Honestly as a 21 year old guy I am already sick of the corruption of this world. I would try to help with these sort of things but in the big picture unless 75% of us stand up for our rights nothing will ever change. Not nearly enough people are even aware of this sort of stuff. I will watch it all burn. I hope 2012 does happen and we have to restart from the basics. At least then MAYBE, JUST MAYBE, we will do things right.
I'd encourage you not to take a jaded view, it doesn't accomplish anything. I was feeling the same when in 2009(?) when I heard that developers wanted to build a giant ski/golf development on top of Brohm Creek in Squamish. I wrote a couple letters stating why I thought it was wrong to destroy this particular creek, I went to the public consultations etc. Apparently I wasn't the only one who thought this way, because quite a few people showed up! In the end, the developers were not given permission to break ground. For me, this came as a bit of an epiphany that I, just an ordinary guy who liked to fish, could make a difference. Brohm Creek still remains as an important steelhead-bearing stream.
Fast forward to summer 2011 when I first heard of Enbridge's plans to build the Northern Gateway pipeline from the tar sands to the coast, then ship it by tanker along a dodgy route. I wanted to do what I could to stop it, but what could I do? I drafted a letter, mailed it to Christy Clark and about ten other politicians. I also posted the letter on Facebook and from that, at least 15 of my friends wrote their own letters.
Compared to this spring, the opposition to the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline has increased many many fold. Its no longer an obscure pipeline somewhere up north, its probably one of the most politically charged issues in western Canada now. Just this past Monday, about 3500 people showed up on the lawn of the legislature building in Victoria to show their opposition to Northern Gateway. I wouldn't have seen that coming in May. You can be sure Christy Clark is re-thinking her ambiguous stance on Gateway. Northern Gateway ambiguity is probably one of two issues which has probably already cost Christy the election this spring.
I find it cool that issues such as Gateway are making environmentalists out of normal people and simultaneously raising awareness. Perhaps this is somewhat of a coming of age for environmentalism in BC... there were a lot more suits and soccer moms than hippies and "activist-types" at the demonstrations against Enbridge and tankers.