A Planet to Win. Kate Aronoff
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The Jacobin series includes short interrogations of politics, economics, and culture from a socialist perspective, as an avenue to radical political practice. The books offer critical analysis and engagement with the history and ideas of the Left in accessible and popular form.
The series is a collaboration between Verso Books and Jacobin magazine, which is published quarterly in print and online at jacobinmag.com.
Other titles in this series available from Verso Books:
Utopia or Bust by Benjamin Kunkel
Playing the Whore by Melissa Gira Grant
Strike for America by Micah Uetricht
The New Prophets of Capital by Nicole Aschoff
Four Futures by Peter Frase
Class War by Megan Erickson
Building the Commune by George Ciccariello-Maher
The People’s Republic of Walmart
by Leigh Phillips and Michal Rozwroski
All-American Nativism by Daniel Denvir
Capital City by Samuel Stein
Red State Revolt by Eric Blanc
Without Apology by Jenny Brown
A Planet to Win
Why We Need a Green New Deal
KATE ARONOFF,
ALYSSA BATTISTONI,
DANIEL ALDANA COHEN,
and THEA RIOFRANCOS
First published by Verso 2019
The collection © Verso 2019
The contributions © The contributors 2019
Foreword © Naomi Klein 2019
All rights reserved
The moral rights of the authors have been asserted
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Verso
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Verso is the imprint of New Left Books
ISBN-13: 978-1-78873-831-6
ISBN-13: 978-1-78873-833-0 (US EBK)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78873-832-3 (UK EBK)
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalog record for this book is available from the Library of Congress
Typeset in Monotype Fournier by Hewer Text UK Ltd, Edinburgh
Printed in the UK by CPI Group (UK) Lrd, Croydon CR0 4YY
There is nowhere to go now but forward. But which way is forward?
Roland Wank, chief architect, Tennessee Valley Authority, 1941
CONTENTS
Foreword by Naomi Klein
Introduction: Bad Weather, Good Politics
1.Bury the Fossils
2.Strike for Sunshine
3.Rebuilding the World
4.Recharging Internationalism
Conclusion: Freedom to Live
Acknowledgments
The Green New Deal burst onto the political stage when organizers held a sit-in in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) last fall. She dismissed the idea as a “Green Dream, or whatever,” but organizers were unfazed. They shot back that the Green New Deal was indeed a dream, a badly needed one about what organized and focused people are capable of accomplishing in the face of a crisis that threatens the habitability of our home. Given how radically and rapidly our societies need to change if we are to avert full-blown climate catastrophe (and given the prevalence of ecological doom and despair), sharing some big dreams about a future in which we do not descend into climate barbarism seemed like a very good place to start.
The interplay between lofty dreams and earthly victories has always been at the heart of moments of deep progressive transformation. In the United States, the breakthroughs won for workers and their families after the Civil War and during the Great Depression, as well as for civil rights and the environment in the sixties and early seventies, were not just responses to crises, demanded from below. They were also the products of dreams of very different kinds of societies, dreams invariably dismissed as impossible and impractical at the time. What set these moments apart was not the presence of crises (which our history has never lacked), but rather that they were times of rupture when the utopian imagination was unleashed—times when people dared to dream big, out loud, in public, together. For instance, the Gilded Age strikers of the late nineteenth century, enraged by the enormous fortunes being amassed off the backs of repressed laborers, were inspired by the Paris Commune, when the working people of Paris took over the governing of their city for months. They dreamed of a “cooperative commonwealth,” a world where work was but one element of a well-balanced life, with plenty of time for leisure, family, and art. In the lead-up to the original New Deal, working-class organizers were versed not only in Marx but also in W.E.B. Du Bois, who had a vision of a pan-working-class movement that could unite the downtrodden to transform an unjust economic system. It