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Indigenous People -Earth and Water Protectors

(@lovendures)
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Line 3 is gaining news media attention.  Now Jane Fonda is protesting ( what was old is new again) and the pipeline is being linked to sex trafficking and violence.  

If you are not aware of what line 3 is, please look at the link above, google it or look at the link below.  Water protectors have been attempting to protect this area for some time now an are finally gaining attention.  

https://truthout.org/articles/exploiting-more-than-the-land-sex-violence-linked-to-enbridge-line-3-pipeliners/



   
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(@journeywithme2)
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Things are being brought to the Light ... exposed... we can not heal what is not acknowledged. Admitting there IS a problem and making all aware of it is a first step to solving the situations/problems. Come on Light!!



   
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(@lovendures)
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A beautiful story about the Yurok Tribe in Northern California and the California Condor.  They will create a captive breeding facility in Redwood national park for the birds who could be released to fly freely in the Pacific Northwest skies as early as this fall for the first time in a century.

The condor once soared from British Columbia to Mexico, but habitat loss, overhunting and, most significantly, poisoning from hunting ammunition drove the birds to near extinction.

By the early 1980s, these threats had caused such a precipitous decline in the population that only 22 remained in the wild. In an effort to regrow their numbers, biologists captured the remaining birds and began a breeding program

There are currently 300 California Condors who dwell in Central and Southern California, Utah and Arizona. This will mark their first reintroduction to N. California. 

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/mar/26/california-condor-reintroduced-yurok-tribe



   
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(@lovendures)
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Canada’s supreme court decision on the Sinixt people could affirm hunting rights for tens of thousands

For decades Rick Desautel had been told by courts and governments that his people no longer exist in Canada.

But Desautel and others in his community in Washington state have long argued that they are descendants of the Sinixt, an Indigenous people whose territory once spanned Canada and the United States.

On Friday, Canada’s highest court agreed, ruling that Desautel and the 4,000 other members of the Colville Confederated Tribes in Washington state were successors to the Sinixt – and as a result, that they enjoy constitutionally protected Indigenous rights to hunt their traditional lands in Canada.

The decision could recognize Canadian hunting and fishing rights for peoples in the United States whose traditional territory was north of the border. The ruling also raises questions over whether the nations whose members live in the US but have treaty rights in Canada need to be consulted over resource projects.

“My grandchildren and their children can look past that border crossing and say, ‘That’s what we began right there.’ And now they can cross that imaginary line and visit the territories of our ancestors,” he said.

“They can see all the adversities their ancestors faced – the logging, mining and smallpox – and know they’re the byproduct of that survivability.”

 

More at the link below.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/apr/25/indigenous-people-canada-sinixt-us-border-hunting-rights?fbclid=IwAR36B8v2oEqBFwEIcguYFkK-iwTguGgKWCXjVkVr8FeHuMD_HSHKLveDfU0



   
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(@lovendures)
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More news about LINE 5.This is really something to watch.

 

The Bay Mills Indian Community tribal council voted to banish Enbridge’s Line 5 pipelines from the reservation as well as lands and waters of their ceded territory as efforts grow to fight the controversial Michigan project.

The resolution approved by the tribe’s executive council on Monday, May 10, comes on the eve of a shutdown order issued by Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer that would terminate the company’s 1953 easement to cross the lakebed under the Straits of Mackinac. 

Whitmer ordered the pipeline to stop running at midnight Wednesday, May 11, and said Tuesday in a letter to Enbridge officials that any profits generated after the deadline would belong to the state of Michigan.

According to a statement issued by the tribe, the Treaty of 1836 has reserved the right for tribal citizens to hunt, fish and gather in ceded territory for all time. This includes the waters of Lake Superior, Huron and Michigan which comprise the Straits of Mackinac.

"Enbridge's continued harm to our treaty rights, our environment, our history, our citizens, and our culture, is a prime example of how banishment should be used," said President Whitney Gravelle of the Bay Mills Executive Council in a written statement issued by the tribe.

More can be found here at this link:

https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/michigan-tribe-banishes-enbridge-line-5-pipeline

 



   
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(@lovendures)
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From Teen Vogue of all places. (Validation that our youth WILL indeed change and save the world).

I found this VERY interesting. 

In an article about the Navajo Nation, also know as Dine` (accent about the e, I don't know how to type that) ) our youth are encouraged to become activists and pressure the US government to compensate Native communities for radiation poisoning. This is actually a big problem facing the Navajo Nation right now.

Our generation has the opportunity to break the cycle and catalyze a change in how the U.S. interacts with the Navajo Nation through the power of digital organizing. We are uniquely skilled at using social media to amplify disenfranchised voices. Starting a movement and using its momentum to lobby our representatives to renew RECA and expand it to cover all of the Diné impacted would make an immeasurable difference to so many. It’s our generation’s responsibility to help end the centuries-old cycle of oppressing Native Americans and then not providing reparations for the harm they have endured. People are dying and won’t stop dying; the least we can do is make sure they have the resources to not go bankrupt paying for medical care.

More found at the link below.

https://www.teenvogue.com/story/radiation-exposure-compensation-act-navajo/amp?fbclid=IwAR3JhukHFG1ORJPx0x2wo_-y6nzL1-XSJvTP0NU08mkzlrtSGGmubSd5pCs



   
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(@lovendures)
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News out of Seattle about fighting the Line 3 pipeline.

Seattle, WA - On Monday May 10, 2021, the Seattle city council unanimously approved a joint statement supporting Tribal Nation’s efforts to halt the construction on the Line 3 tar sands pipeline.

In a letter addressing the Tribal Chairmen of the Red Lake Band of Chippewa, White Earth Band of Ojibwe, and Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe, the Seattle city council states that they are in, “support of your efforts to halt construction of the tar sands Line 3 pipeline. We recognize impacted Nations are fighting a long battle to decommission oil pipelines and to transition to renewable resources. This letter recognizes the harmful impacts of the oil industry on Native American community lifestyles, health, and sovereignty.”

Seattle becomes the first non-Tribal government to openly oppose the Line 3 pipeline. The Seattle city council previously supported the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s fight against the Dakota Access pipeline when they became the first city in the nation to divest from Wells Fargo due to their involvement with Energy Transfer Partners.

The statement, written by community activist Matt Remle (Lakota) and sponsored by council-member Debora Juarez (Blackfeet), will also be sent to the Biden Administration calling on them intervene and halt the construction of the pipeline.

The statement can be found at this link:

https://lastrealindians.com/news/2021/5/11/4rqoy152owzr53a5vpkzya9kcd4uc1?fbclid=IwAR07l0HF6lsfMoj1w74JeKzXTl4xxGtVIVzUvwe94ZjNFDePs5g2qXC63P0



   
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(@lovendures)
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It still amazes me that many of our our water protectors are actually in need of water.

This bill being introduced into Congress might finally address some of the major water inequities that have happened to our Indigenous people in the U.S.  Some like the Navajo and Hopi who haven't had access to clean water for over 40 years.  

Water is life. 

Two Democratic senators have introduced legislation that would dramatically scale up funding to build new water infrastructure in Indian Country, seeking to address a backlog of needed projects and finally bring clean drinking water to communities that have been living with scarcity and toxic contamination for generations.

The bill, introduced by Sens. Michael Bennet of Colorado and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, would provide about $6.7 billion for a variety of water infrastructure projects, the largest amount of additional funding to date to address the longstanding injustice of the lack of clean drinking water in many Indigenous communities across the country.

In a recent report, researchers with U.S. Water Alliance and DigDeep found that race is the "strongest predictor" of water access and that Native American households are 19 times more likely than white households to lack complete plumbing.

"This is long overdue," Hopi Tribe Chairman Timothy Nuvangyaoma said in an interview. "We are First Nations here, yet we're the last nations to be really recognized. So it's just an imbalance in equity."

https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona/2021/07/25/congress-considers-funding-bring-clean-water-native-american-tribes/8028709002/



   
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(@earthangel)
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@lovendures I saw this story and am very pleased the injustice and remedy are being addressed. 
I am thinking of you today and the AZ heavy rains. You are in AZ? How are you faring? 



   
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(@lovendures)
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@earthangel 

Thank you for asking!

It is so weird .  The past few days have been VERY rainy. Flooded neighborhoods and streets just 4 miles from my house had a mess to deal with. The drought has been so bad for so long, we only just left the worst tier of drought t go down to the  second worst tier.  Last year we only had one day of monsoons. It was a non-soon year.  The  only I have experienced in the 27 years I have lived here.  Of course some years are much more wet than others.  This seems to be a very wet July.  In June we baked in the heat and dry sun.

Our soil is such that a hard fast rain water doesn't really absorb into the soil   Many monsoon type rains are powerful and streets can flood easily if they are intense.  So far I haven't been worried about my house flooding.  I am keeping an eye on my back yard  which is the most likely cause of a potential flood as it slopes a bit towards the house and in years past has had collected water to my sliding glass door. 

The sun is trying to come out right now. One thing that is nice is that for the past 2 days the high has been I the 80's, almost unheard of for July.  We will be back in the 100's by Tuesday however.  

 



   
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