UNITED NATIONS — She stepped onto the biggest of global stages to face the most diverse of audiences, and she made it count. "How dare you?" she kept saying to some of the world's most powerful people. "You are failing us," she told them.
Sometimes, a moment and a person align. For 16-year-old Greta Thunberg — whether you admire her or dislike her, and there are plenty of passionate partisans in both camps — Monday was that time.
Climate change is a diffuse topic. And in a society trained to consume narratives by movies and TV shows that feature sharp storylines and powerful protagonists and antagonists, it can be difficult to focus on something so vast and all-encompassing.
Thunberg is changing that, and Monday was the pinnacle of her efforts thus far. She navigated the United Nations like a diplomatic pro, her size and age the only indications that she hasn't been around for years.
A Swedish high school student who started by protesting outside her nation's parliament, Thunberg has spent recent months in an accelerating bid to cast attention on global warming and its effects on the rising generation.
She made the most of her time in the spotlight of global politics on Monday. Her approach and words enchanted many and disgusted others.
In the latter camp, it seems, may be President Donald Trump, who appeared to jab at her late Monday after her U.N. climate conference appearance.
At 8:36 p.m., after Thunberg's utterances of doom and gloom reverberated across the warming planet, he produced this tweet: "She seems like a very happy young girl looking forward to a bright and wonderful future. So nice to see!"