Top 64 Quotes & Sayings by Gail Bradbrook

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British activist Gail Bradbrook.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Gail Bradbrook

Gail Marie Bradbrook is a British environmental activist and a co-founder of the environmental social movement Extinction Rebellion.

Human extinction in our children's lifetime, it should be your top news item every single day, what's happening, you should be holding politicians to account.
You have to keep building. Movements have to move forward.
I planted trees but the idea that you can offset carbon is nonsense - planting trees is more a way of acknowledging harm and apologising. — © Gail Bradbrook
I planted trees but the idea that you can offset carbon is nonsense - planting trees is more a way of acknowledging harm and apologising.
I am no longer a scientist as I stopped in 2000. Science was quite a testing place to be as a working-class woman.
I want to live in a beautiful, nature-filled world, and, if we get shot on the streets fighting for it, so be it.
I'd been focused on trying to start civil disobedience since 2010. I'd tried many things and they hadn't worked. So I went on a retreat and prayed, with some psychedelic medicines. It was really intense and I prayed for what I called the codes for social change and within a month my prayer was answered.
I did a PhD in molecular bio-physics.
My dad was a miner at South Kirkby colliery. He went on strike but he didn't go to the picket line, he just put his feet up and got in my mum's way.
If they come at us with tear gas or batons or mass arrests then you get a kind of upswell because they become repressive of people demanding what the public actually want.
I also personally think - as do many others - that a shift on consciousness is needed toward one where we understand that we are in a relationship with the earth and all living beings, that we have agency. That life is worth fighting for.
The big goal - and it sounds crazy - is to save as much life on Earth as possible.
We are killing life on Earth, we're in the sixth mass extinction event and it's possible that human beings will go extinct. We're in a culture that doesn't want you to think about that.
If your government isn't protecting you and the future of your kids, you have a duty to rebel, and a right to rebel. — © Gail Bradbrook
If your government isn't protecting you and the future of your kids, you have a duty to rebel, and a right to rebel.
We want an economy that grows health and wellbeing, not debt and carbon emissions. An economy that prepares and protects us from shocks to come, rather than making them worse. An economy that shares resources to meet all our needs, regardless of background. An economy that lets us live.
We have a system that is deeply narcissistic - the consumer sort of capitalist culture. It's all about me and now and what do I need that just makes you feel a bit better with all the stress. But in other healthy cultures, they have a real sense of ancestor and a sense of the next seven generations.
What happens if you stand passively by the side of the road with a placard saying, you know, 'Stop climate change' is you just get ignored. When you get on the street and block it, people start to have a conversation about this existential situation that we're in.
We had a 25-step process coming up with the name Extinction Rebellion.
I did yoga in the cell, meditated, and slept well; somebody brings you some food and drink. I've been arrested four times now.
We could easily be facing starvation in the U.K. if the weather effect continues as it is. We need to be building resilience in our communities.
I always had a desire to see change and be part of it.
I'm horrified to have been alerted to anti-Semitism showing up in a Facebook group I'm associated with. As a busy mum I don't have time to monitor everything.
It is not a campaign. It is a rebellion. We are in active rebellion against our government. The social contract is broken, the governments aren't protecting us and it's down to us now.
We need a grownup conversation about why our political economy is killing life on Earth.
We've been at war with nature. Now we need to apologize and clean up.
When you say 'no' and you get on the streets and you do an act of civil disobedience, it changes your psychology.
Whilst I'm all for psychedelic science - I think it's fantastic - I don't think we necessarily have time to wait for the science to tell us these medicines are useful. The indigenous cultures have already shown us the ways.
For years I have engaged with this ecological crisis on an intellectual level, the mounting evidence, the science... but now I have engaged with the potential destruction of this world on an emotional level and there is a fundamental difference. There is huge feeling of grief, of loss.
We have to be bringing carbon out of the atmosphere, and we can't wait for these magical technologies that are somehow going to suck the carbon out of the atmosphere in the future and mean we can do business as usual. And so, what we have to do, what we're going to need to do, is really work with nature to repair the climate.
We need to have a grown-up conversation about what kind of system do we need, both politically and legally and culturally and economically, that will stop this ridiculous, outrageous harming that we're doing to ourselves and the planet.
People think that climate change is something happening to somebody else at some other time but it's coming home.
Love has a cost, and it's grief. Because we will always be separated from things we love. That's the nature and price of life, right? But, when you love something deeply, then you're courageous.
Some people see protesting as a bit of a dirty thing, and certainly the idea of getting arrested was not on people's radar.
We're not just being dramatic talking about a human extinction - that's the pathway we're on. We have to look at the bigger picture. If your child had cancer and it was unlikely they were going to survive, you'd do everything in your power to fight it.
I would support a mass civil disobedience where we take medicine to tell the state that they have absolutely no right to control our consciousness and to define our spiritual practice.
In the past when I was on protests, it was always people shouting out of the cars, 'get a job, get a bath, get a haircut.' So, am I a dole-scrounging hippie, or am I middle class and privileged? Just by stepping forward, somehow you become scrutinized, rather than the actual issues that count.
We oppose a system that generates huge wealth through astonishing innovation but is fatally unable to distribute fairly and provide universal access to its spoils.
I want the system to change so I think you could call that a revolution.
Everyone is into yoni steaming. I've done it once. — © Gail Bradbrook
Everyone is into yoni steaming. I've done it once.
But the main thing is to give people permission to feel it and to put grief at the heart of what Extinction Rebellion's about.
I want the planet protected for my children.
Nothing is being done of any real significance. Our demand is the government must tell the truth about the crisis we're in. And that includes working with communities to build resilience... We want to go to net carbon zero emissions by 2015 and reduce our consumption levels.
We need to go to net zero carbon really quickly. And we're also asking for a people's assembly so people can decide how the change happens. We'll know when governments are doing different things, it could feel like a war, a beautiful war.
The UN has given us until 2020 to change the course of humanity. If that doesn't happen human extinction in my children's lifetime is a possibility.
I was in India as scientist doing post-doctoral research for about four months. I fell in love with India.
Economic growth tends to require the taking of resources from the Earth. So something has to change on a debt-based economy.
This is not a slow movement of change. It's a shift in the consciousness of each of us. It is a collective shift. It involves facing grief and trauma and undoing our numbness and our narcissism and our indulgence that we have in this privileged western society.
I've always been interested in how things change, in social change. I was involved in the animal rights movement as a young woman, I've been involved in thinking about gender and issues around racism and so on.
It sounds like an extremist thing to say, but what do people think is going to happen to human beings when there's not enough food? — © Gail Bradbrook
It sounds like an extremist thing to say, but what do people think is going to happen to human beings when there's not enough food?
Given the scale of the ecological crisis we are facing this is the appropriate scale of expansion. Occupying the streets to bring about change as our ancestors have done before us. Only this kind of large-scale economic disruption can rapidly bring the government to the table to discuss our demands. We are prepared to risk it all for our futures.
What I would say is that in its first iteration, Extinction Rebellion is really about democracy, by calling in for these new democratic forms for people to have their power. And frankly, in many countries of the world, democracy is in just absolute shambles.
There is just arrogance in even having an opinion.
The precedent is that civilizations collapse, and everything's stacked up for this one to go, and it's a mess when it happens.
I have a humble background. My dad was a coal miner. My mum worked a receptionist. I was one of the first people in my family to go to university.
So many of us who've been thinking about the ecological crisis have had this horrible creeping feeling, like nothing was getting done and it was getting worse.
It's only by being disruptive that you get people to have a conversation about an issue.
Change comes when people are willing to commit acts of peaceful civil disobedience.
I do have a rebellious spirit.
The economic system is acting like a cancer on humanity. The regulatory system, the accountants, the legal firms support the metastasizing of this cancer.
I just like swearing and being cheeky.
We do need a vision that's uplifting, even whilst being realistic. And there's a lot in the world that already speaks to that, like tikkun olam in the Jewish faith.
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