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The view from Harper’s chair
A host of Canadians are creating videos as part of Suzuki’s national tour
David Suzuki
I don’t know what’s more inspiring — the
audiences or the videos. Travelling across Canada on the If
I Were Prime Minister tour and seeing so many faces in so many
different communities (we were in Winnipeg on Feb. 20) I have
to keep pinching myself to make sure it’s all actually
real.
And just when I start getting down, after a long bus ride when
the audience faces start to fade from memory and I start to
wonder if it really made a difference, that’s when I watch
some of the videos and am inspired all over again.
There are now hundreds of If I Were Prime Minister videos up
on the tour website (www.davidsuzuki.org). Some are silly. Some
are inspiring. Some are familiar faces and others complete strangers.
But they are all Canadians who have ideas on what our politicians
can do to make Canada a world leader in sustainability.
And that’s just the point. I don’t want to cross
the country talking at people. Our goal is to get people talking
with each other, sharing ideas, pushing our leaders to get serious
about the environment. Canada’s once-vaunted environmental
reputation is falling apart, and no politician has picked up
the pieces yet, let alone started putting them back together.
I’m hoping my audiences will stand up and exercise their
rights to demand real change.
The videos are one way to do that. At each event, young Simon,
our videographer, is ready to record clips of people expressing
the kinds of changes they would make if they were prime minister.
Sometimes people are shy, but more often than not Simon is practically
mobbed by people wanting to express their opinions.
All those videos will eventually go up on our website, if they
aren’t there already, and the beauty of the Internet is
that you don’t have to actually come out to an event to
put up a video. YouTube has made video posting accessible to
anyone with access to a computer. You can watch, rate and even
comment on all the posts. It’s an easy and democratic
way to get your point across, and at the end of the tour we’re
going to send all the videos to the party leaders.
We’ve been fortunate on the tour to have earned the support
of a number of well-known Canadians. I was recently interviewed
on MuchMusic with hip hop artist k-os, for whom I have great
respect. Singer/songwriter Sarah Harmer even performed at one
of our events. Harmer is an impressive musician and passionate
about conservation.
While I really appreciate support from amazing people such as
these, the videos that really blow me away are from average
Canadians who are clearly so passionate about environmental
issues. There seems to be a growing sense that for too long
we’ve tried to separate our environment and our economy
into two distinct entities.
That’s caused huge problems in our society, because our
environment is our home and it is finite. Our economy, on the
other hand, is predicated on relentless growth and considers
environmental issues ‘externalities,’ as though
they don’t really matter. Yet they do matter because today
we are seeing what happens when endless growth meets a finite
system.
What we need now is to rationalize our economy with ecological
reality. This means we need to shift our economy to be cleaner
and smarter. We need to stop subsidizing polluting industries.
We need to create targets and timelines to reduce pollution
to levels that do not jeopardize our natural systems.
It means our environment, not our economy, must be the real
bottom line.
Follow the tour and learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.
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