Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
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- 17,271
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- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
Repeating it does not make it better.
Perhaps that was the case in the 19th century but is not really the case today. Indian reservations do not have standing of states for example. They get all services paid for by states they are located in (but do not pay taxes).the Native Americans were given sovereign land with which they could do as they pleased.
So many things wrong with this.It wasnt very good land, but they were given the rights to determine how it was used. They object to having a big fat fucking pipe spewing disgusting crap on their land and making it hard to get around,
1. It is not their land. The route of Dakota Access Pipeline goes just north of the Standing Rock Reservation.
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2. "big fat fucking pipe" may be a correct, but it is not (unless there is a leak) spewing anything.
3. The pipeline is not making it hard to get around. What do you think these pipelines look like? In reality they look something like this for most of their run:
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What are the Indians worried about? bumping into the sign?
Religion should not be able to prevent projects from getting completed. It has nothing to do with "respect", but with the fact that their religious ideas should not infringe on the freedom of others. You'd think people on an atheist forum should get that.and in addition pose it in reference to a religious conviction to not sound so NIMBY, even if they are perfectly justified; people seem to respect religion in this country more than they respect the environment that provides their biologocal necessities.
As far as "biological necessities", nobody is proposing that environment should be endangered. In fact, pipelines are safer than other forms of moving oil. New pipelines are better than old ones.
And what about non-biological necessities? This is a photo of the Standing Rock administrative building. Notice all the cars parked in the front? Do you think they run on spiritual energy?
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This is the photo of the protest site.
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Notice all the cars parked there? Or plastic tents? What hypocrites!
Some chick named Winona drove 2,100 miles to the protest side, all the way from Maine. That's almost twice the length of the pipeline (and she has to go back home at some point).
How many times did she stop to fill up and did she ever reflect on the irony/hypocrisy of it.Winona, who did not give her last name, is Penobscot. She left Maine on Monday and drove 2,100 miles to put together a recycling program for the hundreds of new residents of the protest camp.
With echoes of Wounded Knee, tribes mount prairie occupation to block North Dakota pipeline
Also note, protesting is 1st amendment right. Trespassing for the purpose of "occupying" and "blocking" activity of others is not.
I am certainly not a "states right advocate", at least not as the term is commonly used (i.e. an advocate of weak federal government).So what this amounts to is a states rights advocate advocating against a state's rights.
And this is not a states rights issue. North and South Dakota, which are states, support the project.
Standing Rock does not have state status. And even if it did, the pipeline would go just north of its territory. And note, if Standing Rock were a state, paying its own way, and a major pipeline were to go through its territory, I am sure they'd think twice before rejecting it (and forcing a reroute rather than them having veto power over the project as a whole, as they demand here).
No, it really cannot. Pipelines are very routine technology.The irony is, the pipeline and the environmental damage it produces, in addition to fossil fuels in general freeing too much carbon, could indeed cause that apocalypse they fear.
Pipelines 101: pipes leak. This pipe crosses the Missouri River, which borders their reservation. I wonder what impact it is going to have on the ecology of the river.
As to the apocalypse, yes, this is already happening, and it is very routine. The fact that people have been doing it doesn't make it any better. Just because it is routine for a serial killer to murder people on a schedule doesn't make it less bad. Pipelines are routinely destroying the environments they are built on, and around.
What I have a hard time understanding, largely because I think it has something to do with an irrational belief, is the willingness to destroy a world we still need in order to leverage a technology that sucks ass in almost every way.
We can get the energy we need; we don't lack for houses, workers, or food. We have everything it would take to commit to doing more work on better forms of energy. We would have stuff to do for decades. I suspect the problem with this is that would mean releasing the stranglehold big business has on the economy.
