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Dead Constitution
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Title: Police State Tactics Against DAPL Protesters
Source: by author
URL Source: [None]
Published: Nov 21, 2016
Author: Stephen Lendman
Post Date: 2016-11-21 13:04:23 by Stephen Lendman
Keywords: None
Views: 465
Comments: 26

Police State Tactics Against DAPL Protesters

by Stephen Lendman

Democracy in America serves its privileged few alone, public needs and welfare largely ignored, entirely when conflicting with powerful monied interests.

They win every time at the expense of peace, equity and justice - imperial wars, corporate favoritism and police state viciousness assuring it.

Oil pipelines notoriously leak, polluting the landscape and drinking water, harming public health and well-being.

Just societies would prohibit them, renouncing fossil fuels and hugely dangerous nuclear power altogether, substituting clean, green, renewable energy.

Last spring, Standing Rock Sioux Tribe members and supporters heroically began protesting against Energy Transfer Partners’ Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), endangering sacred ancestral land, water, and wildlife habitat, along with communities, farmland and other sensitive areas.

Challenging the power of politically connected Big Money assures a hugely unfair fight.

On Sunday, militarized police attacked peaceful DAPL protesters violently, using water cannons in sub-freezing weather, tear gas, concussion grenades, rubber-coated steel bullets, mace, and sonic weapons blasting deafening sounds - vicious tactics like Israel uses against Palestinians. Confrontation lasted around six hours.

Indigenous Rising calls itself a grassroots “environmental network project committed to “protect(ing) the sanctity and integrity of Mother Earth…”

Late Sunday evening, it tweeted “167 Water Protectors have been injured. 3 of those people are elders. 7 people have been hospitalized for severe head injuries. The police are target(ing) the heads and legs of Water Protectors.”

“There are no fatalities. Standing Rock EMT is still on site.” One protester called police action “very scary…feel(ing) like a warzone…(not) like we’re in America in 2016.”

Other reported injuries so far include lung and eye irritations, at least two cases cardiac arrest, multiple cases of hypothermia, a young teenager shot in the face by rubber bullets, and a woman struck with a concussion grenade or other projectile.

Indian Country Today highlighted: “Water cannons. Rubber bullets. Mace. Flash grenades. It's an army vs. unarmed people who only want to protect their water and graves.”

According to Standing Rock Sioux Tribe chairman Dave Archambault II, “(w)e have a very harsh day coming up now. In my family we never celebrated Thanksgiving. It was always a day of mourning for the day that genocide began on this continent. This all just goes to prove what we're talking about.”

A live Oceti Sakowin Standing Rock Facebook feed from Kevin Gilbertt asked readers for donations to build winterized structures in a part of America experiencing severe winter cold.

Overnight temperatures already are sub-freezing. Courageous protesters need all the support they can get. Kevin can be reached at 402-690-6178 for information on how to help. He thanked individuals donating so far.

Days earlier, Greenpeace spokeswoman Mary Sweeters urged Obama to intervene responsibly. Stop the environmentally destructive pipeline.

Safeguard the land and water. Stop police violence. Support the rights of indigenous Standing Rock Sioux Tribe members courageously protecting their sacred ancestral property.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

His new book as editor and contributor is titled "Flashpoint in Ukraine: How the US Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III."

http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html

Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.

Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 8.

#2. To: Stephen Lendman, christine, Ada, Lod, TwentyTwelve, Randge, all 4nicators (#0)

A little while back I looked into the Keystone pipeline disaster (after stumbling upon the account by a seriously green NGO) and thus began a pursuit that led me to a true looming disaster horror story.

As no doubt with many of you, the photos and written accounts of damage to Prince William Sound resulted in a rain cloud of depression over my head. (formerly The Exxon Valdez, now The Sea and River Mediterranean)

It was positively Goth, remember?

Despite the pix of Captain Joseph J. Hazelwood being dragged away in irons and blamed as "the drunk that dun it" Hazelwood was asleep in his rack during the grounding, and a nightcap before beddy with their teddies is not unheard of for officers in the US Merchant Service.

And, the less experienced but otherwise capable third mate at the helm was let down by an alarm that failed to enunciate when the ship slipped out of the lane in a channel bend, allowing the ship to pile up on the shoals. (The tanker's radar was left broken and disabled for more than a year before the disaster, and Exxon management knew it. It was [in Exxon's view] just too expensive to fix and operate."

Lemme repeat that. (thanx to Richard Pryor)

"It was [in Exxon's view] just too expensive to fix and operate." Consequently, Exxon blamed Captain Hazelwood for the grounding of the tanker.[15] (wiki)

I respectfully submit that if the captain was a deacon at Founder John D. Rockefeller's Baptist Church or a "non Christian dual citizen from New York City" we'd have been shotgunned with reports of his quiet, dedicated service to an inflexibly hardshelled-with-greed board of directors that failed to replace the reliable but expensive RADAR equipment.

_______________________________________________________________________

My more recent research led me to the ageing, corroded pipes running through the Great Lakes! (Oh, My G_D)

And because the potential damage is unimaginable in scope and more likely than not to actually happen one day, it's never mentioned by North American Corporate Scribes, Inc, either on TV or in print. There's no way to calculate the total loss of life, economic vitality and environmental damage, including the fact that the lakes connect to The Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf Of Mexico.(with no possible means of preventing the deadly exchange of pollution)

Despite the companies' claims that they (meaning the companies, not the lakes, people or wildife) are safe, independent inspections revealed that the pipes are missing many of the saddles that support the pipes at countless critical stress points on the uneven lake bottoms. And, being decades past their original, planned service life and expiration dates they're likely eroded and corroded to a fraction of their original wall thicknesses.(and crude is erosive, like DeBeers' "wartime swindle diamonds" used for sandpaper and industrial abrasion processes)

Simply put my friend, a single pipeline break in the Great Lakes will have real world consequences that may reduce Michael Crichton and Stephen King to the comparative fright level of HELLO KITTY. I'm talking about sci fi horror, i.e., "IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE TAR SANDS".

Great Lakes Overview

VOLUME

6 quadrillion gallons of fresh water; one-fifth of the world's fresh surface water (only the polar ice caps and Lake Baikal in Siberia contain more); 95 percent of the U.S. supply; 84 percent of the surface water supply in North America. Spread evenly across the continental U.S., the Great Lakes would submerge the country under about 9.5 feet of water.

So, all we need is another solar storm like the Carrington Event of 1859, the continuing destruction of the planet from Fukushima and some enemy divers to plant charges on the submerged pipes discussed above, and the next alien tourists that happen by will stop and scratch their little egg shaped heads and ask, "Did those little cockroaches build all of this then destroy it, or did they kill then eat the builders?"

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2016-11-22   7:24:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: HOUNDDAWG (#2)

Lord knows we've got enough on or plate in this country. There's so much stuff going on no one can keep track of it all.

When you compare a national pipeline map that shows you where all the gas and liquid product flows and compare it with the Dakota Access Pipeline, you wonder what particular horrors this project will inflict on the environment that current levels of pipeline transport haven't already compromised.

And you'd think these "energy partners" could find a way around a danged lake or someone's ancestral graveyard.

On the other hand, pipelines are the natural adversaries of railroads, and both interests spend a lot of dough lobbying against one another in Congress and in the White House. So the cynic in me looks at the local conflict and the coverage of of the clashes with that in mind. If I was going to report on this hullabaloo that's where I might start.

randge  posted on  2016-11-22   8:48:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: randge, HOUNDDAWG (#3)

pipelines are the natural adversaries of railroads, and both interests spend a lot of dough lobbying against one another in Congress and in the White House.

Both of which would seem to be alternatives to loading petroleum onto barges and shipping it all over the globe.

Pipeline makes more sense than rail transport to me, just because the smaller number of moving parts.

Dakmar  posted on  2016-11-22   21:41:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Dakmar, randge (#5) (Edited)

Pipeline makes more sense than rail transport to me, just because the smaller number of moving parts.

The lack of moving parts has resulted in crude and diluted bitumin or "dilbit" line placement where social, economic and environmental disasters are the result. (To say nothing about deadly pipeline explosions of rotting, creaking infrastructure. link)

The natural course of human events in America brought us "corporate citizens" who cannot be jailed for their extreme negligence, but only fined, which is simply the cost of doing business with crumbling pipes all around us. The greedy bastards plan for these disasters knowing that only their scarecrows will be punished.

Would you indulge me long enough to read this? The first 6 paragraphs say it all without undue shrillness or emotional bias. (Something Greenies too often employ to gain an edge in public debates)

"Update: On Thursday, April 7, TransCanada said it had found an estimated 16,800 gallons of oil in the Keystone I pipeline right of way. That figure is 90 times higher than the company's original estimate of 187 gallons. Company spokesperson Mark Cooper said in a written statement that the oil came from a "small leak" in the pipeline. The line has been shut down since Saturday.

An oil spill that surfaced in South Dakota over the weekend prompted Canadian pipeline company TransCanada to shut down its Keystone I pipeline, a predecessor to the controversial Keystone XL project.

TransCanada had still not confirmed the leak as of Tuesday, calling it a "potential incident." According to Chris Nelson, chairman of the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission, the leak was first reported by a passerby. TransCanada reported to the U.S. Coast Guard on Saturday that 187 gallons of oil had leaked, Nelson said. The line is expected to remain closed all week.

The leak is the most recent of dozens reported since the pipeline, which moves about 500,000 gallons of oil per day from the tar sands of Alberta to refineries in the U.S., was commissioned in 2010.

According to Nelson, the leak was not revealed by the company's own leak detection systems. Environmentalists familiar with pipeline leaks said the equipment's failure to detect it is cause for concern.

"It's another piece of evidence in the inherent risk of some of these systems and our oil transportation infrastructure," said Anthony Swift, the Canada program director for the Natural Resources Defense Council. "Contrary to industry talking points, the reality is pipeline systems do fail."

______________________________________________________________________

These costs are unnecessary when one considers that zero point energy has been in secret black project-govt hands since at least the 1940s. And even those inventions (such as H2O engines) that would cut EXXON'S daily gasoline sales by a hundred (or thousand) factor always result in unsolved (and uninvestigated) murders of inventors who refuse to sell the technology to oil soaked robber barons.

Petroleum is important enough to war on the world if necessary, but not important enough to nationalize and allow Americans a share of the resulting economic prosperity. And, despite leaps in technology the American standard of living is kept at near slave levels to prevent this "free and sovereign nation" from enjoying that which we would otherwise have been entitled. Instead the wealth is siphoned from the top and and a working man (other than Tom Cruise, John Travolta) can no longer afford a home and savings for college educations on a single breadwinner's salary or wages.

As Libyans and Kuwaitis were paying .15 per gallon for gas Americans bled to pay for energy, except during election seasons when prices are reduced to guarantee that oil-friendly politicians (remember former AK Sen. Ted Stevens?) aren't hassled by irate voters, who go back to sleep during those periods of minimal price gouging.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2016-11-23   3:19:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: HOUNDDAWG (#6) (Edited)

I dunno Forbes bias on this topic, but based on their sources their authors say:

". . . truck worse than train worse than pipeline worse than boat (Oilprice.com). But that’s only for human death and property destruction. For the normalized amount of oil spilled, it’s truck worse than pipeline worse than rail worse than boat (Congressional Research Service). Different yet again is for environmental impact (dominated by impact to aquatic habitat), where it’s boat worse than pipeline worse than truck worse than rail."

I do know that there's a lot of "House of Cards" type politics in what choices get made. We're led to believe that Warren Buffet put his paddle in with the White house in getting the XL Pipeline scotched because he has rail interests that profit handsomely from tar sands and petroleum transport.

Moving that black stuff around is a nasty business and what you've said about the Great Lakes is scary. I learned to swim in Lake Huron and I've been hiking along the Lake Superior shores where a hiker can take a drink out of that crystal-clear water. (You're supposed to boil it, but drinking it never did me any harm.) I'd hate to see the Lakes harmed by a pipeline burst. In the best of worlds that black stuff belongs below ground where the sun don't shine and not out in the biosphere.

But hey, do you buy zero-point? I haven't had time or mental space to look into this except for a lot of wild stuff I see on the internet. Which of these technologies do you buy into HOUNDDAWG? I respect your input.

randge  posted on  2016-11-23   13:11:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: randge (#7)

But hey, do you buy zero-point?

It all hinges on Dr. Steven Greer's success in exposing the secret unacknowledged special access projects. link

Also, watch this:

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2016-11-23   14:38:19 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 8.

#10. To: HOUNDDAWG (#8)

Thank you 'DAWG. That's a long vid and I'll chew through it when I get time.

I know someone who is a highly developed researcher that was involved with Greer but dropped out because he thought it got "too cultic." We were talking about other stuff when that came up, and I never got it clarified as to exactly what my friend meant by that. I'll have to catch up with him and see what he has to say about Greer's organization. My friend has been visited by entities he describes a "non-human" which is one reason he was attracted to Greer's work.

But I personally have trouble with issues like alien/UFO phenomena, chemtrails, zero point because the stories and evidence don't lock together well. When I look at historical events that have been misrepresented and when I read the revisionist scholars that pick these things apart, narratives and facts fit together to make a reasonable picture and there's lots of corroboration. The JFK assassination, MENA, the origins of world wars come to mind. But with some of the more, let's call them exotic topics, I'm often left with more questions than answers.

For instance: What is an "alien"?

randge  posted on  2016-11-23 16:00:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 8.

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