Youth Strike 4 Climate: St Bartholomew's School in Sydenham marches down Sydenham High Street
I think this is great, and is an astonishing contrast with any on line discussion of politics I'm aware of, apart from one or two WhatsApp groups I'm in. The comments in the News Shopper piece show the problem, there being just two, with the second commenting on "the poison of 'Socialist Worker's Party' placards well in evidence", when, on the evidence of the NS photos, where was no SWP involvement, and I don't believe for one minute that the teachers would have allowed that. So just another on line discussion poisoned by a troll.
Here on STF we maybe have a way of dealing with trolls, but the discussion in the Town Pub is pretty feeble, so much so that no one there seems to have noticed there'd been such a unprecedented political action in Sydenham. I can't see any comment on SE26.life either, but I'm not a fan of the mods team there, and I think the feeling is mutual

Twitter just a little bit better - search for Climate Change SE26, and there is one thread, started by Kirkdale Bookshop, now with 26 likes - was 25 when I found it
https://twitter.com/KirkdaleBooks/statu ... 0216485888
and shortly to have another comment, from me, linking back here.
Having made a bit of effort in recent months, representing a non party aligned anti-Brexit groups, to speak to schools about the need for students to get on the electoral roll (it can be done from age 16) and getting the message that this was too political, I am impressed that the message on climate change can reach parts messages on Brexit can't. Of course climate change is more important in the grand scheme of things, but meeting the challenge of climate change is going to involve politics, and I would say demonstrating about it in Sydenham Road is politics. Good. We need schools and teachers to take politics seriously, and engage with their students, and vice versa. Schools also teach about racism, although, on the evidence of this that I read recently, and thoroughly recommend
Natives by Akala review – the hip-hop artist on race and class in the ruins of empire
they don't always get it right. There are also local Facebook groups, including one on which I'm an admin,
https://www.facebook.com/groups/lewwandpenge/
but set up for those like me who oppose Brexit. There are some good discussions in there, and links to interesting articles, but it's not set up to engage with people who support Brexit, or even just neutral, baffled, or bored of Brexit. There are also much bigger local Facebook groups which also steer clear of Brexit ... because it's politics. I totally sympathise with the Admins on these, but if we ignore politics, it will come back to bite us. How, for example, can a staggeringly unrepresentative sample of maybe 100,000 people be about to chose the next leader of our government?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-48395211
So, if we are starting to talk about politics in our schools, and in Sydenham Road, can we make another attempt to have a wider, grown up conversation about politics in general?