HI.  Rio+20 has failed, as did Copenhagen, et al.  The blame restes squarely
on the US leading other major countries in refusing to take concrete action
to reverse ever increasing destruction of the planet.  We cannot let this
rest, if for no other reason than the futures of our own children and
grandchildren are in peril.  Saturday, I sent you the wonderful statement by
Brittany Trilford, 17, addressing World Leaders at Rio+20.  It's called that
because these meetings began 20 years ago in Rio.  I now send you the
electrifying speece of the 11 year old who helped inspire the original
movement, and her analysis today of what's happened since. 
 
As usual, I encourage you to watch the video, hear and see the passion and
how it affects others.  Go to the URL at the top.
 Ed    

 
 <http://www.democracynow.org/2012/6/21/at_rio_20_severn_cullis_suzuki>
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/6/21/at_rio_20_severn_cullis_suzuki
 
At Rio+20, Severn Cullis-Suzuki Revisits Historic '92 Speech, Fights for
Next Generation's Survival
 

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We continue our coverage of Rio+20 Earth Summit by turning
now to an amazing speech given 20 years ago at the 1992 U.N. Earth Summit in
Rio de Janeiro. Twelve-year-old Severn Cullis-Suzuki became known as "the
girl who silenced the world for six minutes" after she addressed the
delegates in Rio during the summit’s plenary session.

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: Hello. I’m Severn Suzuki, speaking for ECO, the
Environmental Children’s Organization. We’re a group of 12- and 13-year-olds
trying to make a difference—Vanessa Suttie, Morgan Geisler, Michelle Quigg
and me. We’ve raised all the money to come here ourselves, to come 5,000
miles to tell you adults you must change your ways.

Coming up here today, I have no hidden agenda. I am fighting for my future.
Losing my future is not like losing an election or a few points on the stock
market. I am here to speak for all generations to come. I am here to speak
on behalf of the starving children around the world whose cries go unheard.
I am here to speak for the countless animals dying across this planet
because they have nowhere left to go.

I am afraid to go out in the sun now because of the holes in our ozone. I am
afraid to breathe the air, because I don’t know what chemicals are in it. I
used to go in—I used to go fishing in Vancouver, my home, with my dad, until
just a few years ago we found the fish full of cancers. And now we hear of
animals and plants going extinct every day, vanishing forever. In my life, I
have dreamt of seeing the great herds of wild animals, jungles and
rainforests full of birds and butterflies, but now I wonder if they will
even exist for my children to see. Did you have to worry of these things
when you were my age?

All this is happening before our eyes, and yet we act as if we have all the
time we want and all the solutions. I’m only a child, and I don’t have all
the solutions, but I want you to realize, neither do you. You don’t know how
to fix the holes in our ozone layer. You don’t know how to bring the salmon
back up a dead stream. You don’t know how to bring back an animal now
extinct. And you can’t bring back the forests that once grew where there is
now a desert. If you don’t know how to fix it, please stop breaking it!

Here, you may be delegates of your governments, business people, organizers,
reporters or politicians. But really, you’re mothers and fathers, sisters
and brothers, aunts and uncles. And all of you are someone’s child.

I’m only a child, yet I know we are all part of a family, five billion
strong—in fact, 30 million species strong. And borders and governments will
never change that. I’m only a child, yet I know we are all in this together
and should act as one single world towards one single goal.

In my anger, I am not blind, and in my fear, I am not afraid of telling the
world how I feel.

In my country, we make so much waste, we buy and throw away, buy and throw
away, buy and throw and away. And yet, northern countries will not share
with the needy. Even when we have more than enough, we are afraid to share,
we are afraid to let go of some of our wealth. In Canada, we live the
privileged life, with plenty of food, water and shelter. We have watches,
bicycles, computers and television sets. The list could go on for two days.

Two days ago here in Brazil, we were shocked when we spent some time with
some children living on the streets. This is what one child told us: "I wish
I was rich. And if I were, I would give all the street children food,
clothes, medicines, shelter, and love and affection." If a child on the
streets who has nothing is willing to share, why are we who have everything
still so greedy?

I can’t stop thinking that these are children my own age, that it makes a
tremendous difference where you are born, that I could be one of those
children living in the favelas of Rio, I could be a child starving in
Somalia, or a victim of war in the Middle East or a beggar in India. I am
only a child, yet I know if all the money spent on war was spent on finding
environmental answers, ending poverty, and finding treaties, what a
wonderful place this earth would be.

At school, even in kindergarten, you teach us how to behave in the world.
You teach us to not fight with others, to work things out, to respect
others, to clean up our mess, not to hurt other creatures, to share, not be
greedy. Then why do you go out and do the things you tell us not to do?

Do not forget why you’re attending these conferences, who you’re doing this
for: we are your own children. You are deciding what kind of a world we are
growing up in. Parents should be able to comfort their children by saying,
"Everything’s going to be all right," "It’s not the end of the world," and
"We’re doing the best we can." But I don’t think you can say that to us
anymore. Are we even on your list of priorities? My dad always says, "You
are what you do, not what you say." Well, what you do makes me cry at night.
You grown-ups say you love us. But I challenge you, please, make your
actions reflect your words. Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: Severn Cullis-Suzuki, then at the age of 12 delivering her
famous address at the 1992 first U.N. Earth Summit that took place in Rio de
Janeiro. The video of her address has more than 21 million views on YouTube.

Well, now Severn is back in Rio, this time as a veteran international
environmental campaigner and mother of two.

We welcome you to Democracy Now! That was 1992. Can you talk about what has
happened in the intervening 20 years? Do you feel that there has been real
progress now at this summit, Severn?

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: Good afternoon. It’s an honor to be on the show.

Twenty years have passed, and everybody wants to know what have we done, how
have we progressed. Well, last week, scientists released a report in the
academic journal Nature that suggested that we are pushing for a tipping
point in the earth’s biosphere, that we are attacking our ecosystems that
sustain us and all life on this earth, in so many ways, on so many levels,
that we are pushing for a state shift like what was seen 12,000 years ago
with the end of the last ice age. But this time it will be human-caused, and
it will be orders of magnitude faster than the thousand-year transition that
happened last time. I mean, that report, released on the eve of this world
summit, is clear that we have not achieved the sustainable world we knew we
needed 20 years ago.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Severn, yet the draft agreement that is being proposed
at this summit, somebody did an analysis of the verbs in that agreement and
found that the word "encourage" appeared 50 times, and the word "support"
appeared 99 times, but "must" only three times and "we will" only five
times. So, in the face of this looming crisis, does it give you much hope at
all that the world leaders are couching this agreement in such weak terms?

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: They called Rio+10 in Johannesburg "Rio-Minus-10"
because already the world leaders were starting to backtrack on an agreement
from Rio 1992 that now looks like this amazing, visionary success. And, I
mean, I am ashamed to hear that the Canadian negotiating team was trying
their best to omit the word "commit." So I wonder how many times that
actually made it through in the draft that we have today.

I think that this is indicative of what is happening in our world at large.
There is so much shift right now. We have economic meltdown around the
world. We have social unrest. We have revolution just boiling up all over
the planet. And now we have our national leaders that are hunkering down
more and more, defending their national interests, and less and less looking
for the good of humanity. I believe we have a crisis in governance. This is
showing that the world’s leaders are not able to come together and lead for
the sake of humanity. What does it mean when the world’s elected leaders do
not represent the good of the people that they’re supposed to care for?

AMY GOODMAN: Severn Cullis-Suzuki, especially for young people who are
listening and watching right now all over the world — we have a room full of
interns that we are celebrating today, the summer interns who have begun at
Democracy Now! — talk about how it was you who ended up giving this speech
20 years ago at the age of 12. How did you end up addressing world leaders?

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: Well, it was an incredibly grassroots initiatives. I
had started a club, and this was really a group of girls who really wanted
to do something for the planet in the broadest terms. And how we started
was, well, we needed to educate ourselves. When I was nine, we started this
club, called ourselves ECO, the Environmental Children’s Organization. We
built on very small projects like beach cleanups, basic support for other
environmental groups. And finally, we heard about the Earth Summit, after a
few years of this, and decided we wanted to go. It’s a very long story. We
galvanized support from our community, our parents, our teachers, our
friends, fundraised the money, got here, and then, in a sea of 30,000 people
here, we started getting our message out because we were young. And this is
the key.

Twenty years later, the world is still talking about a speech, a six-minute
speech that a 12-year-old gave to world leaders. Why? It is because the
world is hungry to hear the truth, and it is nowhere articulated as well as
from the mouths of those with everything at stake, which is youth. Today’s
youth will spend their entire—the rest of their entire lives, their entire
adult lives—my children will grow up in a time characterized by climate
change, characterized by social unrest and refugees and all kinds of
problems that that brings, because of the ecological crisis that we now find
ourselves in. The economic crisis, that’s what everybody’s talking about,
but really it is a subsystem within the ecological crisis of this planet
earth that is our home.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: I want to ask you about the Canada-to-Texas Keystone XL
pipeline. Just two months after President rejected the project after large
protests by environmental groups, he announced his support for TransCanada
to build a southern leg of the pipeline from Oklahoma to Texas. In his
remarks, President Obama said his administration has authorized enough gas
pipelines to encircle the earth.

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Under my administration, America is producing more
oil today than at any time in the last eight years. Over—that’s important to
know. Over the last three years, I’ve directed my administration to open up
millions of acres for gas and oil exploration across 23 different states.
We’re opening up more than 75 percent of our potential oil resources
offshore. We’ve quadrupled the number of operating rigs to a record high.
We’ve added enough new oil and gas pipeline to encircle the earth, and then
some.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was President Obama, who is not attending the summit,
nor is David Cameron, the prime minister of England, or Angela Merkel. Now
TransCanada has reapplied for a permit—

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: Or Harper.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: —to build a 1,200-mile segment from Alberta, Canada, to Steel
City, Nebraska. Just this past Friday, the United States State Department
said it would conduct a new environmental impact statement on the Keystone
XL pipeline. Talk about the significance of this project and the role of
activists in stopping it.

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: The British journalist George Monbiot said yesterday
that it’s just—it’s quite staggering to see the president, Democrat leader,
Obama, backtracking on commitments that George Bush Sr. made in 1992. It
really points to the shift politically that we’ve come to in 20 years. The
realm of what is politically possible is totally on the side of the right,
and it’s on the side of exploiting the natural resources of the planet as
fast as it possibly can, and on a budget and on a scale that dwarfs its
opposition.

You know, I’m here in Rio, and there’s so many people, so many young people,
who are going through the tracks that have been presented to them to have
their voices heard. And they’ve been lobbying, and they’ve been following
all the negotiations, and they’ve been staying up ’til 2:00 a.m., and they
put their heart and soul into the document and the declaration, because they
have good faith that this process works and it matters. And we are seeing,
from the lack of interest in this global summit from our world leaders, and
in the inability to decide—to decide on anything, on saying anything, that
this system is broken, it does not work. And I think the Keystone XL, as
well as the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline, which is proposed from
Alberta to the coast—I think we can see, by all of the opposition to this,
that our governments just want to ram it through at all cost, even at the
cost of democracy. And that is what I am interested in talking about, is
this crisis in democracy that we have in promoting what the people actually
want and what actually will carry us forward into the future with dignity.

AMY GOODMAN: What about the fact that your prime minister, that Harper, is
not there, that the U.S. president, which—President Obama is not there? And
I think it’s particularly significant, since he weighs every day what he’s
going to do in this election year, what kind of message he wants to send.
Instead, he sent Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Yet, more than 130
world leaders are there.

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: This message is loud and clear. This is a message from
Prime Minister Harper, President Obama. The message to the rest of the world
is: We don’t care about you; we do not care that your countries may be
inundated, and huge social strife may be imminent—and is imminent. I was on
a panel the other day with a minister from New Caledonia, a small island
nation. I mean, for him, climate change is an issue of survival of his
people, in—I mean, in direct terms. And what my country, what the American
nation is saying is, "We do not care."

AMY GOODMAN: It’s very interesting, the Pentagon has reports on seeing
climate change as one of the most serious threats to national security,
because of vast migrations of people when their areas are desertified or
flooded and they must move to other places. As we wrap up, Severn, can you
talk about the effects of climate change? In the United States, it is not a
common discussion in any way.

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: It is just—it is staggering how we’re not making the
connection between climate change and what is already happening in the
ground, not only in the Horn of Africa, not only in the Arctic north, but in
the country of America. I mean, I remember in March seeing on the news
reports about the hurricanes, the crazy storms that were hitting a huge
portion of the continental U.S., and, you know, not to make the connection
with what the world’s leading experts are saying is exactly what happened in
a situation where climate change was unfolding. You know, actually, we have
to really ask, who’s driving the ship here? I mean, really, when we—when the
world’s leaders do not listen to science, when they do not listen to the
experts who study this, the ones that, you know, really can tell us what’s
going on, using facts and data and information, and when we actually have
campaigns like in the Canadian current government—

AMY GOODMAN: Five seconds.

SEVERN CULLIS-SUZUKI: —that are actually trying to shut down science, you
know, this really points to a huge question of governance and where are we
going.

AMY GOODMAN: Severn Cullis-Suzuki, we thank you for being with us, and for
being there 20 years ago in Rio de Janeiro. It’s the largest U.N. summit
ever.

  _____  

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