What do you do when you’re working on a big climate change project that could help the world reach the goals of the Paris Agreement, and the U.S. elects a president who wants to expand the fossil fuel industry? Canada's National Observer talked with environmentalist and author Bill McKibben, the man who brought climate change awareness to the public. He has been mobilizing grassroots action against fossil fuel development for decades. Bill McKibben thinks Donald Trump's Drill Baby Drill policies are not only taking the climate change fight back 50 years but are also putting the U.S. far behind China in the race to develop renewable energy. Tzeporah Berman and South African activist Kumi Naidoo of the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty initiative have been travelling the world to find out just how countries are responding to the U.S. policies. They have some positive news to report. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Treaty
The signing of the Paris Agreement in 2015 was a breakthrough in the fight against the climate crisis. Almost every country in the world signed on to the treaty and agreed to keep or reduce emissions to under 2 degrees Celsius, or better yet, 1.5 degrees Celsius.When environmental activist Tzeporah Berman read the agreement – a bit nerdy but someone had to do it – she found no mention of oil, gas and coal. Odd, because oil, gas and oil are responsible for more than 86 per cent of carbon emissions. Berman decided the Paris Agreement needed help, so she set out to create the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty. Not a heavy lift at all. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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When Politics Ruins Friendships
Today, we’re sharing something a little different on our feed. It’s part of an episode swap we’re doing with CANADALAND, and we think their episode When Politics Ruins Friendships fits right into what we explore here on The Takeover.You’ve heard us talk about how powerful voices are weaponizing language and misinformation to shape the climate conversation. But those same forces.., those same tactics… are also tearing apart our relationships and reshaping how we talk to each other in our deeply divided world. In this episode, host Sam Konnert explores what happens when politics stop being about policies. First, you’ll hear a deeply personal story about a friendship destroyed by political radicalization. Then Sam speaks with Ryan Broderick, the writer of a popular newsletter called Garbage Day, about how to recognize this behaviour in your personal circles and maybe even how to pull someone back from the edge.If you’ve been listening to The Takeover, you know how important it is to understand not just what people are saying, but how those messages are being used to push us further apart. For more episodes like this, you can follow Canadaland wherever you get your podcasts. This is When Politics Ruins Friendships, from CANADALAND. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Back in Canada
We take our exploration of right-wing politics to Ottawa, where the Canada Strong and Free Network conference brings together key players in the Conservative movement. Our goal: to compare this event with the ARC conference in London, U.K., and see how each reflects the state of right-wing thought today. With a federal election underway, I wasn’t sure how many major Conservative figures would show up—but as it turns out, the campaign wasn’t a distraction. It was a central theme, woven through speeches, panels, and hallway conversations alike. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Drill Baby Drill
Donald Trump made it clear during the presidential campaign that his administration planned a Drill, Baby Drill approach to energy. He said he would reduce regulations and cancel policies to fight climate change put in place by the Biden administration.It was only a week after he was elected that President Trump announced he wanted fracking executive Chris Wright as his Energy Secretary. The long-time climate denier who dismisses renewable energy as expensive and unreliable seemed to be everyone’s favourite, especially the fossil fuel industry. And it was smooth sailing for Wright through his confirmation hearing.Episode four of The Takeover looks at the man who could make or break the world’s climate change goals. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Powerful voices are rewriting climate reality—and getting away with it.At a conference in London, politicians, influencers and billionaires call Net Zero "a sinister goal," renewables "impossible," and climate action a "scam".They weren’t whispering in backrooms, they were building alliances across the West and beyond to kill global climate commitments and reshape public opinion.The Takeover pulls back the curtain on a rising movement that's weaponizing language, spreading misinformation, and shifting the boundaries of mainstream debate. Hear what they’re saying—and why it matters more than ever. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.