Mozz - // Andy, she's bought her cause to the attention of tens of millions. That's not a bad impact for a young woman in her position. //
That's just it, she is not in 'a position'!
She is a mass media novelty, like cute kitten videos.
What we must always be aware of, is that someone watching or listening to something on the internet does not equate with understanding or agreeing with it. If it did, millions more people think a kitten is cuter than Ms. Thornburg, because millions more have looked at it.
This is the illusion that the Internet and Social Media create - fads and fashions are not real generators of change in society.
// If no governments have acted yet, that' not her fault. If a third ofhe people who have heard her agree with her, then the voice gets louder to the point that change will have to come. //
A nice concept, but again, making noise is not the same as making change.
Governments around the world have vast personal and political investments in energy companies, and there is not the will or the intention to change any time soon. Maybe in generations to come people will look back and assess Ms. Thornburg's impact, but to assume that she is suddenly the voice of common sense and instant change is naïve in the extreme.
//In a melodramatic term, she's fanning the flames that could lead to a revolution in green awareness. //
It could, but that will only happen if governments are convinced there is something in it for them in terms of votes and power.
That will not come from being lectured by a teenager.