"If there is something we
are not lacking in this world, it's money. Of course, many people do lack
money, but governments and these people in power, they do not lack money."
During an event
in New York City Monday night with author and environmentalist Naomi
Klein, 16-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg had a simple message for
those who claim it is "too expensive" to boldly confront the climate
crisis with sweeping policies like a Green New Deal.
"If we can save the
banks," said Thunberg, "we can save the world."
"If there is something we
are not lacking in this world, it's money," she added. "Of course,
many people do lack money, but governments and these people in power, they do
not lack money. And also we need to have the polluters... actually pay for the
damage they have caused. So, to that argument, I would not even respond to that
argument, because it has been said so many times, the money is there. What we
lack now is political will and social will to do it."
Watch:
Thunberg arrived
in New York late last month after nearly two weeks of sailing across
the Atlantic. The young environmentalist made the journey ahead of the Sept. 20
global climate strikes, which she helped inspire through persistent activism
that has included directly
confronting world leaders and elites over their role in the
planetary emergency.
The strikes, which are
expected to bring millions to the streets in over 150 countries, will coincide
with the United Nations Summit on Climate Change on Sept. 23rd in New York.
"I want September 20 to
be a tipping point," Thunberg said Monday night. "I want world
leaders to feel like they have too many people watching them."
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