In
a move that surprised no one for its greed and arrogance, on Jan. 24
President Donald Trump reversed President Obama’s Executive Order
impeding construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. The route of the
pipeline goes across sacred Sioux land and under the Missouri River
near Standing Rock, North Dakota.
Delivering
on a promised one-two punch against climate sanity and Native
American rights, climate change denier Trump also approved restarting
the Keystone XL oil pipeline project, halted in November 2015 and
stretching all the way from Canada to the Gulf Coast.
In
order to stoke chauvinist rhetoric that attempts to address the
burning desire of working families for good jobs at decent pay, Trump
said that the pipelines must be “American made.” That might sound
promising to some because the Democrats have done little to create
good paying jobs. But here’s the kicker: Trump promises 28,000 jobs
at Keystone XL, but a State Department review found that the project
would yield only 35 permanent jobs! Trump invited Keystone to
re-apply to start digging.
The
fossil fuel industry’s blitzkrieg has outraged Native Americans who
are vowing to take the fight to a new level. “We will fight back
through the courts, protest in any means possible and necessary,”
said Ariel Derenger of the Athabasca first nation.
After
court challenges by the Sioux Nation, if what’s called an
“easement” or permission to dig under the Missouri and Lake Oahe,
a source of drinking water for the Sioux and millions downstream, is
granted, and if the digging resumes, it is estimated it could take as
little as two weeks to complete the pipeline. But that depends,
again, on the courts and the mass movement. John Hasselman, an
attorney for the Sioux Nation, says that stopping the oil in the
pipes through the courts is still a possibility. He states that Trump
“unlawfully and arbitrarily sidestepped” the findings of the
Obama administration.
We
will see if any justice in the capitalist courts is possible, but the
experience of Native Americans in this country is 400 years of rape,
murder, theft of resources and broken treaties!
The
flashpoint of resistance at Standing Rock has ignited unprecedented
mobilizations and unity among over 100 Native American nations. In
December, crowds were said to peak at 10,000, including thousands of
native and non-native American solidarity activists from across the
US and Canada, 3000 of whom were veterans.
The
largest numbers of water protectors were in camp around the time
Barack Obama ordered an environmental review on Dec. 4, demonstrating
the power of mass mobilization for Standing Rock across the world.
About 500 remain at Standing Rock in the sub-zero North Dakota
weather.
At
the present time, the main camp at Standing Rock, Oceti Sakowin, is
being relocated due to oncoming spring floods in the plain area and a
unanimous decision by the Tribal Nation Council, reiterated on Jan.
21, to leave the camp. Cops and security goons are taking quick
advantage of the situation.
Diné
water protector and videographer Marcus Mitchell spoke with
Pacifica’s “Democracy Now!” (Jan. 25) lost sight in one eye
after a police attack. He described cops brutalizing water
protectors: “After about five minutes on the bridge, my hands were
raised, and I was saying, ‘I am an American citizen practicing my
First Amendment right to freedom of speech. I’m unarmed, and I am
in peaceful protest.’ I was then shot in the leg. I looked down.
And as I looked up, a beanbag hit me. … And then, another round
came in my face and hit me—hit my eye directly.
“I
then turned around to run and was nearly shot in the back of the
head. At this point, I became disoriented. In the chaos, another
water protector pushed me to the ground to protect me.”
Donald
Trump invested up to $1 million in Energy Transfer Partners (owner of
the Dakota Access pipeline), but last year was reported to have
divested his stock in the company. Nevertheless, he was the recipient
of large campaign contributions from Energy Transfer Partners head
Kelcy Warren—including a $100,000 check to the Trump Victory Fund.
What’s
more, in June 2015, Warren gave $5 million to a PAC that supported
the presidential campaign of Ex-Governor Rick Perry, now Trump’s
nominee for Secretary of Energy. Perry sat on the board of Energy
Transfer Partners until Jan. 5 and also Sunoco—a corporation that
also is involved the Standing Rock pipeline. During his time as Texas
governor, Perry distributed hundreds of millions in “incentives”
to corporations wishing to do business in Texas.
The
nominee for Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, is the longtime CEO of
Exxon Mobil, the wealthiest corporation in the world and the biggest
threat to the climate’s survival.
The
Democrats hardly pose as an alternative to Trump’s fossil fuel
madness. Hillary Clinton refused to speak out against rampant police
brutality against peaceful protesters at Standing Rock, seen by
millions in news broadcasts and YouTube videos across the world
(which has continued), while she continued to pose natural gas as an
alternative to coal. Senate Democratic Minority leader Chuck Schumer
has been a big recipient of Wall Street donations, including from
energy companies.
Donald
Trump’s orders to revive the Keystone XL and Dakota Access
pipelines sparked a number of emergency protests in Washington, New
York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Philadelphia, and other
cities. Josh Fox, filmmaker and protest organizer, told “Democracy
Now!” that “we had, we think, between 2000 and 5000 people last
night in New York City in the freezing rain.”
Thousands
of No DAPL protesters are expected at this #SuperSundayMarch in
Pershing Square in Los Angeles. (Stay in touch with #NoDAPL
and #NoKXL, Stand With Standing Rock and Labor for Standing
Rock).
Troy
Fairbanks, the sixth-generation grandson of Sitting Bull, told the
British Guardian,
“Have we as Native people ever been given a fair shake? Nah. But
this time, the whole world is watching.”
Another
method of resistance was shown by Local 10 of the International
Longshore Workers Union, which carried out a one-day strike at Bay
Area ports on Jan. 20, the day of Trump’s inauguration. This points
a way toward further labor action against Trump and his billionaires.
Militant labor action, alongside oppressed communities within the
working class, can ultimately take down the whole rotten system, now
plunging headlong toward environmental disaster.
>> The article above was written by Marty Goodman and is reprinted from Socialist Action.
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