This article, Big Oil, Big Tobacco, Big Lies, from Project Syndicate is, as usual, very illuminating...
At IB schools around the world, students and teachers should become aware of what has been going on all these years and become active in reversing this catastrophic path.
The article can be found here.
Bill McKibben, one of the authors, is a founding member of 350.org, a 'global climate movement' that runs '...adaptive, locally-driven campaigns in every corner of the globe. 350.org’s small team of paid staff supports thousands of grassroots activists running their own independent, loosely affiliated organizations and campaigns in 188 countries'
Related to this is Fossil Free, a '...network of campaigns and campaigners working toward fossil fuel divestment in our communities.'
Worth reading and worth getting involved.
At IB schools around the world, students and teachers should become aware of what has been going on all these years and become active in reversing this catastrophic path.
Over the last few years, a growing number of people have been taking a hard look at what is happening to our planet – historic droughts, rising sea levels, massive floods – and acknowledging, finally, that human activity is propelling rapid climate change. But guess what? Exxon (now ExxonMobil) had an inkling of this as early as 1978.By the early 1980s, Exxon scientists had much more than an inkling. They not only understood the science behind climate change, but also recognized the company’s own outsize role in driving the phenomenon. Recognizing the potential effects as “catastrophic” for a significant portion of the population, they urged Exxon’s top executives to take action. Instead, the executives buried the truth.
The article can be found here.
Bill McKibben, one of the authors, is a founding member of 350.org, a 'global climate movement' that runs '...adaptive, locally-driven campaigns in every corner of the globe. 350.org’s small team of paid staff supports thousands of grassroots activists running their own independent, loosely affiliated organizations and campaigns in 188 countries'
Related to this is Fossil Free, a '...network of campaigns and campaigners working toward fossil fuel divestment in our communities.'
Worth reading and worth getting involved.
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