The Red Deal to save Earth

August 29, 2021
Issue 
The authors believe the campaign to halt climate change and repair ecological destruction is bound up with the fate of the world鈥檚 Indigenous peoples.


By The Red Nation
Common Notions, 2021

As heat and severe weather records are broken again and again, it should be clear by now that there is no limit for capital. There will be no scientific warning or dire catastrophe that leads to a political breakthrough. No huge wildfire, terrible drought or great flood will make governments and corporations change course. To carry on as they are means extinction. And yet they still carry on: more fossil fuels and fewer trees, more pollution and fewer species.

Recognition that there is no way out of this crisis without far-reaching, social upheaval animates the proposals put forward in The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth. The short book was authored by activists from , a coalition devoted to Indigenous liberation and made up of Native and non-Native revolutionaries based mainly in North America.

The authors make clear that they believe the campaign to halt climate change and repair ecological destruction is bound up with the fate of the world鈥檚 Indigenous peoples. They say bluntly that 鈥渢here is no hope for restoring the planet鈥檚 fragile and dying ecosystems without Indigenous liberation鈥 and that 鈥渋t鈥檚 decolonisation or extinction.鈥

Land back

This is not just a rhetorical flourish. The Red Deal points out that the approximately 370 million Indigenous people worldwide belong to traditional lands that cover 22鈥25% of the world鈥檚 surface. These territories overlap with areas that hold more than 80% of the planet鈥檚 biodiversity.

Regaining control over their traditional lands is essential for Indigenous people鈥檚 ability to protect, restore and care for them, as they did sustainably for millennia prior to their dispossession. This makes decolonisation 鈥 which 鈥渟tarts with land back鈥 to Indigenous peoples 鈥 a critical part of The Red Nation鈥檚 proposals to avoid planetary extinction.

The authors of The Red Deal emphasise that their vision of decolonisation 鈥渋sn鈥檛 exclusively about the Indigenous鈥 but is instead meant to bring together non-Indigenous and Indigenous activists in a common fight for the future.

They say: 鈥淲hat we seek is a world premised on Indigenous values of interspecies responsibility and balance. We seek to uplift knowledges, technologies, governance structures, and economic strategies that will make these values possible, in the immediate future and in the long term, and which always have the future health of the land at the center of their design and implementation, Indigenous or not. In this sense, decolonisation is for, and benefits, everyone. It also needs our collective cooperation to succeed.鈥

Some recent Indigenous-led movements against ecologically destructive projects have won international support and attention, such as the Oceti Sakowin-led protests to halt the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock, and the Wangan and Jagalingou people鈥檚 campaign to stop the huge Adani coalmine in Queensland鈥檚 Galilee Basin.

But rather than focusing solely on what Indigenous movements oppose, The Red Deal aims to draw attention to 鈥渢he revolutionary potency of what Indigenous resistance stands for: caretaking and creating just relations between human and other-than-human worlds on a planet thoroughly devastated by capitalism.鈥

Four principles

The authors of The Red Deal advance a 鈥減lan of collective climate action鈥 based on four general principles. The first of these is "What Creates Crisis Cannot Solve It". This principle means that the destructive, polluting industries that profit from the plunder of nature cannot be reformed and have no future. But The Red Deal extends this principle to carceral institutions such as the military, police and prison systems, calling for their abolition. The Red Deal insists such violent, repressive institutions also stand in the way of a safe climate future.

The second principle is "Change from Below and from the Left". This is both a commitment to practice grassroots democracy in the struggle, and also a longer-term ambition to replace capitalism with a system of true democracy. The document says: 鈥淲e must throw the full weight of people power behind these demands for a dignified life. People power is the organised force of the masses 鈥 a movement to reclaim our humanity and rightful relations with the Earth.鈥

"Politicians Can鈥檛 Do What Only Mass Movements Do" is the document鈥檚 third principle, which underscores The Red Deal鈥檚 skepticism that reformist politics can make significant progress against fossil capital. Although the authors say that they 鈥渞efuse to compromise鈥, they acknowledge the mobilising potential of 鈥渘on-reformist reform鈥 that 鈥渇undamentally challenges the existing structure of power.鈥

The final principle is "From Theory to Action". This recognises that the development of real social movements, in which people develop through struggle their own capacity to act and organise, is far more important than having 鈥渃orrect positions鈥 on things. Rather, 鈥渃orrect ideas and theories of change that are worthy of reproduction only matter if they arise from, and directly nourish, our collective movements.鈥

Beyond the Green New Deal

The authors of The Red Deal do not see their proposals as a 鈥渃ounterprogram鈥 to the Green New Deal, which they praise for its 鈥減otential to connect every social justice struggle 鈥 free housing, free health care, free education, green jobs 鈥 to climate change.鈥 Rather, they see their ideas as a platform that builds upon and goes further than what the various Green New Deal proposals have yet offered.

However, the 鈥減rimary inspiration鈥 for The Red Deal was not the Green New Deal but the . The People鈥檚 Agreement was adopted by 30,000 attendees at the World People鈥檚 Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth in 2010. The conference, which promoted a suite of radical, people-centred policies on climate change, was hosted by the former President of Bolivia and leftist Indigenous leader Evo Morales.

This inspiration is clear in the way The Red Deal tackles the issues of technology transfer and climate debt owed to nations of the Global South 鈥 topics not addressed in some versions of the Green New Deal discussed in Europe or North America. It notes that the past high carbon emissions of the rich countries have in effect 鈥渃olonised鈥 the atmosphere, meaning nations in the Global South are blocked from pursuing the same path of industrialisation due to climate change. This injustice means 鈥渁ny climate policy must also be anti-imperialist鈥 and include 鈥渢he payment of northern climate debt to the rest of the world.鈥

The Red Deal also includes criticism of 鈥渟ome Western socialists鈥 who downplay the Global North鈥檚 responsibility to reduce its ecological impact rapidly to make room for the South but instead fixate on 鈥渢echnological pipe dreams like mining asteroids, gene editing, and synthetic meat.鈥 Reshaping the wasteful economies of the Global North so they can play a role in healing the planet should instead take priority.

Towards the end of the document, the authors note wryly that it鈥檚 evident other people have not listened enough to Indigenous people in the past. 鈥淲hy else would we be on the precipice of mass extinction?鈥 they ask. Those willing to listen today will gain a lot of insight and inspiration from the radical Indigenous activists showing leadership in this fight to save the Earth.

[Simon Butler is co-author, with Ian Angus, of . He is a former editor of 麻豆传媒 and lives in Scotland. Reprinted from .]

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