'Disruption': Film Offers Grassroots Global Revolt as Key Answer to Climate Crisis
Ahead of a mass demonstration scheduled for New York City on September 21 that will take place alongside a global mobilization aimed at world leaders meeting at the United Nations that week, climate campaigners have been ratcheting up their messaging to make their position as clear as the scientific consensus that informs it: The planet faces an unprecedented crisis due to human-caused global warming and climate change. As governments and business leaders have refused to act, it is ordinary people, pushing radically from below, who must now mobilize.
“The most dangerous threat we’ve ever faced meets a movement whose time has come.”
Part of a new story-telling and mobilizing effort, —one of the key leaders of the upcoming “”—teamed up with filmmakers to produce a new documentary film called “,” which will premiere via online screenings in people’s homes and public venues this Sunday evening, September 7, from 7 to 9 PM EST. A public screening at The New School in New York City will include a follow-up Q&A with some of the climate movement’s most recognized leaders, some of whom are featured in the film.
As the poster for the film states: “The most dangerous threat we’ve ever faced meets a movement whose time has come.”
According to 350.org, the word “disruption” itself refers to both “the dangerous environmental tipping points after which the entire climate system could spiral out of control, as well as the need for a mass social movement to disrupt the status quo and business-as-usual approach which is inhibiting the bold actions necessary to protect the planet’s future.”
Watch the trailer:
In their description, the producers explain the film’s primary purpose is to answer a fundamental question: “When it comes to climate change, why do we do so little when we know so much?”
Like the upcoming actions this month, the film will also make an attempt to inform (or remind) people of the idea that the climate issue is not just an environmental concern, but a matter of social and economic justice — onethat most severely and negatively impacts the poor, the marginalized, and those who strikingly have had the least to with causing it.
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