The Seasonal Reading Challenge discussion
WINTER CHALLENGE 2019
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Group Reads Discussion - This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate
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Sometimes I feel as if there are too many examples and she overdoes the explication but overall this is an excellent book that urges people to change what we ARE doing rather than implement something new.
Big changes are needed and now


I completed this book today and felt that the author took far too long to make some very valid points. This is information that people need to know, but it should have been pared down to be more readable. I listened to the audio book which might have been a mistake because my concentration faded in and out.
All of that aside, we need to do more to save the planet for future generations. If we expect corporations to grow a conscience, that's not going to happen. They put profits before everything and everybody.

Like Amy & Marie said, it's possibly overlong in ramming home some of the points, especially as I suspect it's a book that is preaching to the converted, who might not need quite as much convincing that oil is bad.
This was written before Greta & Extinction Rebellion, and I wonder what an update would say about those two, who are building on the need to create moral outrage and the Blockadia principles she talks about.



I too found the book slow going but I am glad I finished it. I thought her struggle to have a baby was interesting although it did feel a bit like part of a different book. The main thing I got out of it was how intertwined climate change is with poverty and the rights of the poor.

Let me start by saying I am not a climate denier, but I am also not all on board with the world is ending due to climate change. We are told this is settled science, however, I was also told growing up that we were headed to another ice age. I also believe that with all its downsides, Capitalism has improved quality of life by encouraging innovative ideas and creating wealth. I'm a bit of a skeptic and this book did nothing to push me to either side of the debate.
There is frankly too much information in this book. It is repetitive and overwhelming. As I was reading it, I would think that's a good point and yet as I write this I cannot come up with anything. It was just too much. If this was a topic that I was passionate about, I'm sure I would have gained a lot more knowledge; however, I chose this book only because I had already read the other two.

I was happy to start this book with the realization that it wasn't just going to be another book trying to convince people that the climate crisis is real. It starts with the assumption that this is a given (which it is) and moves on to a discussion of what we need to do about it and barriers to making that happen. I've read two of Naomi Klein's books in the past and am a big fan. She is able to present incredibly complex issues in a manner that makes me feel like I understand more and can do something about it.
I will admit that the first two thirds of the book had me worried - it felt like a lot about how this is an insurmountable challenge, the the last part of the book highlighted what was successfully being done by common people, taking up the charge - giving up on waiting for someone to come and save us. There was a quote toward the end of the book, "And it's not just about the people we vote into office and then complain about - it's us." So this book ended up being a very powerful call to action, a move toward bringing this fight home to every person. This Changes Everything isn't just about climate change impacting the earth, This Changes Everything is about the book changing people's attitudes toward their role in being a solution to the problem. Very powerful.
The requirement for task 20.10: You must participate in the book's discussion thread below with at least one post about the contents of the book or your reaction to the book after you have read the book.