In defence of Greta Thunberg and her nonviolent action

is likely to be seen by future generations as pathbreaking or, as they say today, iconic.

One of several reasons she attracts so much attention is that she combines three factors that, in these dark times, seldom go together but which – undoubtedly – people worldwide long for: knowledge (facts), passion/emotions and a commitment to nonviolence.

While politicians go populist, nationalist and militarist and many individuals tend to be obsessed with themselves, their body – looks, food, weight, ways to relate and how to show off (inner emptiness) – here is a 16-year young woman who speaks on behalf of humanity and does so as if she was Nature’s appointed ambassador too.

She operates in a world in which there is more and more fake – and more important, omission – in which it’s great to keep cool and unemotional in public (and often say nothing of interest but delivering standard, politically correct and non-provocative speeches) and in a world in which violent demonstrations – from Hong Kong to threats with nuclear weapons – is considered normal modes of operation that don’t need scrutinization.

Gandhian and Greta-ian nonviolence

Those of us who have devoted ourselves to nonviolence – to the UN Charter norm of making peace by peaceful means (Article 1) – allow ourselves to celebrate the strength of nonviolent action for constructive change that is Greta.

It’s deplorable that that particular – and obvious – dimension of her campaigning is hardly even mentioned. Media and others don’t see her campaign for global change in harmony with Nature as a major example of the strength of nonviolent philosophy and action.

Gandhi’s formulation was that “the means are the goals in-the-making” – in other words, choose the right, good means and you will arrive at good goals.

Imagine in that perspective that Greta had chosen to smash some shop windows in Stockholm carrying a sign that we must save the Earth or something. The media of course would have been there, she would have been arrested and – that would have been it.

Fortunately, instead she wisely chose the classical nonviolent sit-down action, with a sign (“School Strike for the Climate”), she chose to strike and – very importantly and in the spirit of Gandhi – chose self-suffering, to suffer by abstaining from school. As she says in that remarkable, moving speech at the UN: “This is all wrong. I shouldn’t be up here. I should be back in school on the other side of the ocean.”

In a nutshell, she broke the norm and law (about going to school) for a higher cause, one way beyond herself but also her own.

And again, not without parallels to Gandhi as well as many great artists, she has converted an inner problem into a mission of doing something good for the world and humanity.

Apart from her young age, Greta Thunberg is also an interesting socio-political figure in global politics in the sense that she proves what the single individual can achieve if a) willing to focus on the world and not only I, me and myself… b) do things with determination and c) build on a strong knowledge base.

She did not start out setting up an NGO, finance it by support from the Swedish government (which would have confined and made her politically correct, sooner or later) and she did not put that organisation with money into the hands of a marketing company.

In that sense, she demonstrates an important nonviolent principle – you must take personal responsibility for a cause much bigger than yourself and remain independent. (People who know me well know that for years I have ended my public speeches with “Every human being is a potential peace movement whereas I don’t believe much in movements.”).

Greta has millions of followers – for instance over 6 million on Instagram – but no organisation with a board and hierarchy and power struggles.

I hope she will never go NGO in that sense. I hope she will remain an unconstituted leader – as was Gandhi who was never elected to any position.

This is the constructive individual(ism) that permits a collective of millions to thrive and develop and be inventive – not dis- but un-organised with no bylaws or party program that stifle the passion and the creativity. There can be no coup against her precisely because there is no organisation with a power structure and funds or fame to grab.

The nasty attacks on Greta Thunberg

But she will be attacked – and has been. Increasingly so. She is considered a huge challenge to powers that be in a very broad sense.

She is living the wrong way, doing wrong things in contravention of what she works for, or she is misguided and doesn’t know what she talks about. Or she does not write her speeches herself, or that she meets the wrong people. On and on…

There are all kinds of ill-willed accusations and conspiracies about “who is really behind her,” about being misused by her parents to get famous, about her being just a mentally sick girl you should not listen to, etc. Here is how Fox News did it but, in all fairness, apologized for it.

Here is how Mr Trump obviously felt so threatened by her that he had to ridicule her. And Russia Today has chosen to publish only suspicion-throwing articles which accuse her of being nothing but a tool in the hands of a new green capitalism and worse.

And here is the argument by a former deputy member of the Nobel Committee, Sverre Lodgaard, that her shaming of people who pollute the environment is not a constructive feeling and brings her chances to receive that prize down.

It would be more appropriate if Lodgaard had pointed out that, in spite of her amazing work for the environment, Greta Thunberg has done nothing that qualifies her to receive the Nobel Peace Prize as it is a prize that shall be awarded “the person who has done the most or best to advance fellowship among nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies, and the establishment and promotion of peace congresses.” – read Alfred Nobel’s will here.

And of course, there is mean and lousy Breitbart.

Great if Greta also took up the huge military destruction of the environment

Greta undoubtedly knows where she wants to go in the future. At the moment, she is strongest on diagnosis and prognosis, so to speak, but one would wish she had a bit more of Gandhi’s constructive program, of treatment: What shall we do (and not only abstain from), who can do it, how and when can it be done – in short, a strategy.

Secondly, I for one would hope that she would attempt to become a kind of bridge-builder between the two huge challenges humankind is facing – environmental destruction (about which there is a lot of talk) and large-scale war, including nuclear war (about which there is woefully little and unqualified talk).

The two are intimately connected. The military pollutes the cities, agricultural lands, seas and the air – both for exercise, training and transport in peace time and directly, of course, in times of war. It shuffles soldiers and materiél around the world, mostly on a rotational basis – by air, sea and land. It consumes incredible amounts of oil – as does, at the earlier stages, the production and export of weapons.

And there is the whole field of environmental warfare – technologies for deliberately destroying the environment of the enemy.

And should just one nuclear weapons be used – by accident or deliberate political decision – we can forget about most, if not all, of what Greta Thunberg and the millions of environmentalists are struggling to preserve. The climate consequences of that will dwarf all we subsume under “climate change” and environmental destruction today.

A 2019 study concludes, among other things, that “the US military is one of the largest polluters in history, consuming more liquid fuels and emitting more climate-changing gases than most medium-sized countries. If the US military were a country, its fuel usage alone would make it the 47th largest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, sitting between Peru and Portugal.” (Read about the study at The Conversation).

As the headline goes: US military is a bigger polluter than as many as 140 countries – shrinking this war machine is a must.

“Its fuels usage alone”… by the US alone. Yes, it stands for about 40% of the world’s military expenditures but add to that what the rest of the world’s military – some 180 – does to the environment and you can only ask one question: How dare you ignore the military destruction of the environment in the global climate change debates?

It would be great if Greta Thunberg would point her finger at that major environmental destroyer – which does this violence to Nature in order to be able to do violence to everything else where it operates.

Violence against Nature is fundamentally connected to violence against humans, societies, countries, and cultures. And that fundamental connector is the – basically Western – civilisational acceptance of and obsession with the mentality, research, technology and policies of violence.

Burning passion and detachment

Fortunately, Greta seems totally unimpressed with her status of intellectual and political celebrity, created in just about a year. I’m reminded of Gandhi’s statement that “A burning passion coupled with absolute detachment is the key to all success” – where detachment means detachment from the fruits of the action, to not do things in order to become rich or famous or otherwise benefit oneself.

I hope by all my heart that she and her parents will remain strong and “detached” and stay the course for the cause. That the nasty critics will not be able to wear her down. Fortunately, she seems strong and perhaps her Asperger “problem” is actually a help here.

The world needs Greta more than it needs the majority of its present decision-makers.

So let us wish her luck and support her cause. She brings hope, knowledge, passion and – yes, anger too – into global politics.

It could well be that Greta Thunberg develops into a modern day Gandhi-in-the-making. I would not exclude it and I am sure Gandhi would have welcomed her into his ashram.

Recommended

There are lots of videos with Greta Thunberg. Here is one of the many that also shows that she does not need a manuscript to say what she needs to say and one about the movement:

And here a fine interview with Canada’s National Observer.

Finally, The Transnational Foundation will soon launch a Militarism and the Environment Magazine on Flipboard. We’ll tell you when it takes place but until further, go and browser – and follow – our Transnational Peace Affairs magazine there.

Editor’s note

Although we are trying hard to persuade readers on our social media to conduct the debate here, under the article – which is the natural place if you have read the article – most seem ignorant and write their comments on Facebook. Thereby they endorse Facebook’s tracking and censorship and give this flawed media a virtually global monopoly on debates.
We do not want to contribute to that.
However, if you want to see that debate on Facebook – also the continued nasty attacks on Greta and her person and role, you may read it here.

Peace & future researcher + ‌Art Photographer

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