Science Friday - Empowering Older Adults To Step Up For The Climate
Episode Date: September 30, 2024If you’re a baby boomer, you may remember the first Earth Day, the Civil Rights Movement, anti-war protests, and the first Pride parade. The list goes on, because the 1960s and 70s were packed with ...social revolutions. But the organization Third Act has a message for boomers: Your work isn’t done yet.Third Act empowers folks over the age of 60 to get involved in the climate movement. It aims to leverage older generations’ access to power, money, and life experiences to create change.Ira Flatow talks with Third Act founder Bill McKibben and lead advisor Akaya Windwood about the importance of including older adults in the climate movement.Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
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The organization's third act encourages folks age 60 and older to step up for the climate.
Right now, we're in grave danger of being the first generation that leaves behind the planet worse than the one we found.
We don't want that.
It's Monday, September 30th, and you're listening to Science Friday.
I'm CyFRI producer, Rasha Auretti.
Last week was Climate Week here in our home-based New York City.
So we talked with folks who are leading climate solutions, including
getting older adults involved in climate activism.
Here's Ira Flato.
If you're a baby boomer like myself,
you may remember the first Earth Day,
the civil rights movement,
anti-war protests, the first pride parade.
The list goes on because the 60s and 70s
were packed with social revolutions.
But the organization, Third Act, says that boomers,
your work isn't quite done yet.
What do we want?
Third Act and Parenthood.
folks over the age of 60 to get involved in the current crisis, and I'm talking about the climate
movement, by leveraging older generations access to power, money, and life experiences to create
change. Here to discuss that with me are my guests, Akaya Winwood activist and lead advisor
for Third Act based in Oakland, California. Welcome to Science Friday. Thank you. And Bill McKibben,
climate activist and founder of Third Act based in Middlebury, Vermont. Welcome back, Bill.
Well, Ira, it's always so good to be with you.
Let me ask you first, Bill.
Give us the idea of how Third Act came about.
What happened?
You know, Ira, that I've been working on climate change pretty much my whole life.
I wrote the first book about what we now call climate change back in the late 1980s when I was in my 20s.
But somehow along the way, I became older.
And though I've always loved working with young people,
and though young people have been in the lead of the climate fight from the beginning,
right through Greta Tunberg, at a certain point I began to hear a few too many people
our age say, oh, it's up to the next generation to solve this problem, which seemed both unfair
and also impractical. You know, young people, for all their energy and intelligence and idealism,
lack the structural power to make change on the scale we need and the limited time we still have
by themselves. So I wondered if maybe we could get together some people my age. If you've reached the
time in life when you've got hair coming out your ears, then you've got structural power coming
out your ears too. There are 70 million of us over the age of 60. We punch above our weight
politically because we all vote. There's no known way to stop old people from voting. We've got
most of the country's financial assets. So the hope was that we could start this thing that would
get people really engaged in this work for climate and for democracy. People said it won't work
because people become more conservative as they age. But I think that if that was true once,
it isn't anymore for precisely the reason that you say, if you're in your 60s or 70s or 80s now,
Your first act was back precisely in that period.
Just thinking about the environment, in April of 1970, 20 million Americans, 10% of the then population, most of them young, were marching in the streets.
And within two years, we had the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act and the EPA, and indeed the air and the water got cleaner.
now that we face this even graver crisis, it really seems time to call on those same people again.
And so it hasn't surprised me that in the two plus years we've been going, this thing has grown like Topsy.
We've got chapters in almost every state. We've got 100,000 people deeply engaged in the climate fight, going to jail, writing hundreds of thousands of postcards and phone calls ahead of this year's election, on and on and on.
So it's like asking retired soldiers to come out of retirement.
There's something like that, nonviolent soldiers to be sure.
And the spirit with which people have done it is just right, I think, because they're, you know,
I remember one of the very first protests we did a couple of years ago, young people,
they'd asked us to help with this demonstration they were doing against the big banks like
city and Chase and Wells Fargo and Bank of America that are the biggest funders of the fossil fuel industry.
And I can remember showing up at that demonstration. And there were a couple of hundred high school
kids there, because there's always high school kids know just what they're staring down the barrel of.
And they're somewhat spryer, so they were out in front. But at the back, there were a bunch of us
from this nascent third act with a big banner that said, fossils against fossil fuels. That's been the
spirit we've been operating in from the beginning. We shut down in a hundred cities last spring
before last. We shut down those banks for the afternoon with people our age sitting in, not sprawled
on the sidewalk because our joints are past that point. We'd gone to the goodwill and gotten every
rocking chair we could find, and that's what we used for the most comfortable sit-in ever the
times the next day called it the rocking chair rebellion. Interesting. Kaya, do you find
that young people look up to seniors when you're activating and being active together?
Or do they say, it's our turn. Get out of the way.
It's somewhere in between, actually, Ira.
In talking with younger people, what I hear is it's time for people over 60 to not step
aside, but to step beside them, to be in support of what they're up to.
and in many ways get out from in front of the room and trying to run everything, but not go away.
So this is an opportunity, and we're finding it's happening all over the country, as Bill just mentioned,
for the older people to have a new role in the world.
And there are a lot of younger folks who are trying to make amazing things happen
and who could lean back on some of the things that we elders know.
So to be available to them as we just reorganize what our role in the world is has been very satisfying.
That's interesting. Bill, what kind of actions can older folks take for the climate?
I mean, what advantage do we have that maybe younger people don't have?
Let me tell you a story about sort of where this idea originally came from in my mind.
You may recall, because we talked about it at the time, the sprawling campaign against the Keystone Piper,
in the last decade, which was kind of the big environmental fight of that decade.
And I wrote the letter that asked people to come to Washington at the beginning of that in 2011
to do civil disobedience outside the White House.
It turned into the biggest civil disobedience action of recent times, at least in the environmental
movement.
And on the last day, there was a guy arrested with a sign around his neck that said,
World War II vet, Handle with Care.
he was old enough that he'd been born in the Warren Harding administration, which was long enough ago that I frankly almost forgotten there was a Warren Harding administration.
It was remarkable for the young people who were there to see their elders outside their comfort zones, willing to set aside some of the comforts and privileges of older age in order to really look at.
to the future. If you're young right now and looking at the climate crisis, you're quite rightly
thinking about your future, because by the time you're in middle age, this will be the only thing
happening on Earth if we don't get a handle on it very soon. But if you're somewhat nearer the exit
than the entrance, you know, you have a kind of perspective on the world that just this world that we've
loved and that we've been so privileged to get to live in in love, you want to leave it in shape
for all that come behind. Legacy is a very abstract word until you're a certain age, at which point
it becomes, you know, your legacy is what you leave behind for those that you love the most. Right
now, we're in grave danger of being the first generation that leaves behind a planet worse than
the one we found. We don't want that. Yeah, but we also, as boomers, we've also, we've also
We also have accumulated wealth. We've got where we're big spenders. We also have our money in banks that
invest our money. Isn't that a leverage we have? It's exciting to see people beginning to, in fact,
more than beginning to reach out and demand if they have an investment advisor or a banker or someone
that they take seriously the future of the planet. That's enormously valuable pressure on those
institutions. You know, they've been, all the banks have been hearing from the Red State Treasurers for the last
couple of years about whether or not they're becoming too woe and they're backing away from their
climate commitments that they've made in recent years. It's very good to be able to apply counterpressure
from people who saying, I don't want my life savings used for the wreckage of the planet that
I made that money on. Right. And you know, the boomer generation,
being one of them. We're aging out and dying to be, to be blunt about it. I mean, what about the next
generation who's behind us, the next generation of seniors that follows? What happens to the third act
movement there? Does it move to those people? And how do you motivate them? Or are they naturally
moving up and understanding the situation, Bill? First of all, it really is going to be a while
before the boomers disappear from the scene. We've still got members of the baby boom generation
who are just about to turn 60. It remains the biggest slug of voters in the system and it will
for a while. But yes, you're right. As we understand our mortality a little more directly,
that's one of the reasons we take action. One of our slogans is no time to waste. And we mean it two ways.
One of the reasons the attention on this election is so fierce is because everyone's come to understand that climate change is the ultimate timed test.
You know that the IPCC has told us the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that we need to cut emissions in half by 2030, which, by my watch, is five years and four months away.
This may be the last presidency that really is able to make huge change in the time that we have.
But we also mean no time to waste because we know that our own time is limited.
I think the thing that Akaya has done so beautifully is really lay out a kind of concept of
elderhood. That's not something that America, always a youth-focused society, has spent much time
thinking about. But we're thinking about it. That's a gift we want to pass on to all the
generations of elders that hopefully will be coming after us.
And how successful have you both been in motivating the seniors to come out and be active?
Oh, so the best part about it is it takes almost no motivation because people are really excited about it, right?
Our dear beloved staff has been overwhelmed by how much interest and how can I help and what can I do, you know, to go from zero to 100,000 people in a little more than two and a half years.
we were stunned. We were not anticipating that. It's been very exciting. And everybody I talked to,
how can I get involved? Well, that's what I'm going to ask you, because I'm sure we have just a few
seniors in our audience. How could they get involved in Third Act? This couldn't be easier. You go to
thirdact.org, T-H-I-R-D-A-C-T-O-R-G, and sign up. You know, the pleasure of doing this in part has been
this incredible sense of companionship that sprung up in one place after another.
Sometimes aging can be an isolating and lonely time.
That may be one reason that people have grabbed onto this with both hands
and built already a kind of sense of camaraderie and fellowship that's getting the work done.
We're putting out hundreds of thousands of postcards a week now.
Older people are jumping on buses to head to the stuff.
swing states to knock on doors because it turns out that America will still open its front door
if there's a 75-year-old lady on the other side, you know. This is a remarkable chance for a new
kind of activism, and it really is working. Bill, you've been in doing this for a long time. You mentioned
that your book, The End of Nature from 1989, was the first popular science book on climate change.
Tell us what it has been like to grow older with the topic of climate change and what you've noticed in all those years.
Well, look, it's possible at this point, Ira, that I've written more words about climate change than anyone else in the English language, which would make me, given the temperature of the earth, the least successful writer and activist that we've ever produced.
but I am finally we see this great coalescing of people now finally demanding action and we see the
possibility of that action you know right now we finally live on a planet where the cheapest way
to make power is to point a sheet of glass at the sun that means we might really be able to make
progress fast and I keep telling people as we gather we may be old but we're going to be alive long enough
to see the outcome of this fight
because the next four or five years
are going to be the decisive ones.
Yeah. And Akaya, from all of your years of organizing,
speaking of passing down wisdom
from one generation to another,
what advice do you have for the younger generations
when it comes to the climate movement?
I would say, trust yourselves.
The world is precarious.
It can feel very, oh my gosh,
what's going to happen here?
but what I'm finding in my conversations with younger generations is they're brilliant and they care deeply.
And yes, some are, you know, hesitant and some feel like this is going to all fall apart.
There's that.
And I don't absolutely understand why they would feel that way.
But I firmly believe that the solutions that our generation can't think about or don't come from us,
are there. And the next ones will do an amazing job. And I'm frankly, completely optimistic about
what may happen in the next 30 to 40 years. And just because I want to put it on record,
not all of us have hair coming out of our ears. I just want to say that.
Only your barber knows for sure.
Well, I'm glad both of you are still working at this and we're still all around to talk about it.
And I want to thank both of you for your work and for taking time to be with us today.
What a pleasure, Ira. Many thanks.
Yes, I love this conversation. Thanks for inviting us.
You're welcome.
Micah Winwood is an activist and lead advisor for the Third Act based in Oakland, California.
And Bill McKibben is a climate activist and founder of Third Act.
And he's based in Middlebury, Vermont. And listeners who want to hear from you, are you a fellow boomer concerned about the climate? What actions are you taking? Let us know at sciencefrily.com slash climate. Science Friday.com slash climate. And we may feature your answers on our website.
That's it for today. Lots of folks help make this show happen, including John Denkoski, Annie Niro, Jason Rosenberg, Shoshana Bucksdown.
On tomorrow's episode, we'll hear from two climate champions working on very different solutions,
from an operating room in Seattle to the northern Mariana Islands.
Catch you tomorrow. I'm Cyfry producer, Rasha Aridi.
