Joe Wilkes
Editorial Manager
It鈥檚 generally difficult to shake Monday morning D.C. commuters out of their post-weekend torpor鈥攂ut the purple van blocking the intersection of 16th and K last week probably did the trick.
鈥淩OAD CLOSED. CLIMATE EMERGENCY,鈥 proclaimed a banner taped to the van鈥檚 side, before the vehicle鈥攁nd the climate activists chained its roof鈥攚ere by the police.
The van was one of viral to from the on September 23: a of 22 major intersections throughout the nation鈥檚 capital. Organized by a coalition of local climate and social justice groups (including Black Lives Matter D.C., Code Pink, Metro D.C. Socialists of America, Extinction Rebellion, and Work for Peace) and timed to coincide with the United Nations Climate Action Summit in New York, the shutdown formed a striking addendum to the largest in history. In total, more than 2,000 supporters participated in the shutdown, propelling it to Twitter鈥檚 #2 trending topic in the U.S.
According to shutdown organizer 鈥攁 member of and founder and national director of the 鈥攊t鈥檚 been a long time coming.
鈥淭his action is different from many others in the past,鈥 Brana told me in an interview. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen the way our government, our leaders鈥攂oth Republicans and Democrats鈥攈ave recognized this problem but have done nothing.鈥
The decision to paralyze citywide traffic, Brana emphasized, wasn鈥檛 taken lightly.
鈥淲e have literally done everything we鈥檙e told we鈥檙e supposed to in a democratic society to produce change when there is an existential crisis chasing us down, and none of it has worked,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e done the voting, we鈥檝e done the office visits, the calls, the lobbying, the protest鈥攁nd our politicians and leaders have just shrugged it off. That鈥檚 why we had to take drastic action for an emergency that can no longer be ignored.鈥
Brana described #ShutDownDC and an earlier September 20 march to the Capitol鈥攂oth inspired by the made famous by 16-year-old activist Greta Thunberg鈥攁s following in a storied tradition of nonviolent protest.
鈥淭here is a long and effective history of civil disobedience being used to make change when people are left with no other option,鈥 he said, citing South African resistance to apartheid, the Indian independence movement, the Civil Rights movement, and the very founding of the U.S. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a proud, respected tradition. I would say that creative nonviolent civil disobedience is the best way to bring people out.鈥
In all, 32 protestors for 鈥渦nlawful demonstration activities鈥濃攁n outcome the coalition had been prepared for, said Brana.
鈥淭his is what it's going to take to shock the government to awake from its complacency and do something,鈥 he said, adding that there is 鈥渘o such thing as a cost too high … when the alternative is the extinction of humanity.鈥
Despite hours of gridlock and ensuing media buzz, however, lawmakers made virtually no mention of the protest; the only official response was from Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), who to introduce a bill that would hold protestors responsible for public safety response costs. So how does a grassroots movement compel recognition from policymakers, mobilize a growing base, and stay relevant amidst increasingly frenetic media cycles?
鈥淭he key is to stay in action,鈥 Brana said, noting that powerful institutions such as governments and major fuel corporations will generally attempt to 鈥渨ait out鈥 climate activists. 鈥淵ou know, there鈥檚 going to be a big march, but then everyone鈥檚 just going to go home.鈥 In such cases, he said, public demonstrations simply act as 鈥減ressure valves鈥濃攔eleasing tension without generating accompanying change.
Instead, Brana asserted, we need 鈥渟ustained and continued action鈥 in the fight for our climate. 鈥淧eople and institutions that are responsible for this crisis have to know you鈥檙e going to keep coming back. We are going to keep coming back in bigger numbers and keep acting and escalating until change is made.鈥
Thus, he stressed, while 鈥済etting the attention of literally millions of people and shutting down the capital of the most powerful country on Earth鈥攚hich is [resource-wise] the biggest polluter and contributor to climate change鈥攊s a huge achievement 鈥 the work isn鈥檛 done.鈥
Last Friday saw the coalition and other climate activists marching through the streets of D.C.鈥攁nd according to Brana, 鈥渘ot even that will be the end.鈥 Those who count themselves as part of the climate movement, he said, must act as 鈥淓arth鈥檚 antibodies鈥攖he white blood cells identifying a cancerous economic and political system that blights everything it touches鈥濃攊n order to heal a dying world.
In the meantime, Brana is particularly heartened by the 鈥渞ising tide鈥 of young people pushing the movement forward.
鈥淭here was a beautiful moment [during the shutdown] when a group of the youngest among us went back into the street and continued blocking traffic鈥攅ven after we were finished,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淚t was a display of how critical this is to the future of the youth鈥攁nd how profoundly they understand that.鈥