The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth

The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth

by The Red Nation
The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth

The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth

by The Red Nation

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Overview

When the Red Nation released their call for a Red Deal, it generated coverage in places from Teen Vogue to Jacobin to the New Republic, was endorsed by the DSA, and has galvanized organizing and action. 

Now, in response to popular demand, the Red Nation expands their original statement filling in the histories and ideas that formed it and forwarding an even more powerful case for the actions it demands. 

One-part visionary platform, one-part practical toolkit, the Red Deal is a platform that encompasses everyone, including non-Indigenous comrades and relatives who live on Indigenous land. We—Indigenous, Black and people of color, women and trans folks, migrants, and working people—did not create this disaster, but we have inherited it. We have barely a decade to turn back the tide of climate disaster. It is time to reclaim the life and destiny that has been stolen from us and rise up together to confront this challenge and build a world where all life can thrive. Only mass movements can do what the moment demands. Politicians may or may not follow—it is up to them—but we will design, build, and lead this movement with or without them.

The Red Deal is a call for action beyond the scope of the US colonial state. It’s a program for Indigenous liberation, life, and land—an affirmation that colonialism and capitalism must be overturned for this planet to be habitable for human and other-than-human relatives to live dignified lives. The Red Deal is not a response to the Green New Deal, or a “bargain” with the elite and powerful. It’s a deal with the humble people of the earth; a pact that we shall strive for peace and justice and a declaration that movements for justice must come from below and to the left. 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781942173434
Publisher: Common Notions
Publication date: 04/20/2021
Series: Red Media
Pages: 144
Sales rank: 193,639
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 6.80(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

The Red Nation is a coalition of Native and non-Native activists, educators, students, and community organizers advocating Native liberation that formed to address the marginalization and invisibility of Native struggles within mainstream social justice organizing, and to foreground the targeted destruction and violence towards Native life and land. www.therednation.org

The Red Nation is dedicated to the liberation of Native peoples from capitalism and colonialism. They center Native political agendas and struggles through direct action, advocacy, mobilization, and education. Formed to address the marginalization and invisibility of Native struggles within mainstream social justice organizing and to foreground the targeted destruction and violence towards Native life and land. The Red Deal was written collectively by members of the Red Nation and the allied movements and community members who comprised the Red Deal coalition. Everyone from youth to elders; from knowledge keepers to farmers contributed to the creation of The Red Deal.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Resistance 5
“New Deals” 8
Decolonization 12
Anti-Imperialism 13
The Red Deal 18
A Caretaking Economy 23
Demilitarization 25
Land Back 27
It’s Not Just an “Indian Problem” 30
The Four Principles 31
1. What Creates Crisis Cannot Solve It 32
2. Change from Below and to the Left 34
3. Politicians Can’t Do What Only Mass Movements Do 36
4. From Theory to Action 38

PART I

DIVEST: END THE OCCUPATION 43

Introduction 44
Area 1: Defund Police, Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
Customs and Border Protection, and Child Protective Services 46
Area 2: End Bordertown Violence 51
Area 3: Abolish Incarceration (Prisons, Juvenile
Detention Facilities, Jails, Border Security) 58
Area 4: End Occupation Everywhere 61
Area 5: Abolish Imperial Borders 66

PART II

HEAL OUR BODIES: REINVEST IN OUR COMMON HUMANITY 73

Introduction 74
Area 1: Citizenship and Equal Rights 77
Area 2: Free and Sustainable Housing 80
Area 3: Free and Accessible Education 83
Area 4: Free and Adequate Healthcare 85
Area 5: Free, Reliable, and Accessible Public
Transportation and Infrastructure 88
Area 6: Noncarceral Mental Health Support and No More Suicides! 91
Area 7: Healthy, Sustainable, and Abundant Food 93
Area 8: Clean Water, Land, and Air 95
Area 9: End Gender, Sexual, and Domestic Violence 98
Area 10: End Missing and Murdered Indigenous
Women, Girls, and Two-Spirit Peoples 102

PART III

HEAL OUR PLANET: REINVEST IN OUR COMMON FUTURE 107

Introduction 108
Area 1: Clean Sustainable Energy 112
Area 2: Traditional and Sustainable Agriculture 116
Land Return 121
Remediation 122
Area 3: Land, Water, Air, and Animal Restoration 124
Recommendations 126
Area 4: Protection and Restoration of Sacred Sites 128
Recommendations 130
Area 5: Enforcement of Treaty Rights and Other Agreements 131
Recommendations 134
Conclusion 135

CONCLUSION

OUR WORDS ARE POWERFUL, OUR KNOWLEDGE IS INEVITABLE 139

Infrastructures of Relation 139
The Power of Words 143

APPENDIX 148
Who We Are 148
Areas of Struggle 148
Principles of Unity 149
NOTES 152
ABOUT RED MEDIA 160

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“The Red Nation has given us The Red Deal, an Indigenous Peoples’ world view and practice that leads to profound changes in existing human relations. Five hundred years of European colonialism, which produced capitalist economic and social relations, has nearly destroyed life itself. Technology can be marshaled to reverse this death march, but it will require a vision for the future and a path to follow to arrive there, and that is what The Red Deal provides.”—Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States

"The Red Deal is an incendiary and necessary compilation. With momentum for a Green New Deal mounting, the humble and powerful organizers of The Red Nation remind us that a Green New Deal must also be Red—socialist, committed to class struggle, internationalist in orientation, and opposed to the settler colonial theft of Indigenous lands and resources. Redistribution also requires reparations and land back. The Red Deal is a profound call to action for us all."—Harsha Walia, author of Undoing Border Imperialism and Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism

“We really need The Red Deal because it forces open a critical conversation on how Land Back can be a platform for mass mobilization and collective struggle. The Red Deal poignantly argues that if we do not foreground decolonization and Indigenous liberation in climate justice strategies such as the Green New Deal, we will reproduce the violence of the original New Deal that dammed life-giving rivers and further dispossessed Indigenous peoples of their lands. Strategically, The Red Deal shows how, if we understand green infrastructure and economic restructuring as anticolonial struggle, as well as an anticapitalist, we can move from reforms that deny Indigenous jurisdiction towards just coalitions for repossession that radically rethink environmental policy and land protection without sacrificing Indigenous life and relations.”—Shiri Pasternak, author of Grounded Authority: The Algonquins of Barriere Lake Against the State


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