Re-imagine What’s Possible… and Re-invent the Future

Young people are crucial in the global transition from dirty to clean energy. We also must play a pivotal role in re-envisioning and re-inventing our society to fully harness the potential within a clean energy future.

If there is one idea that serves as our core identity and our rallying cry it is this: young people today have the power to change the world. Many of us emerge into the adult world a bit groggy with confusion and perhaps a lack of direction, but with the fierce motivation to “make a difference.” And the world, it seems, desperately needs us.

We face an incredibly uncertain future. As a forthcoming UN report concludes, seeming almost entirely redundant, the world has never seen calamities at such a global scale.

It is a relatively new conception of the world as a connected global community that enables us to feel the sadness and anger inherent in these global calamities. Many of us who live in post-scarcity comfort, with most of our own fundamental needs met, can’t bear the injustice of a world where billions of people do not. As the UN report points out, “ours is the first generation with the means for many to know the world as a whole, identify global improvement systems, and seek to improve [them].”

So, as young people we sign petitions, write letters to Congress, and organize, organize, organize. Valiant folks have recently begun to seriously step it up, in some places putting bodies on the line to fight coal plants and let corporations know that they can’t monopolize our future for profit, taking part in the critical fight to stop the forces that threaten our future. With the knowledge that our future has the potential to be bleak, we must do everything we can to stem the forces pulling us in that direction.

Yet the future also has the potential to be great, so we need to simultaneously push ourselves to become our own force of change. To do this, we must tap into the creativity and innovation that young people have historically provided for the world.

Our modern understanding of a connected world enables us to think creatively about how to further connect and leverage our actions to a global scale. The UN report outlines how far we have come as a global community and the potential within our own progress. The power of the internet to facilitate idea and information sharing has untapped great potential in innovation and social power, “reinventing citizens’ roles in the political process and changing institutions, policy-making and governance,” while “advances in science, technology, education, economics and management seem capable of making the world work far better than it does today”.

A recent WorldChanging article challenges us to imagine the world “after green,” where we think beyond mere environmental improvement and into a literal and figurative re-invention. It ends with an open invitation to think about any outdated idea, get rid of it, and ponder its replacement. Once we begin to imagine our future world in terms of re-invention, we open up a diverse array of new ideas and unleash infinite potential. This kind of radical imagination will lead to the ideas–in policy, technology, planning, design, activism, communication, you name it—that will pave the way to a strong clean energy future.

While people of all ages can succeed at this fundamental shift in the way we look at problems, young people are uniquely positioned to succeed in this endeavor. Without the social and psychological conditioning that years of a particular way of thinking can instill, we have more freedom for radical pursuits.

Some of the boldest and transformational ideas come from people under 30. Think of the genius behind Dylan’s lyrical opposition to the status quo (”Blowin in the Wind” was written when he was 21) or even Mark Zuckerburg’s vision for the ultimate procrastination tool and crush-stalking online network that became facebook.com.

Young people must stop coal fired power plants and put an end to our addiction to coal and oil, and they must also be the leading innovators and thought leaders that carry us into a clean energy future by imagining entirely new ways to succeed as a global society.

This idea of reinvention is hard, and it subjects our movement to incredible complexity. Once we are no longer thinking merely about ways in which society can be more environmentally friendly, but ways in which it can become fundamentally different, we lose the clear moral guide that the idea of “improvement” gives us. As a recent post on IGHIH illustrates, the path to a clean energy future will not be black and white, with a clear direction of what needs to be done. Re-invention is marred with shades of grey.

So let’s embrace the shades of grey, understand that our future is neither doomed nor bright but has the potential for both, and get creative about how we can direct it.

There is an infinite number of ways for young people to get involved in a re-imagining of the world–ways that will transcend traditional activism or even activism at all. Let’s all find the place we can play off our strengths and passions, and join this re-invention. It will take activists and artists, engineers, designers and policymakers. We can’t wait until our own journey leads into a more established professionalism–we need the potential locked within our own ideas now.

There is tremendous potential in the power of youth to change the world. The most beautiful and inspiring part about it is that we have yet to even imagine the scope of it.

7 Responses to “Re-imagine What’s Possible… and Re-invent the Future”


  1. 1 R Margolis Jul 16th, 2008 at 8:25 am

    This post reminded me of the writings of Ted Rockwell. He worked on both the Manhattan Project and the early development of the US Nuclear Navy. One thing he emphasized was that most of the effort was expended by young people. They essentially built a huge infrastructure quickly and without detailed knowledge due to the newness of the technologies. I realize that these projects may be controversial today [especially on this blog ;-)], but they are examples of young people leading the way on difficult technological challenges in the face of high uncertainty.

  2. 2 Phil A. Jul 16th, 2008 at 11:16 am

    Nice post, Lindsey. I think we could all bear a little humility in the face of what is coming down the pipeline, whether it’s good, bad (or more likely) both.

  3. 3 Aurelia Jul 16th, 2008 at 2:01 pm

    It’s important that we re-imagine what is possible and change our eay of thinking so that re-inventing the future is a reality, not a dream to some who see the disaster that is forthcoming. We have the potential to destroy our Earth (as we are currently heading towards), but we also have the ability to save it. I’m sure that everyone would rather save it, so let’s address the issues and find a solution.

    ~ http://blog.ourtask.org

  4. 4 Stark Jul 18th, 2008 at 1:45 pm

    Aurelia -

    Great post! I definitely think we have the ability to save the planet while also not disrupting our economy and the future of the worlds growth.

    We need to brainstorm in to determining ways to benefit society versus disrupt it.

    I was actualling giving some thought to a windmill technology that can live at everyones individuals home to provide supplemental energy. Its obviously not economical in its current form but I believe it could be benefical for those willing to experiment.

    I am tired of the protest - lets think positive - people won’t change until we make it economical as people need to pay their bills and put food on the table. If we think positively we can actually make a change in the next 30 years to make alternatives affordable ourselves.

    Email me at starkbaddin@gmail.com if you have any interest in focusing on solutions versus diruptions and negativity. You seem like someone that would be great for my mission group as well.

  5. 5 Stark Jul 19th, 2008 at 9:47 am

    I am willing to protest at this home. Who will join me. Look at the energy it is wasting.

    We really need to stop things like this. This is disguisting how much energy this home uses. Dirty politician - there is no altneratives associated with this home at all. I bet yall can’t guess whos it is….

    A 20-room mansion (not including 8 bathrooms) heated by natural gas. Add on a pool (and a pool house) and a separate guest house all heated by gas. In ONE MONTH ALONE this mansion consumes more energy than the average American household in an ENTIRE YEAR. The average bill for electricity and natural gas runs over $2,400.00 per month. In natural gas alone (which last time we checked was a fossil fuel), this property consumes more than 20 times the national average for an American home. This house is not in a northern or Midwestern “snow belt,” either. It’s in the South.

    Starkbaddin@gmail.com. Email me here and I can coordinate.

  6. 6 Speakout Jul 26th, 2008 at 10:17 am

    Cheers for the electric car. Did anyone here the news on the Fox News today? We finally have an electric car that can meet speed limits as well as have over two days of power for intermediate travel!

  1. 1   links for 2008-07-16 by Kevin Bondelli’s Youth Vote Blog Trackback on Jul 16th, 2008 at 7:31 pm

About Lindsey


I graduated from Middlebury College in 2007 with a degree in Environmental Studies/Philosophy and a passion for climate change solutions, ignited by Middlebury's Sunday Night Group. I spent the summer and fall in New Hampshire first with 25 awesome organizers implementing a five day walk for clean energy, then joined with friends from the Step it Up campaign to coordinate hundreds of climate rallies nationwide in November. I then spent the last months before the primary co-coordinating a campaign with the League of Conservation Voters to increase climate change visibility and coverage at candidate events. I now find myself living in San Francisco, and am working with the Breakthrough Generation.

Power Vote Twitter!

Follow live updates from the Power Vote Campaign and the Clean Energy Movement with the Power Vote Twitter feed

Flickr Photos

DSC_0419.JPG

DSC_0316.JPG

DSC_0089.JPG

DSC_0314_2.JPG

More Photos
block.png