( Counter Current News) U.S. Government Just Declared WAR On Native Americans, State Gives Cops the Green Light To Shoot DAPL Protesters On Sight : –
While Trump is busy targeting Mexicans and Muslims, his new adviser
and current governor of North Dakota has just given the green light to
“shoot on sight” Indigenous tribes that are peacefully protesting
against the Dakota Access pipeline, according to Anarchic News.
The article goes on to give background to the current events:
Please share this with the world let them know how they are treating us… we are not terrorist! We are defending the land and the water! Protecting out future!Latest news that isn’t out there yet is that last night hundreds of cops from various agencies came with lots of flatbed semis and took out all of the construction equipment. The workers left and in doing so disassembled the construction site. Now though homeland security has taken over, LEGALLY, and the situation and the level of threat has been bumped up. This means they consider this a terrorist action and have the authority to shoot on sight.
“24 Aug 2016
Federal Judge: No Decision Until at Least Sept 9 on Dakota Access Case
Federal Judge: No Decision Until at Least Sept 9 on Dakota Access Case
WASHINGTON – Federal District Judge
James E. Boarsberge said he will not render a decision on the lawsuit
brought by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Dakota Access, LLC.
He indicated that the central legal
issue is whether or not proper tribal consultation occurred between the
tribes and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
Judge Boarsberge said there appears
to have been a lack of communication between the Corps of Engineers and
the tribes and the failure on the Corps of Engineers’ part to perform
the due diligence in the process in the development of the project.
The judge will render his decision on
September 9, 2016 and he set September 14 as a date for appeal if either
side is not happy with his decision.
In today’s order, there was no injunction rendered, which means construction and drilling can continue.
Aug 19, 2016
Construction halted after more than 1,000 people swarm to protest the Dakota Access pipeline they believe threatens the Missouri River.
Construction halted after more than 1,000 people swarm to protest the Dakota Access pipeline they believe threatens the Missouri River.
A groundswell of Native American
activists has temporarily shut down construction on a major new oil
pipeline with an ongoing protest that has drawn around 1,200 people to
Cannon Ball, N.D.
Construction workers walked away from their bulldozers
Monday after protesters surrounded the equipment and called for an end
to construction of the Dakota Access pipeline. A group of protesters on
horseback also staged a mock charge toward a line of law enforcement
officials guarding the site, and the county sheriff alleged others have
fired guns and set off pipe bombs.
The $3.8 billion pipeline at the heart
of the protest would carry about half a million barrels of crude oil per
day from the Bakken oil field to Illinois where it would link with
other pipelines to transport the oil to Gulf Coast refineries and
terminals.
The protest was staged at a spot where
the pipeline would pass beneath the Missouri River, just upstream from
the Standing Rock Sioux reservation, a community of 8,500 along the
Missouri River in North and South Dakota.
Protesters from dozens of tribes across the country are now camping in tents, tepees and mobile homes at the Sacred Stone Camp a mile and a half from the construction site. A video shows a second, more recently established campsite, the Red Warrior Camp.
“We have to be here,” David Archambault
II, the chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, who was arrested at
the site last week, said in a statement. “We have to stand and protect
ourselves and those who cannot speak for themselves.”
The pipeline’s builder, Energy Transfer
Partners, said through a spokesperson that it is “constructing this
pipeline in accordance with applicable laws, and the local, state and
federal permits and approvals we have received.”
“This is an important energy infrastructure project that benefits all Americans and our national economy,” it said. The company did not respond to a request for additional comment.
The Standing Rock tribe, one of the
poorest communities in the nation according to 2010 census data cited by
the tribe, relies on the Missouri River for drinking water, irrigation,
fishing and recreation, and for cultural and religious practices. The
reservation covers about 3,600 square miles along the river.
“An oil spill would represent a genuine
catastrophe for the people who live there,” said Jan Hasselman, an
attorney with Earthjustice, an environmental organization that filed a
lawsuit on behalf of the Standing Rock Tribe against the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers, which approved the pipeline. “It isn’t just cultural and
religious, it’s their economic lifeblood.”
The suit alleges the pipeline violates
the Clean Water Act, the National Environmental Policy Act and the
National Historic Preservation Act.
Protests against the pipeline have been
ongoing since April. In July, a group of roughly two dozen from the
Standing Rock tribe completed a nearly 2,000-mile relay from Cannon Ball
to Washington, D.C. They delivered a petition with 150,000 signatures
to the Corps calling on it to halt construction of the project.
On July 25, the Corps approved
construction of the section of the pipeline upstream from the Standing
Rock reservation, and ground was broken on August 10. Protests at the
site started small, with about 50 people and grew to an estimated 1,200
on Wednesday, according to Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier.
Mekasi Horinek Camp, a member of the Ponca Nation of Oklahoma and coordinator of the environmental groupBold Oklahoma, claimed the Sioux bands “haven’t come together in this traditional way since the Battle of the Little Big Horn.”
“It’s an historical time,” he said, “and just a beautiful thing to be a part of.”
As the number of protesters at the
construction site and the nearby Sacred Stone Camp swelled, tensions
between activists and law enforcement rose.
Protesters came on horseback Monday and a video shows what appears to be a mock charge aimed
at law enforcement officials who had formed a line along a steep
embankment near the entrance to the construction site. The video shows
horses charging toward the officers and pacing in front of their line,
directed by activists who yelled a “war whoop,” or battle cry.
Neither the horses nor the protesters
made physical contact with the officers, according to Montgomery Brown, a
member of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe who was at the protest. The
officers, however, appear visibly frightened in the video and quickly
scrambled up the embankment away from the horses.
Camp said the demonstration was part of a
traditional ceremony that brings in the spirit of horses, and Brown
called it a traditional way of introducing warriors from separate
tribes. The officers were notified of the ceremony ahead of time, Camp
said, and were asked to back up to give the horses space.
Kirchmeier said the protest had become
“unlawful” as his officers reported incidents of shots being fired, pipe
bombs, vandalism and assaults on private security personnel.
Construction on the pipeline near Cannon Ball has been “discontinued for
the time being,” Kirchmeier said.
Protesters denied those allegations.
“Firearms and weapons are not allowed at the Sacred Stone Camp and our
security has done an exemplary job at maintaining safety amongst the
crowd,” according to a statement released by Sacred Stone Camp
protesters with the groups Honor the Earth and the Indigenous
Environmental Network. “As our camp was established on an act of prayer,
we are committed to nonviolence.”
“We are disappointed that there are
those who will put the lives of others in jeopardy,” the Energy Transfer
Partners’ spokesperson said. “We will continue to put the safety of our
workers and those who live in the area as our top priority.”
The Army Corps of Engineers declined to comment on the project citing the ongoing litigation.
While the protest in Cannon Ball is
primarily Native Americans, ranchers are challenging the project
elsewhere along its 1,168-mile path. On August 9, lawyers representing
14 Iowa landowners filed a motion to halt construction of the pipeline
across their property. The suit challenged Dakota Access’s use of
eminent domain to seize land for what it says is private use.
Over the past year, protests against
fossil fuel infrastucture projects nationwide have increaseed, and at
least 24 dozen projects have been rejected or canceled for myriad
reasons, the most prominent among them the Keystone XL pipeline.
Protesters at the Sacred Stone Camp said
they are hopeful that a federal court will rule in their favor when
their case is heard on August 24. In the meantime, they are planning to
continue their protests.
Brown, the Standing Rock member, who is
also a former Navy medic, said he is seeking additional medical
professionals to help ensure the demonstrations can last.
“One of my main concerns right now is
either pneumonia or tuberculosis since we are camped so close around
each other,” Brown said. “From a medical standpoint, you are going to
need a lot of staff for these people to self-sustain.””
To reiterate the plea: “Please share
this with the world let them know how they are treating us… we are not
terrorist! We are defending the land and the water! Protecting out
future!” Please share this, leave your comments, prayers, positive
thoughts, whatever is good. Please help people become aware to what is
happening. Help protect the land and water!
Source : ( Counter Current News)