Maeve Masterson | Climate change is not a countdown to an apocalypse
Despite honest intentions to make the world livable for generations to come, my reasons for hopping on board the environmental movement were misguided and a tad off base.
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Despite honest intentions to make the world livable for generations to come, my reasons for hopping on board the environmental movement were misguided and a tad off base.
With knowledge comes immense responsibility.
“We’re here to make a statement. We’re here to start a fight. We’re here to let the people know that breathing is our right.”
As members of Gen Z, we are left with no choice but to submit ourselves to a lifelong quest for environmental solutions. Although many Penn students feel protected and subsequently removed from climate change effects, the recent onset of the sustainability trend paraded across social media feeds, embedded within marketing campaigns, and embodied by Penn’s green campus initiatives, has brought the issue much closer to home, mobilizing many to join the movement. But how long will it last? And is it really doing enough?
The LOVE sculpture presumably serves as a bright red reminder to those of us walking up and down Locust walk that we live in an open-handed, compassionate place that cares about our livelihood and future.