In terms of solutions to climate change, check out Carbon Fee and Dividend, , through Citizens' Climate Lobby, an organization I volunteer for. It's a remarkable solution in that it was (1) created by George Shultz, a widely respected Republican and former Secretary of State, (2) is projected to grow the U.S. economy and any economy in which a similar price-dividend program is implemented, (3) requires very little increase in government regulations, so Republicans, conservatives, Libertarians can all get behind it and many have already, and (4) works well within the UNFCCC programs already established as well as cap and trade systems, and is implementable in any country. B.C. Canada already has something like this in place. I have reservations about the policy's encouragement of economic growth, but it's a realistic policy that works well in the world we have today.
Similar policies are increasingly being discussed in the UNFCCC and avenues for direct citizen participation are as well. One arm of Citizens' Climate Lobby works there and with World We Want . Each evening, a consensus agreement is made in the climate talks, and a draft document is completed and is now going to be published on this platform, each night, for annotation. Anyone in the world with a computer can get online and comment on the document, voicing their concerns, desires, feelings, etc. No UN delegate is going to want to be the only one in the morning that hasn't read what the citizens of the world have said, so this is essentially a way to directly input citizen voices without even asking for it. It's been a few months since I've been around this, but I think World We Want is the correct platform. I've personally spoken with the guy that leads this arm of CCL. Very, very good things are happening here. Check him out on instagram @poeteconomist.
Overall, Citizens' Climate Lobby is an incredible organization. Everything that we do is based on respect, appreciation, and connecting over common values. In this way, we're connecting with people across boundaries on the issue of climate change. We're alleviating some of the intense partisanship going on right now in the U.S. We've made significant inroads with Republican members of congress and conservative voices. In October, 12 House Republicans wrote a resolution (House Res. 424) that stated that human-induced climate change is real and the federal government has a responsibility to find and implement solutions to it, and CCL worked very closely with those MoCs in the drafting of the resolution. We were only founded in 2007, and now we have members in every congressional district in the U.S. and in the last one year we've more than quadrupled our membership (4,000 to 18,000).
This summer, 900 of us went to D.C. and met with almost every single congressional office to speak about Carbon Fee and Dividend. I met with three there, and in August I met my own representative in person. Citizens' Climate Lobby has shown me that there are still bits and pieces of our democracy that are still intact, and it's shown me that I can be an engaged and effective citizen for a cause that I care about. And the people in the organization have shown me what can be accomplished when a group of determined, passionate people support each other and work together toward something good.
I sometimes feel hopeless about the whole damn thing too. Hopeless and pissed off. But I feel that way less often now than I did before, because there
are real solutions out there, and there are people that are working tirelessly to make sure that they become a reality. Join us.