"The climate crisis has everything to do with the military. Every single war fought in the past eighty years, if not longer, has been about oil."
I thought I was fairly well informed about the sources of our current climate crisis but --did you know that our plastic bottle problem is a direct result of our big oil problem? Yes--fracking is the source of the plastics used in bottle production. The oil companies already see the writing on the wall, they know that fossil fuel burning vehicles are being phased out, but they fully intend to keep fracking because they are making HUGE profits from the plastics industry. "British Petroleum, Exxon, and Chevron estimate that they might make as much as 70 percent of future revenues from plastics . . ."
This book is chock full of information like this. When Jane, who has been a lifelong activist (anti-war, pro-physical fitness) as well as an award winning actress, decided to take a stand on climate change, she used Greta Thunberg's School Strike for Climate Action as a template, and organized a year's worth of Fire Drill Fridays.
Each month was focused on a different aspect of climate change, and each month she organized with other leaders currently working in that particular field. So we get to meet Bill McKibben of 350.org and Annie Leonard of Greenpeace, Naomi Kline, author of On Fire, the (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal, and countless other leaders working on impacts in oceans, forests, indigenous lands, environmental justice, women's issues, climate change and the military, etc.
Every chapter ends with a section: What Can I Do, with specific, actionable steps. It's not enough to raise the alarm--you have to empower people with information on how they can get involved to solve the problem. This book does this so well that I have just realized with a sigh that I will have to return my library copy and go buy a copy for my permanent use. One example: The financial industry--it is time to take a really close look at who you are supporting with your 401(k).
Jane had a goal to be arrested at her Fire Drill Fridays--but she also knew that she had to limit the number of arrests so as not to trigger a next-level legal response in which she would have to be held for sentencing. So she only got arrested four times --- but she had plenty of others with her who took their turns being arrested. People like her daughter and stepdaughter, her grandchildren, her friends Lily Tomlin and Ted Danson, Eve Ensler, Rosanna Arquette . . . I could go on and one listing them. Then she and the remaining protesters would wait on the street for them and cheer in solidarity when they were released. I think she stresses this several times in the book and perhaps it is because she is saying Solidarity is what it's going to take for us to overcome the forces of resistance.
What did Jane do when she was processed and put in a jail cell? Well, this 82 year old woman who once led the aerobics mania of the 80s with her leggings-and-Reebok-clad videos, stated "I spent the time doing wall squats." Ha ha! Go, Jane!
Not only is the book informative and thorough, it is beautifully produced on glossy stock with dozens of photographs and shows a respect and commitment to good book design--good separation between the meat of each chapter and the supporting preambles and sidebars in contrasting colors.
Yes--editing matters. Book design matters.
This book could have been a hastily produced three star. But it is a five star.