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To End Fossil Fuels, End Settler Colonialism

To End Fossil Fuels, End Settler Colonialism May 14, 2021 Indigenous youth, organizers with the Dakota Access and Line 3 pipeline fights, and climate activists hold a protest against pipeline projects and to urge President Biden to Build Back Fossil Free at the Army Corps of Engineers Headquarters in Washington, on April 1, 2021. The protest included a 200-foot-long black snake, representing the threat of the Enbridge Line 3 and the Dakota Access Pipelines to Indigenous communities. Photo By Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, Inc / Getty Images Much environmental framing misses the point about capitalism and Indigenous sovereignty. In this era of catastrophic climate change, why is it easier for some to imagine the end of fossil fuels than settler colonialism? To imagine green economies, carbon-free wind and solar energy, and electric, bullet-train utopias but not the return of Indigenous lands? Why is it easier to imagine the end of the world a zombie apocalypse than the end of capit

Sovereignty in Motion - BPR Interviews: Uahikea Maile - Brown Political Review

on certain federal funds that tribal entities qualify for. What do you say to such proponents? UM: We cannot not desire protections. We cannot not desire entitlements that we have been authorized to receive by the federal government and state government. It is sensible to understand arguments for federal recognition in the sense that they are arguments to protect our people, our community, and our scarce entitlements that are a product of colonialism. The issue is that it is a small piece of the pie, and I’m not interested in just one piece. I’m interested in the whole pie. That pie is our lands, our resources, our own government and self-governance mechanisms not those small pieces that are gifted by our colonial government. 

No Joint Struggle With Settler Colonialism

No Joint Struggle With Settler Colonialism New Politics , responds to Daniel Fischer’s “ . For Marx, the working class was the revolutionary class, the only class for whose self-liberation would mean the liberation of all. In Daphna Thier’s chapter “Not An Ally” she argues that the Israeli working class is an exception to this rule. The reason for this is that the class character reflects the settler colonial nature of the Zionist state. The very class formation of the Israeli working class came with the ethnic cleansing and forced appropriation of Palestinian land and replacing Palestinian society with Israeli one. Zionist labor and labor parties both were essential actors and thus guilty parties. This Zionist welfare state served as the cocoon that gave birth to Israeli capitalism. She argues that Israeli workers are bestowed direct benefits at the expense of Palestinians and that a political economy constructed around the continued war and occupation of the Palestini

RED by SFR : Nouveau deal avec un forfait 100 Go + un iPhone offert

RED by SFR : Nouveau deal avec un forfait 100 Go + un iPhone offert
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End Occupation Everywhere: an excerpt from The Red Deal – Mondoweiss

Editor’s Note: The following is an excerpt from The Red Deal: Indigenous Action to Save Our Earth, a new book by The Red Nation which connects the struggle to prevent ecological collapse to the struggles against imperialism, capitalism, and settler-colonialism, including in Palestine. As The Red Nation summarizes: The choice is decolonization or extinction. The United States owns the deadliest and most funded military power in the world. It invests more in its military than the next seven largest military powers combined. The US military also owns more international military bases than any other country.  Why does the United States invest so heavily in its military? The answer can be found in the creation of US settler sovereignty, forged through war against Indigenous nations. In its early years of existence, the United States needed free land to repay war debts following its war of independence with Great Britain. Looking westward from its original settler colonies to find

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