I want to talk about the term "resiliency" as it pertains to climate chaos. It's being used in a lot of bold proposals lately and I want to be excited I do. But a thread on why I'm not. After Superstorm Sandy, the word resilient was tossed around a lot to describe recovery. 1/
Seven years later over 1,000 families still aren't home. Mine will never get back home. In my family's case it was because MITIGATION and ADAPTATION measures were not put in place. We, the people were resilient. But the policies we actually needed are tied to elevation, green 2/
spaces, the ceasing of development, natural flood barriers, infrastructure that isn't in need of repairs all the time. I LOVE that frontline communities are finally being centered. You don't get much more frontline than Atlantic City. We're working class and poor, we're a 3/
a barrier island, we have something like 80 spoken languages among 40,000 people, we're being gentrified. And even though my family was displaced years ago, I still say we because that will always be my family's home. More families are facing flooding now than did from Sandy. 4/
Resiliency is a very nice word. And I am ecstatic that Climate Chaos is finally being talked about and covered daily. But what our communities need is socially equitable and just mitigation and adaptation and that is going to be a combination of a lot of things including *sob* 5/
managed, community-led retreat. Flooding was a major part of the news cycle because before the first part of the year hit more than 20 states had suffered major flooding. Dams, levees, floodgates- they're not working- at least not for frontline communities. 6/
There was literally a funeral for an ice cap this week. Sea level rise & flooding is only going to get worse and we have millions of people living in flood zones in this country. We don't have time. We don't. The NFIP-RE is a start but it hasn't been enacted yet. We need it to 7/
pass AND we need the Living Shorelines Act to pass AND we still will need more to survive. We're losing out most precious carbon trap. Temperatures will rise beyond IPCC predictions. I'm not a scientist but I believe that's the right conclusion. 8/
So in the future can we hear less "resilient" and more socially equitable and just adaptation and mitigation. 9/
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As Dorian is being is tracked I thought it would be a good time to reshare @njstandupspeak "Long Road Home" along with the very personal side of severe weather and climate chaos. It's my own personal story. 1/
I'm a Jersey girl. There is no doubt about that. I'm half Portuguese but grew up in South Jersey but that's another thread. My mother is a Rhody. I spent my summers in Ocean Citu, NJ and in Narragansett, RI. My grandmother's house sat on Narrow River. 2/
I had a relationship with water- salt or fresh. But salt water was always like a dear friend; healing my body & spirit, embracing me in the warmest of hugs, daring my sense of adventure. I was always *home* of I was on the sand. My uncles taught us to fish. My grandmother 3/
It is no coincidence that after a record breaking number of women won House seats & a presidential primary has seen the highest amount of women running that states are passing laws against reproductive justice. This isn't just about controlling our bodies- it's retaliation. 1/
So yes donate to health centers, volunteer to be an escort. But most importantly RUN FOR OFFICE. Run for the state legislature, run for Congress. Get your law degrees and work you way up through the courts. Or 👏ga👏nize! F*** the Handmaid's Tale memes. They will not help us. 2/
There is only one way out of this. And that is to unseat the masochists voting for these bills and having nothing less than EQUAL REPRESENTATION OF EVERY LEVEL OF GOVERNMENT INCLUDING THE JUDICIAL BRANCH. Want to stop hearing stupid shit like "just move an ectopic pregnancy"? 3/
So, I normally just try to ignore Seth Grossman. He's vile but let's face it, there's other fires that need to be put out before I spend energy on him but there is something I want to call attention to. Even if you're someone who buys into or ignores some if his ideologies 1/
if you live in South Jersey you can't afford to ignore his denial of climate change or his attitude towards flood survivors. Flooding is the new normal. There is no current buyback plan that gives fair value AND creates green spaces to address flooding. Would you just hand 2/
your property over to the government, Mr. Grossman? If yo have the finances to do so and just start over, God bless. But something tells me that in your "pull yourself up by your bootstraps" bull, you wouldn't under any circumstances just hand your property over to the govt & 3/