Teenage warrior of the climate crisis

In person, she is tiny. Eyes wide and head down, her discomfort with crowds and small talk make it easy to understand why Greta Thunberg says she was “an invisible girl” for most of her 16 years.
But when Thunberg went to Washington—into the lights, cameras and lack-of-action that makes up the modern congressional hearing—the smallest and youngest person in the room came off as the oldest soul on Capitol Hill.
Brushing off Republican talking points and Democratic flattery with equal flat annoyance, even friendly softballs were treated as reminders that she takes this much more seriously than most grown-ups. Even those in the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Climate.
Furious
“How can we get more kids involved in this issue?” asked Rep Ben Luján, a Democrat from New Mexico.
“Just tell them the truth,” she said. “Tell them how it is. Because when I found out how it actually is, it made me furious.”
When Thunberg walked into a conference room at the Ford Foundation for interviews, I flashed to a short story I wrote in college about a child who can see the future. On his popular TV show, the boy announces that all war will end the following day but, as humanity celebrates, he admits to his mother that it was a lie.
“Tomorrow, all life on earth will end in fire,” he tells her, and “I don’t think they can take it.”
Small price
Convinced that humanity can—MUST—take the hardest of truths, Thunberg set down her “Skolstrejk för Klimatet” (“School Strike for Climate”) sign, put on a mic and began a gauntlet of interviews about the end of life as we know it.
“I mean, I don’t like being the center of attention,” she said. “I don’t want to be heard all the time, but if there is anything I can do to improve the situation then I think it’s a very small price to pay.”
It’s been less than a year since she plopped down in front of Parliament in Stockholm, a one-girl Swedish version of the US school strikes for gun control.
“The symbolism of the climate strike is that if you adults don’t give a damn about my future, I won’t either,” she explained.
By Day 2, she had company. By Week 2, a viral movement on social media, and within a few months, she stood before dignitaries at the UN’s climate change conference in Poland.
“You only speak of green eternal economic growth because you are too scared of being unpopular,” she said.
A month later, she took a train to Davos, Switzerland, slept in a tent and told the rich and powerful that the house is on fire. “Adults keep saying we owe it to the young people to give them hope. But I don’t want your hope. I want you to panic.”
Having sworn off flying, it took a 60-foot sailboat on loan from Monaco’s royalty to get her to America, and while her selfies amid whitecaps drew new followers by the thousands, it also made her a target of conservative climate crisis skeptics.
“Freak yachting accidents do happen in August,” tweeted Arron Banks, a founder of the pro-Brexit Leave campaign.
“For me, that is just in a way, funny,” Thunberg responded with a smile. “It is like they don’t have any arguments left so they, so they have to just mock me, or mock my diagnosis or my appearance. In a way, it is a positive sign that something is happening. They feel threatened by, by this movement. That means we are making a difference.”
By “diagnosis,” she means Asperger’s. Thunberg’s mother is a famous singer in Sweden and has written about Greta’s place on the spectrum as something like a superpower.
“It makes me work a bit different. I think differently,” she said.
In March, almost 1.5 million children in dozens of countries left classrooms and took to the streets. With strikes planned in over 500 places in the US alone today, the Fridays for Future movement could easily double those numbers.
Thunberg sees protests—but also lawsuits, treaties and pressure campaigns—as vital tools.
“We will try to push it and make sure that the world leaders have all eyes on them so that they cannot continue to ignore this.” —CNN