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If we do this right, not only will we avoid another devastating crisis, but we will create millions of new jobs, secure a safer, healthier world for our kids, and strengthen our national security.
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We also believe in the power of showing everyone the upside of climate solutions. John Kasich speaks at Protecting Lake Erie event. These conversations must address what Americans can see with their own eyes: once-in-a-generation floods happening more and more often, hurricanes getting stronger and more destructive, wildfires raging harder each year, farmers who are losing more crops - the list goes on. World War Zero is galvanizing 10 million conversations this year to connect a group of voices -the business leaders, scientists, military leaders, artists and entertainers, diplomats, and everyday citizens and activists - with the people who may need to hear something different than what they’ve heard from cable news or partisans. To make that happen, we need to do more to reach out to our fellow citizens who may not yet be convinced that the climate crisis impacts them, their families, their economic security, and our national security. "The climate crisis needs to be approached like the greatest battle of our time, because that’s what it is" During World War II Americans would conserve resources like rubber and nylon, encouraged by iconic posters proclaiming, “ don't you know there’s a war on?” We need a similar mindset today, because each of us can make a difference if we know how much is at stake. Now, in the same can-do, entrepreneurial spirit, we need millions of activists to take individual actions to address climate change themselves. Just like America’s shift to wartime footing in the 1940s helped build out our industrial base, bringing with it a decades-long expansion of the middle class, there’s a manufacturing revolution just waiting to be unleashed, creating new jobs that will accompany a clean energy economy. We need business and industry leaders to demonstrate how sustainability and clean energy technology are good for workers, good for businesses, and good for the economy. No one person can do it alone and every voice must be heard. Last but not least we are bringing along and inviting people who have never before felt connected to this issue, because there is so much that must be done. We are working to use this new coalition to fuse the incredible energy of young activists with the experience and leadership of people who have been in this fight for years. We launched World War Zero to bring together the aforementioned group of unlikely allies - Democrats, Republicans and independents, scientists, military leaders, business leaders, diplomats, entertainers, and ordinary people from all walks of life - committed to mobilizing, speaking up, and tackling this threat together.
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Secretary Kerry holds granddaughter while signing the COP21 Climate Change Agreement at the UN. World War II was won because people with fundamental differences came together to fight the common enemy. We know that the climate crisis needs to be approached like the greatest battle of our time, because that’s what it is - a fight for our environment, our health, our national security, our jobs and economy. One of us is a lifelong Democrat, a lifelong environmentalist, and a former United States Senator and Secretary of State who believes that the climate crisis can only be solved by galvanizing global action and cooperation - “all hands on deck” at home and overseas.īoth of us grew up in the shadows of World War II, fought by our parents’ generation. "We need a new kind of discourse that’s inclusive and connects every audience with voices they trust" In that same spirit, we are calling on more conservatives to stand up and do something on this all-important matter. The very word “conservative” signals our commitment to conserve, value, and protect those things that matter most to our American way of life and to our future. One of us is a Republican, and a conservative former Governor who proudly championed many efforts to protect the environment in Ohio, including strong renewable-energy policies and standards that reduced the state’s carbon emissions by almost 30 percent. John Kasich speaks about protecting Ohio's drinking water.