A lot of people went to streets to protest against nuclear weapons which were considered existential risks, and it resulted in nuclear disarmament in 1980.
What makes you think that the street actions caused the arms reduction treaties?
Any important topic has street actions, Greenpeace, PETA, you name it. If you don't have street actions it means that no body is interested in the problem.
Alternatively, it means that people are getting on with solving the problem. For example, there are no (few?) street actions to protest the fact that it's hard to communicate over long-distances. This is not because people don't care, it's because they realise that street actions won't change things, and instead they invent email, and VoIP, and Skype, and so on. Street actions are a reflection of powerlessness, of a lack of better ideas.
So do you think that any protest against nuclear war or war in Vietnam were completely useless, because nobody knows what was exact causation?
I do not claim that antinuclear protest was the only cause of nuclear disarmament but I think that it was one of several parallel causes and no we now, neither people at this time could find the proportion. But is some cases street protests are effective. Greenpeace did most of its job by street protest.
Also your example with creating Skype is not correct. Preventing human extinction is not equal to creating one conc...
Existential risks are the risks of human extinction. A global catastrophe will happen most likely because of the new technologies such as biotech, nanotech, and AI, along with several other risks: runaway global warming, and nuclear war. Sir Martin Rees estimates these risks to have a fifty percent probability in the 21st century.
We must raise the awareness of impending doom and make the first ever street action against the possibility of human extinction. Our efforts could help to prevent these global catastrophes from taking place. I suggest we meet in Union square, San Francisco, September 27, 2014 at 2:00 PM in order to make a short and intense photo session with the following slogans:
Stop Existential Risks!
No Human Extinction!
AI must be Friendly!
No Doomsday Weapons!
Ebola must die!
Prevent Global Catastrophe!
These slogans will be printed in advance, but more banners are welcome. I have previous experience with organizing actions for immortality and funding of life extension near Googleplex, the White house in DC, and Burning Man, and I know this street action, taking place on September 27th, is both legal and a fun way to express our points of view.
Organized by Alexey Turchin and Longevity Party.
Update: Photos from the action.