'Last battle': On Contact visits Standing Rock resistance in North Dakota

Environmental activists and Native Americans from 200 tribes are waging a determined last-ditch battle to stop the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Chris Hedges, host of RT America’s On Contact, visited the water protectors’ resistance camp.

Thousands of protesters are camping out near Cannon Ball, North Dakota, facing off against police, private security contractors, and the Army Corps of Engineers. The company behind the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) intends to run the pipes under Lake Oahe, an artificial lake created by the Army on the Missouri River – and the Standing Rock Sioux Nation’s sole source of drinking water.

“Go back to when we were put on reservations,” Kandi Mossett, an activist with the Indigenous Environmental Network, told Hedges. “The Standing Rock tribe never ceded this land.”

Among the many Native American banners, several upside-down US flags are flying over the encampment. Mossett explained they symbolized the Natives’ distress.

“We have been in distress out here ever since we’ve been attacked by the police and the military for simply saying, ‘No, we do not want a pipeline underneath our drinking water source,’ and on our unceded treaty territory,” she said.

North Dakota Native Americans have been fighting hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, since 2008, when drilling began at Bakken shale fields. The oil boom brought thousands of workers to the state, disrupting local communities. Women and children no longer feel safe, because of the oil workers who live in “man camps,” Mossett said.

The land has suffered, too. An oil spill of over a million gallons in July of 2014 contaminated the upper flow of the Missouri. “Nothing is growing there, whatever that water touched,” Mossett says.

The Standing Rock Nation and its allies worry that when Dakota Access ruptures – not if, but when – it will affect not just the waters of Lake Oahe, but up to 80 million Americans living downstream.

The $3.8 billion pipeline, which is being constructed by Energy Transfer Partners, would transport 470,000 barrels of crude oil from the Bakken fields through three other states to a refinery in Illinois.

“It seems like what they want to do is just get the pipe in the ground and deal with whatever later,” Mossett said.

Native Americans and environmental activists have been building broad alliance against Dakota Access, seeking to replicate the success of the fight against the TransCanada Keystone XL, another pipeline endangering indigenous reservations.

Racism is a “powerful instrument that is being used to divide people,” Tom Goldtooth of the Indigenous Environmental Network told Hedges. To counter this, the activists built a “Cowboy-Indian alliance” against Keystone, partnering with the farmers and ranchers in Nebraska.

The struggle in North Dakota has become “a model of resistance that will be replicated throughout the US, especially under a Trump presidency, against the hegemonic power of corporations and a democratic system that has become too anemic to carry out reforms – especially environmental reforms – that will protect the planet,” said Hedges.

“This is the last battle in the struggle against colonization – not only of people, but of the Earth. It is a battle indigenous communities have been fighting for over four centuries,” Hedges added. “If they lose, we all lose. If they win, we make possible life itself.”

Source: RT, Nov 28


Sustainable Water Network - Water Charges are back in the news.

 

Water charges are back in the news because the independent Expert Commission established to ‘assess and make recommendation upon the funding of domestic public water services in Ireland and improvements in water quality’ is due to submit its report to the Oireachtas next week.  Contrary to its position in September, Fianna Fáil were reported in the Irish Times early this week as saying that they ‘cannot rule out supporting the return of water charges if an independent expert commission proposes such a move’.  The Government has put a motion to the House today to establish a special Oireachtas committee tasked with examining how water services are to be funded, based on the report.  At time of writing, a stormy debate is taking place in the Dáil, with opposition unhappy that the government have already determined the Chair. If approved, the Committee will have 20 members, including five Government TDs, four Fianna Fáil TDs, two Sinn Féin TDs, five TDs from smaller groupings and four Senators and will report back to the Dáil and Seanad within 3 months, leading to vote in March. The details and politics of the process are well covered in this piece in Wednesday’s Irish Times.
Based on information in a leak to the press last weekend it would appear, according to RTE, that the Expert Commission are set to recommend a per- volume usage charge, with ‘a free water allowance for all households and a significant one for families’ resulting in a final charge which would, ‘in the words of one source, be "modest"’. 
The forcefully negative response from opposition parties is indicative of the utter breakdown of public trust on this divisive issue. Despite the high calibre and international experience and expertise of the members of the Expert Commission, it is regrettable that for those opposed to water charges, it doesn’t matter what they recommend, its work has been tainted by the manner of its establishment by the government and by the complete lack of meaningful engagement with the public on the water charges from the moment they were included in the Memorandum of Understanding with the Troika agreed almost 6 years ago tothe day on November 28th 2010.    

Source: Sustainable Water Network Newsletter, Nov 25


Google's Jigsaw: Undermining Alternative Media

In this episode of Geopolitical Report Kurt Nimmo, examines Google’s Jigsaw, an emerging technology that will be used on the internet to counter speech and ideas considered “extremist” by the global elite. Initially beta tested on radical Islamists,  Google and its partners plan to leverage the technology to marginalize and ultimately eliminate opposition to the establishment.

by Kurt Nimmo

Source: Newsbud