As Final Decision Looms, Native Americans Organize KXL Resistance
-
By : LIANNEWSKGABAR
- October 22, 2020
-
Comments : 0
As Final Decision Looms, Native Americans Organize KXL Resistance
Native Americans in the mid- and upper-mid west are not waiting idly as President Obama and the State Department finalize their ultimate decision on the Keystone XL pipeline which would transport tar sands—the planet’s dirtiest fuel—from mining operations in Canada to the U.S. gulf coast for export.
In Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebraska, tribal groups and indigenous activists are busy planning the best ways to resist the pipeline—which they have dubbed the Black Snake—if it gains approval. As McClatchy reports Monday:
As Common Dreams previously reported, the indigenous-led ‘Moccasins on the Ground’ is one of the key programs laying the groundwork for this resistance by giving nonviolent direct action trainings to front-line communities.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT
“We go up to wherever we’ve been invited, usually along pipeline routes,” said Kent Lebsock, director of the Owe Aku International Justice Project, in an interview with Common Dreams earlier this month. “We have three-day trainings on nonviolent direct action. This includes blockade tactics, and discipline is a big part of the training as well. We did nine of them last summer and fall, all the way from Montana to South Dakota, as well as teach-ins in Colorado and a training camp in Oklahoma.”
65-year-old Faith Spotted Eagle, a Yankton Sioux tribal elder from South Dakota told McClatchy that she feels obligated to try to stop the pipeline, both to protect the land and water but also for her grandchildren and to protect local women from attacks associated with the infusion of outside construction workers.
“This is a form of militarism, bringing in these man camps,” said Spotted Eagle, referring to labor camps that some see as a promise of jobs generated by the pipeline project. “For those of us who have the history, it smacks of repetitive economics, when they put us in forts and they wanted our land. . . . All we’re willing to do here is sell our soul, just for the economy. That’s the dark side.”
However, when it comes to feeling assured of their ability to actually block the pipeline, she’s not so convinced their effforts will be enough.
“There is no way for Native people to say no – there never has been,” she said. “Our history has caused us not to be optimistic. . . . When you have capitalism, you have to have an underclass – and we’re the underclass.”
______________________________________
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.