what is red tagging
Red tagging has two common meanings today: one in politics and human rights, and one in workplace/Lean management. Both are important, but the political one is more serious and sensitive.
Quick Scoop: What is red tagging?
In politics and activism (most common now):
- Red tagging is the act of labelling individuals or groups as communists, terrorists, or subversives, usually without adequate evidence.
- It is often carried out or amplified by state actors (police, military, or officials), and sometimes their supporters, against people seen as “enemies of the state,” such as activists, critics, journalists or NGOs.
- This practice has been documented prominently in the Philippines, where courts and legal scholars describe it as a serious threat to people’s rights to life, liberty, and security.
- Global rights groups warn that red tagging is used to silence or intimidate land and environmental defenders, as well as other progressive movements, by painting them as terrorists online and offline.
In Lean/5S workplace methods (much less political):
- In Lean management and 5S, “red tagging” means putting a literal red tag on tools, equipment, or materials that are not needed or are defective, so they can be removed from the work area.
- These tagged items are moved to a “red tag area” for review; if nobody claims a real need for them, they are recycled, sold, or discarded.
- This is a productivity tool meant to reduce clutter and waste, not a political practice.
Why political red tagging is a big deal
Red tagging in the political sense can have serious real‑world consequences:
- It can expose people to threats, harassment, surveillance, or even physical attacks, because being labeled a “terrorist” or “communist” makes them seem like legitimate targets.
- It chills free speech, because others see what happens to tagged individuals and become afraid to criticize authorities or join protests.
- Courts and human rights advocates have compared it to a modern form of McCarthyism: using accusations of subversion to discredit and isolate critics.
A typical scenario: a community organizer campaigns against a destructive mining project, then is publicly branded online and in official statements as a “communist terrorist supporter,” even though there is no proof they support armed groups. This can damage their reputation, endanger them, and weaken the movement they work with.
How it differs from ordinary criticism
Red tagging is not just “being criticized online” or being called “radical” in casual debate. It usually involves:
- Accusations tied to terrorism, insurgency, or armed rebellion.
- A power imbalance: often coming from, or echoed by, state institutions or influential figures.
- Real security risks: once someone is framed as a terrorist or enemy of the state, it becomes easier to justify surveillance, arrests, or even violence in the name of “security.”
That’s why courts and rights groups treat it as a rights issue, not just a rhetorical one.
Meanwhile, in factories and offices…
In workplace process improvement, red tagging looks totally different:
- Staff place red tags (labels or tape) on items they think are unnecessary, broken, or out of place.
- Each tag usually lists the item, location, date, reason for tagging, and who tagged it.
- Items go to a “red tag area” for a set time (for example, a week or a month). If no one proves they are needed, they are disposed of, repaired, sold, or repurposed.
- The goal is to support the first “S” in 5S: sorting needed from unneeded items to keep the workplace lean and efficient.
So “red tagging” could mean cleaning up a cluttered storeroom—or it could mean a dangerous political labeling of activists. Context (news vs. factory/Lean discussion) is everything.
HTML table: types of red tagging
| Type | Context | What it means | Main purpose/effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Political red tagging | Human rights, security, activism | [7][9][5]Labelling people or groups as communists, terrorists, or subversives, often without solid evidence. | [9][5][7]Silences critics, justifies surveillance or attacks, chills free expression. | [5][7][9]
| Workplace/5S red tagging | Lean management, factories, offices | [2][1][3]Placing red tags on unneeded, defective, or misplaced items for review and removal. | [1][2][3]Reduce clutter and waste, improve organization and efficiency. | [3][1]
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.