Attitude

THE BIG ISSUE

Climate change is the crisis we don’t talk about — but we must if we are to survive, says Matthew Todd

- rebellion. earth/ thetruth

Climate change

The dam has broken. The recent Extinction Rebellion protests have at last given the issue of ecological breakdown something approachin­g the attention it deserves.

I’ve tried to write about climate change as much as possible. But, despite frightenin­g warnings since 1988, it has for too long seemingly been viewed as a fringe issue.

When I was editor of Attitude we ran stories featuring gay people who worked in the environmen­tal sector. I remember receiving a letter from a reader saying this was not why they bought the magazine.

But now it is becoming clear to more and more people: this is an unpreceden­ted global emergency and one that LGBTQ people must make a priority.

We need to care because we are people. This is not the far- off future, it’s an issue now. People are already dying because of increasing fi res, fl oods and storms, and last year’s landmark UN report stated there was a strong risk of planetary crisis by 2040.

We cannot exist without a stable planet. But there is another reason LGBTQ people must treat this as an emergency. David Attenborou­gh has said many times that unless we take

emergency action, the collapse of our society and civilisati­on is on the horizon. I’m amazed and alarmed that for some people this goes in one ear and out the other.

It seems the more alarming the reality, the more some think it is hysteria or an exaggerati­on. IT IS NOT.

The world’s scientists are screaming at us that the systems that keep the planet habitable are failing because of pollution, climate change and our never- ending desire for “more”. What this means in practical terms is that not only is it getting wetter, warmer and stormier, but also there is a threat to crops and the water supply.

Last year, after our hot summer, yields of some fruit and vegetables in the UK were down by as much as 25 per cent. If “multi- bread- basket failure” occurs, that is drought that causes the collapse of harvests in the key areas of the world, we may not be able to produce enough food to feed the world, including Britain. Prices everywhere will rise — along with social tensions.

We all know there are violent people out there who hate those who are diff erent. They are only kept in line by civilisati­on. When that civilisati­on is

“Violent people who hate diff erence are only kept in line by civilisati­on”

stressed, minorities get attacked fi rst. You may think this is far- fetched but, as I found while researchin­g my book, Pride, about the history of the LGBTQ equality movement, this has happened before.

In the years after WWI, Germany — and, in particular, Berlin — was a bastion of tolerance for LGBTQ people. There were gay bars and clubs and the earliest gender reassignme­nt surgeries took place. There was tolerance of diff erence.

Then the Great Depression occurred, leading, in part, to the rise of the

Nazis. Soon gay men were arrested, with many sent to concentrat­ion camps. I understand that the dire warnings may sound hysterical but they are founded in truth.

The situation we all face from climate change is far, far worse than most people understand. David Attenborou­gh says that the climate crisis is the biggest threat humanity has ever faced. That means the biggest threat you and I have ever faced.

Educating ourselves and our friends and family is more important than any pop music, fashion, fi lm or virtually anything else. Start by watching Attenborou­gh’s documentar­y, Climate Change — The Facts. Then read The Uninhabita­ble Earth, by David Wallace- Wells.

If we don’t take to the streets and demand radical action from our ineff ective government at home and call on them to pressure their counterpar­ts abroad, the science is so bleak it suggests that not many people will be around to celebrate the 100th anniversar­y of the Stonewall riots.

Those who are still alive will be fi ghting to survive on an unrecognis­able planet. Every single one of us must take action now.

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