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A Small Group Can Change the World Because We Must

A gray squirrel looks to the right in a blurred winter landscape. His face and tail and reddish points to the fur while his back and body and dark gray except for his white chest and throat. On the image, a quote in a white box reads, "“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has." -Margaret Meade

Margaret Mead’s famous words—“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has”—have never felt more urgent than they do today. The stakes for wildlife, public lands, and democracy itself are higher than ever, and those in power know it. That’s why they’re working so hard to dismantle every safeguard, silence dissent, and put corporate interests ahead of ecological integrity.

We are living through an era where the most basic norms of governance and conservation are being destroyed in real-time. A government that once at least paid lip service to protecting public lands and wildlife has been handed over to profiteers and extractive industries. The recent mass firings at the Department of the Interior—gutting the very agencies tasked with stewarding our nation’s lands and wildlife—are just one example of the destruction unfolding before our eyes. National Park Service employees, Bureau of Land Management scientists, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologists—thousands of professionals who dedicated their lives to public service were tossed aside in an effort to strip the government of expertise and accountability.

These are the very people who protect our public lands, safeguard endangered species, and uphold the environmental laws that keep ecosystems functioning. And their dismissal is part of a broader effort to dismantle environmental protections in favor of industry profits.

To what end? To clear the way for billionaires and industry lobbyists to do as they please. To ensure that our national parks, public lands, and the wildlife that depend on them are no longer managed for the public good but instead serve the highest bidder. To rig the system even further in favor of those who already hold power, so that everyday people—those who actually care about the future of our planet—have even less say in what happens next.

We’ve seen this playbook before. Hollow out the agencies responsible for conservation. Silence scientists and experts. Rewrite the rules to favor extractive industries. The goal is clear: weaken any opposition to the destruction of our natural world. But here’s what they underestimate—people care. And when people care, they fight back.

But this is where Mead’s words come into play. The people behind this destruction are a small, powerful group. But so are we. And history shows that when determined people make a principled stand against injustice, they can change the course of history.

As an openly fascist administration guts environmental protections, fires thousands of federal workers, and hands over our public lands to the highest bidder, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. But history tells us that when those in power act recklessly, ordinary people must rise to meet the moment.

Right now, it is easy to feel hopeless. The forces we are up against seem insurmountable. But the truth is, the fight for wildlife and wild places has always been an uphill battle. Those in power have always prioritized profit over protection, control over coexistence. Yet time and again, grassroots movements—people like you, like us—have fought back and won.

Those victories weren’t handed to us; they were won through relentless organizing, speaking out at meetings, and refusing to back down. There are so many examples that can serve as a testament to what happens when people come together with a shared vision for justice.

We don’t have the luxury of waiting for the system to fix itself. We are the system’s correction. Every time we show up at a wildlife commission meeting, demand transparency from decision-makers, or challenge the status quo, we are doing what those in power fear most: reminding them that this world does not belong to them alone.

This is not the time to step back. It is the time to lean in. To be louder. More relentless. More unapologetic in our demand for ethical, science-based, and just wildlife management. The people tearing apart protections for wildlife want us to believe that we are powerless—but they wouldn’t be working so hard to silence us if that were true.

Now is not the time for despair—it’s the time for action. We must demand better from our leaders. We must show up at wildlife commission meetings, contact lawmakers, and build coalitions that challenge the status quo. The forces seeking to undo decades of environmental progress may be powerful, but so is the will of an engaged public.

The only thing that has ever changed the world is a small, committed group of people willing to fight for what is right. We have no other choice but to be that group.

We are not powerless. We are not alone. And as history has proven time and again, a small group of committed people can, indeed, change the world. Join us. Speak up. Take action. The future of wildlife—and our shared future on this planet—depends on it.

5 Actions You Can Take Right Now for Wildlife: 

  1. Speak up at Wildlife Commission Meetings: State wildlife commissions make crucial decisions about hunting policies, predator management, and ecosystem protections—but they’re often dominated by special interests. Find your state’s next commission meeting and comment on plans or ask them to prioritize the State Wildlife Action Plan funding and programs to protect biodiversity.
  2. Contact your elected officials: State and federal lawmakers must hear from constituents who care about wildlife. Call or email them and demand federal funds be restored and employees who have been let go be rehired.
  3. Then, follow that with a demand to your federal elected officials that they halt Elon Musk’s unelected takeover of federal spending and federal agencies. He has not been appointed or confirmed to a position and what he is doing is illegal. Call your representatives and demand they stand up against attacks on wildlife and public lands. You can reach Congress through the switchboard at (202) 224-3121.
  4. If you can, volunteer your time. Nonprofits are the frontline of the fight in this moment and they need your assistance, your donations, and your voice.
  5. Finally, share this with everyone you can. Education is power! Share posts from us and other advocacy groups, talk to friends and family, and challenge the dominant narrative that wildlife only has value when they’re of use to us.
  6. BONUS: if you’re ready to take it even further, check out The General Strike US. Once they hit 10 million people, they’re calling for a mass strike to disrupt business as usual and demand real change.Direct action has a critical place in this fight. We need a full-spectrum approach—protests, occupations, and public demonstrations alongside strategic policy engagement, legal challenges, and sustained pressure on decision-makers. The more people we mobilize, the harder it becomes for them to ignore us. Let’s fight on all fronts!