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Published 17:29 20 Sept 2019 BST
Updated 17:50 20 Sept 2019 BST
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The Dublin demonstration kicked off at noon today and by half 12 the thousands of primary school students, teenagers, and adults supporting them were making their way towards Leinster House, armed with clever signs and voices loud enough to shout over the busy city centre traffic.
"There's no planet B," boast the banners. They depict cartoon planet Earths on fire, sea levels rising, and the very real warning that we've been far too inactive for far too long.
There's something cruel and oddly uplifting about seeing children in school tracksuits, those who couldn't possibly be older than seven or eight, chanting about rising sea levels and global warming.
When we were that age, we were singing songs about kissing boys in yards. Now they're singing songs about saving the planet.
They shouldn't have to do it. But they do, and they are.
A considerable turnout had been expected for today's strike. A considerably higher number of people actually showed up.
A few months back, Ireland became one of the first countries in the world to declare a climate emergency. Along with the UK, our government decided to officially recognise that the world is in trouble, and that we now must take real and necessary steps to ensure that the next generation actually have a world left worth living in. But simply admitting that something is wrong is not enough - especially not when the UN has given us just 12 years to limit a climate change catastrophe. Today's strike wasn't the first time Irish students took to the streets in protest of our lack of action around the ever-present climate issue - and it certainly won't be the last either. It's just like the signs say: "Sea levels are rising - and so are we."Huge numbers of people here at Leinster House. And the crowds just keep coming ? #ClimateMarch #climateaction pic.twitter.com/TMCzhBf7k6
— Her.ie (@Herdotie) September 20, 2019
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