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Home / Hawkes Bay Today

Chris Perley: Doco shows small changes count

By Chris Perley
Hawkes Bay Today·
25 Nov, 2015 05:00 AM5 mins to read

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Chris Perley

Chris Perley

We dread the horror documentaries on climate change.

This is what is happening. If we don't do something about it, these are the consequences. It has the effect of stunning us. It's better to put our head under a rock. It's better to believe that the big powerful interests actually care about our future. Let's move on to other things and just have faith.

Naomi Klein's documentary This Changes Everything, played a completely different tune. It was a film of hope. We can make a difference. And no, we cannot trust the powerful interests, because they think in the blind alleys where short-term finance mugs wisdom.

Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth was of the horror variety. It went into what was happening, and the danger of threshold effects tipping our global system into some bleak beyond. Remember the frog heating up in the beaker, seemingly oblivious to its eventual fate until ... Al Gore rescued him from the beaker. "It is important to rescue the frog," he said, to the amusement and nervous relief of the audience, released from witnessing a cooked amphibian. They got the point though. We are the frog. We risk much by waiting for that point where our life support system collapses.

Naomi Klein starts her documentary stating how bored she is with struggling polar bears and receding glaciers. She didn't mention frogs. Klein knows this horror ground is covered. She knows that there is now no serious dispute about the warming climate, other than from the oil lobbies that continue to fund the deniers.

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Klein focuses on response: what to do; where to focus. Klein's genius is to do two things. First, she takes us deep into cause. Not just the immediate cause - the burning of fossil fuels and the unscrupulous power of corporations undermining democracy - but many layers deep into the way we in the 'modern' West see the world. Four hundred years ago, much of the Western world lost its connection to place. We started seeing the world as a set of resources, something for us to dominate and control. We lost our humility, and saw ourselves as above the eventual banquet of consequences. Klein challenges the very core of what it is to be human. We are not disconnected. We belong. We stand together as a community, and within our land, or we perish.

Her second piece of genius was to take us to places and deeply embedded communities where there was an immediate threat. Their connection was obvious. Their threat was on the doorstep. There was no longer any room for apathy because the people all around them, their children, their elders, were very evidently the frog on the point of no return.

Immediacy. The land to which you belong being destroyed, sacred grounds desecrated, the ripping apart of the tar sand earth of the Crow Nation of Canada for the gain of some far way corporate financier. Klein takes us around the world; to a Greek community fighting mining interests, to a Montana ranch and the Cheyenne Nation fighting yet more oil interests in pursuit of a life within the land; implacable Indian protesters, channelling Gandhi, passively resisting the march of coal-fired power plants destroying the commons upon which these local people depend.

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The groundswell of dissent was from the bottom up. It was their communities and commons that was being lost because of a way some viewed our earth and our communities where extraction and profit dominated any ethos of care or justice.

There are those who say that marches and rallies do nothing. Yet every significant social change has started from small beginnings by people concerned and courageous enough to act on principle. It seldom starts with many, but there is always some trigger that shifts the momentum from a narrow protest to a wider movement. People wake up from apathy and despair, and realise that they can change things.

Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a European in Montgomery, Alabama, was arrested, and the outrage at the injustice saw first the bus boycott, and then a growing movement of principled and decent people, until President Johnson was forced to act after the events of Selma. Gandhi was another; the Berlin wall; the rise of Maori rights following Dame Whina Cooper's 1975 land march.

Unjust conventions cannot hold when the people realise that they stand for what is right and have the power to change things. We face a similar injustice with climate change: the clear threat of the loss of 8000 homes and 76 businesses in Napier alone within 50 years is the tip of the iceberg of consequences. We cannot wait 50 years to do nothing, because stopping climate change is like stopping a supertanker with a fleet of rowboats, requiring international coordination and commitment. It will take time.

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The Paris talks of early December are critical, and standing up for right and the future of Hawke's Bay is the act of a citizen. Which is why people have organised an Earth to Paris Rally on Saturday, November 28 at 11am, Hastings Clock Tower, to stand witness that we care.

-Chris Perley has a background in strategy, policy, research and operational management in provincial economies and land use.

-Business and civic leaders, organisers, experts in their field and interest groups can contribute opinions. The views expressed here are the writer's personal opinion, and not the newspaper's. Email: editor@hbtoday.co.nz

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