do more than learn. We’re going to have to start practicing, and that’s very hard.”

Join us at Climate Generation, we are ready to practice.

Susan Phillips

Susan Phillips
Executive Director

Photo: Martin Ruegner/Getty Images

The post We’re For a Better Future appeared first on Climate Generation.

We’re For a Better Future

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USDA Extends Pause on Loans for Controversial Digesters That Turn Manure Into Biogas

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Anaerobic digester loans showed “significant delinquency rates,” the U.S. Department of Agriculture said, while environmental groups see the technology driving an expansion of large-scale animal farming operations.

The federal government’s pause on new loans for anaerobic digesters, the controversial method of converting animal manure from large-scale feeding operations into biogas, will now extend through the end of the year.

USDA Extends Pause on Loans for Controversial Digesters That Turn Manure Into Biogas

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Climate Change

Malnourished Gray Whales of the Eastern North Pacific Are in ‘Serious Trouble’

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The population has plummeted over the past seven years as climate change triggers mass starvation in warming Arctic waters.

SEATTLE—Exceptionally skinny gray whales—enfeebled by starvation and mangled by blunt-force trauma—are washing up this spring along the coast of Washington state in numbers that alarm marine-mammal scientists.

Malnourished Gray Whales of the Eastern North Pacific Are in ‘Serious Trouble’

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Climate Change

Sewage and Fuel Leaks Contaminate the Potomac River, Source of Drinking Water for More Than 5 Million People

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Observers believe regulatory failures contributed to catastrophic sewage and fuel leaks in the watershed. The river was recently named the most endangered in the nation.

The warning signs were years in the making. And yet, regulators failed to heed the writing on the wall, according to Dean Naujoks.

Sewage and Fuel Leaks Contaminate the Potomac River, Source of Drinking Water for More Than 5 Million People

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