gatito Posted December 6, 2016 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oxw2NhuXst4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Everything Posted December 6, 2016 (edited) So, there's this very old rock, in the middle of a north european park of elder trees, only hard workers of north european origin are allowed to clean the leaves and cultivate these trees, and less working people only walk on the grey path of stone that leads to the old rock in the center. Mostly, they are walking their dogs there, the dogs take a dump, and get to play and run around the rock, take a peepee on it, and they go back home, though modern people to clean up their dogs own shit. The energy the tree cultivators expend to maintain and keep alive this ancient environment and lifeform is tremendous and truely back braking. It's mostly the heavy struggle they keep alive. Perhaps the ancient ones lived mostly in struggle, I cannot tell.  I honestly could not think of anything else in my personal life experience to share on this topic, cause the only words here are Veterans for Standing Rock and it made me think of those veteran ancient north european tree cultivators around the central standing big dark grey rock.   -------------------------------- Pkaa, Pkaa!  /o> Aim on the humans. Gg, well pooped. Edited December 6, 2016 by Everything Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gatito Posted December 7, 2016  The Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), owned by Houston, Texas based corporation called Energy Transfer Partners, L.P. which created the subsidary Dakota Access LLC. The DAPL, also known as the Bakken Pipeline, is proposed to transport 450,000 barrels of crude oil per day (which is fracked and highy volatile) from the Bakken fields of North Dakota to Patoka, Illinois. In August 2016, the final finances were secured when Enbridge and the Marathon Petroleum Company bought a 2 billion dollar share.  Despite pressure from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the U.S. Department of Interior (DOI) and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, Dakota Access has failed to consult tribes and conduct a full environmental impact statement. The proposed route crosses the Missouri River at the confluence with the Cannon Ball river, and area that is of utmost cultural and spiritual, and environmental significance. The confluence an important location for the Mandan origin story as the place where they came into the world after the great flood. Where the two waters meet once created IÅ‹yaÅ‹ Wakháŋagapi OthÃ, spherical Sacred Stones (thus the colonizers' term 'Cannon Ball'), but after the Army Corp of Engineers dredged and flooded the rivers in the 50s, the flow has changed and Sacred Stones are no longer produced. There are historic burial grounds, village grounds and Sundance sites that would be directly impacted. The water of the Missouri River is essential to life on the Standing Rock Reservation as well as all of the nations and states downstream. The threats this pipeline poses to the environment, human health and human rights are the same as those that were posed by the Keystone XL. The current route of the DAPL will cross over the Ogallala Aquifer (one of the largest aquifers in the world) and under the Missouri River twice (the longest river in the United States). The possible contamination of these water sources makes the Dakota Access pipeline a national threat.  Links: scientificamerican.com/article/the-ogallala-aquifer/ sacredstonecamp.org/dakota-access-pipeline/ 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites