Exposing the Big Game

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Exposing the Big Game

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wonders whether people should have kids in a climate-ravaged world. So does this movement of ‘BirthStrikers.’

Blythe
Blythe Pepino, age 33, is the founder of the BirthStrike movement with spokeswoman Alice Brown.
 Tom Jacobs/Courtesy of Birth Strike

https://www.businessinsider.com/climate-change-birthstrikers-refuse-children-2019-3

  • A recent trend of environmental bad news — warming oceans,melting ice sheets, and more intense tornadoes— prompted New York Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to pose the question of whether it’s right to still have children in a world threatened by climate change.
  • A growing group of women concerned about climate change agree with AOC. And they’re wielding a new weapon in the war against“business as usual.” They’re choosing not to reproduce.
  • These women, called BirthStrikersall agree to not bear children “due to the severity of the ecological crisis and the current inaction of governing forces in the face of this existential threat.”

Blythe Pepino grew up walking with her parents on blustery, cold English beaches and in the Welsh mountains.

She remembers fondly sitting in the freezing cold with hot chocolate, aware of her environment and its fragility. As she grew older, the singer-songwriter watched a lot of news, and read books like Naomi Klein’s “This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate,” with growing dismay.

While she wanted to hold politicians and governments accountable for their inaction on climate change, she found herself “anxious to the point where I had to switch off,” she told Business Insider.

Extinction Rebellion is a group of activists that seek to stop climate breakdown, halt biodiversity loss, and minimize the risk of human extinction and ecological collapse by means of education and nonviolent protest. Their lecture changed Pepino’s outlook on the climate change crisis.

“I knew I couldn’t go back,” she said. “I knew stuff I couldn’t un-know.”

extinction rebellion
The Extinction Rebellion activist group protested on November 23, 2018 in Tower Hill, London.
David Holt/Wikimedia Commons

That was the genesis for Pepino’s controversial and growing BirthStrike movement, created for people who have decided not to have children in response to the threat of a warming planet. While the movement is small, it’s part of a growing group of activists, politicians, and scientists attempting to communicate that our warming planet has passed multiple irreversible tipping points.

BirthStrike began with a modest membership of 60 men and women. Now, global membership is around 200, according to the Guardian.

‘We’re too afraid to bring children into world with the future that’s forecast’

Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez made headlines in February when she brought up the idea that having children was no longer a given in today’s environment. “It is basically a scientific consensus that the lives of our children are going to be very difficult, and it does lead young people to have a legitimate question: is it OK to still have children?” she said on Instagram Live.

This vocalization of a core BirthStriker message may have helped pave the way for the media attention that Pepino’s new movement is getting. She publicly announced the BirthStrike movement two weeks ago.

“We’re too afraid to bring children into the world with future that’s forecast,” Pepino, age 33, said. “This is a really powerful way of communicating the severity of what’s going on.”

The UK-based Birthstriker movement started with Pepino — freshly grieving from her decision to not have children — reaching out on Facebook to friends and others who she thought might feel the same way.

“I know that sounds calculated, but I made this decision [to not have children] personally first and then realized it was a great way to get more people, especially the right wing media, on board with the climate change crisis,” she said.

While BirthStrike is new, the idea of not having children because of climate change has been percolating for years.

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Conceiving one fewer child is equal to a savings of 64 tons of carbon dioxide annually over the course of a parent’s life. 
Chip Somodevilla / Stringer / Getty Images

‘Maybe we should protect our kids by not having them’

“I think it’s seen as such a massive decision to make, especially for the younger women like myself,” Lydia Dibben, a BirthStriker from West Sussex, told Business Insider. “Children are seen to be the ultimate goal in life, something that everyone wants, and so promising never to have them seems extreme to a lot of people.”

“Here’s a provocative thought: Maybe we should protect our kids by not having them,” Rieder told NPR.

Another organization, a non-profit called Conceivable Future, was started on the notion that “the climate crisis is a reproductive crisis.” The US-based group, founded in 2015, demands an end to US fossil fuel subsidies by “telling the stories of climate change’s impact on our reproductive lives.”

In 2018, the New York Times reported on more than a dozen people ages 18 to 43 — most of them American women — voicing concerns over bringing a child into a world saddled with increasing climate-change driven natural disasters.

Conduit doesn’t own a car, walks to work, and eats vegetarian. Pepino said she doesn’t fly anymore. But a 2017 study found that having even one less child is a more effective way of cutting down a person’s carbon footprint than recycling, driving an electric car, being vegetarian, or using renewable energy.

That said, the BirthStrikers — and many scientists— argue the scale of the climate change problem has become so severe that collective action is more important than individual actions.

The movement is not about population control

One of those suggested collective actions is controlling how fast the number of humans living on Earth grows. Though the world population currently hovers around 7.7 billionthe United Nations expects that number to grow to 9.8 billion in just 30 years, and reach 11.2 billion by 2100.

But the BirthStrike movement isn’t founded on notions of a “child ban” or population control. In fact, Pepino’s biggest concern is that the BirthStrike movement “will continue to be re-edited as a population argument.”

Hannah Conduit, a 27-year-old Birthstriker from Bristol, UK, pointed out that “nothing in the movement demonizes having children.”

“The idea of a sort of mass movement against having children is damaging to society,” Conduit told Business Insider. “But BirthStrike highlights that some women see [having children] as a choice that they might not be able to make in good conscience.”

She doesn’t have a significant other in her life right now. Pepino does.

“We still talk about how we want kids, and it’s hard to come to terms that this is the end,” Pepino said of her and her partner’s conversations about starting a family.

Alice Brown, a 24-year-old from Bristol who works on the BirthStrike movement with Pepino, said on the BirthStrike website that “instead of dreaming about my career and family, I’m burdened with the disease we’ve created.”

birth strike
Alice Brown, age 24, is “gutted” not to be able to start her family.
 Thomas Jacob

“My decision not to have a child I truly feel is a necessity not a choice,”Brown said. “I cannot imagine how scared our kids are going to be.”

“People doing extreme things for what they believe in always gets attention. It’s worked in past social movements, like the suffragettes chaining themselves to railings, and it really needs to work if we have any hope of surviving the years that are coming,” 22-year-old Dibben said.

‘It would break my heart to bring children into the world and have it collapse around them’

The BirthStrike movement has dealt with plenty of conservative backlash and social media vitriol in the two weeks since the organization’s formal announcement. But that doesn’t deter BirthStrike followers.

To these women, their power of reproduction is the hammer with which they strike at a world that seems indifferent to its impending demise. “We’re going to have to take a hit on our arrogance as a species,” Pepino said. “We are becoming less than we are as our babies, our future, and our natural world are disappearing.”

“It would break my heart to bring children into the world and have it collapse around them,” Conduit said.

SEE ALSO: People are using the viral ’10-year challenge’ as a stark warning about what’s happening to our planet

6 thoughts on “Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wonders whether people should have kids in a climate-ravaged world. So does this movement of ‘BirthStrikers.’

  1. Mother Nature’s design isn’t an intellectual thing, though. Most pregnancies are unplanned.

    It breaks my heart to see the world collapsing around us *because* people are having too many children, and too much of everything.

    I always say it reminds me of that shampoo commercial – I had two kids, and my friends had two kids, and so on…and so on…..

    How did we end up with nearly 8 billion if everyone was only ‘replacing themselves’? I did like the idea of adoption, though, for the couple who wanted children and decided to adopt.

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