View allAll Photos Tagged DAPL
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
I participated in this mural action by painting, taking photos and video, time-lapse, and drone footage, editing it all into this video On Friday April 9 Wells Fargo's hundreds took over the streets in from of Wells Fargo World Headquarters. They painted a giant 250 foot mural street mural, which Read: WELLS FARGO: DEFUNCD INE & FOSSIL FUELS. FIRE: PROTECT FUTURE GENERATIONS. Then they marched to BlackRock headquarters and covered the office with red clay paint hand prints. Here is some more background info: PROTECT NEXT GENERATIONS SIGN PROJECT: Rows of (distanced) people vigiling will line the street, holding signs with the faces of the next generation in their lives (kids, grand kids, nieces/nephews, siblings, relatives, friends, yourself...). Bring a photo of a young person/s in your life (8 12/x11 landscape/horizontal format) and we will have screen printed DEFUND LINE 3 & FOSSIL FUELS/PROTECT FUTURE GENERATIONS posters (and tape/glue to attach it).
MARCH TO BLACKROCK: BlackRock owns a big part of Wells--and must vote fire Wells Board Chair if they are to walk their climate talk.
WHY:
WELLS FARGO: Wells Fargo has been the world’s third largest financier of fossil fuels over the last five years, with $223 billion in lending and underwriting over 2016-20. It is the world’s leading funder of fracked oil and gas.We Call on all Wells shareholders to Fire Board Chairman Charles Noski; Help us urge city, county, state state pensions and retirement funds, endowments of universities and cultural institutions, foundations, etc to protect future generations by voting Noski out.
#DEFUNDLINE3: Because Stopping This Pipeline is a Matter of Justice
“The fight to stop the Line 3 tar sands pipeline is about justice for the land. It’s about justice for the water. Justice for Anishinaabe people whose culture and way of life it threatens. Justice for people all over the world who are being impacted by the climate crisis.
Back in 2016, I helped to launch #DefundDAPL. As Indigenous Water Protectors were being brutalized by racist, militarized police―shot with rubber bullets, bitten by attack dogs and blasted with water cannons in the middle of winter―#DefundDAPL spread nationally. Protests erupted in cities around the country, close to a dozen city governments committed to breaking ties with the funders of DAPL and nearly $100 million in personal accounts were moved away from the funders of that colonial pipeline.
Now is the time for us to defund the White Supremacist, carbon bomb that is Line 3. As an Anishinaabe woman it is my duty to protect the water, the land, and my people. I am moved to act because I love the people, the four-legged, the winged, the finned, the land, the water.
It is from this sense of duty that I am asking you to join us in this campaign. Together, I know that we can do this. Throughout history people-powered movements have changed the world. And they sure as hell can stop Line 3."
A Call to action and solidarity from Tara Houska (Couchiching First Nation Anishinaabe) currently engaged in the movement to defund fossil fuels and a years-long struggle against Enbridge's Line 3 pipeline. Read the whole call here:
www.commondreams.org/.../defundline3-because...
PROTECT FUTURE GENERATIONS: FIRE NOSKI!
Majority Action released their call to Fire Wells Fargo Board Chairman Charles Noski, along with other key corporate leader opposing defunding Fossil Fuels. Stop the Money Pipeline will be working in conjunction with our San Francisco action to build national pressure to fire Noski and Defund Line 3/Fossil Fuels. From their release today:
Last year we demanded that climate-denial architect Lee Raymond be removed from the JPMorgan Chase board of directors. Lots of major shareholders, including 11 state treasurers, heard us and, after a strong no vote, Lee Raymond left the board.
This year we need to build on that success. Not every director is a climate super-villain, but too many are doing too little to transform their companies into sustainable practices. They need to be held accountable - which means fired. We are calling this "Proxy [shareholder]
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 919 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
A Native American elder assumes a rather stoic demeanor during his visit to Standing Rock for a peaceful march on Veterans Day
In the last 5 days Trump has taken strides to set us back hundreds of years.
Attempting to Take away the rights of women.
Trying to reverse laws protecting the environment and endangered species.
Taking down the Civil rights website and putting instead a "protect law enforcement" page says VOLUMES.
He has made it illegal for certain people to talk to the media.
He has put racists, biggots, and completely unqualified people in charge.
He has refused to give up control of his assets. He has reopened DAPL, which is assaulting native Americans land.
We have had the biggest protest in history, protesting him. And the fact that when I say "Women's Rights March" people fucking equate it with being ANTI the President of the United States, Should fucking terrify everyone. Being pro women is anti trump.
I'm scared. We should all be scared.
The scariest thing is the people who still agree with his actions
i had hope that this may not be a shitshow but now, I have one hope for this presidency; That he stays president long enough for every person who supports him to regret it.
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 2800 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 2800 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Divest Wells Fargo - Native People Not For Sale
February 24, 2018
THUNDERBIRD WOMAN RISES AGAIN
Wells Fargo World Headquarters
San Francisco Financial District.
With a huge street mural, native people tell Wells Fargo they will not be bought off with greenwashing grant $$ while the bank extends huge lines of credit to Canadian oil corporation, TransCanada, to build the Keystone XL pipeline and others investing in fossil fuel infrastructure projects.
Grandmothers from the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe in South Dakota join native people and allies in the Bay Area to bring Thunderbird Woman back to Montgomery Street where she made an appearance November, 2017. While sharing stories of struggle for clean land, air, water and for Indigenous Sovereignty, they call for divestment from Wells Fargo and for Wells Fargo to divest from the fossil fuel industry.
- Native People Are Not For Sale -
- Water Is Life -
- WELLS FARGO DIVEST -
Bayou Bridge - Trans Mountain - DAPL - KXL - Line3
A crowd of about 200 demonstrators gathered outside the White House to protest the Army’s decision to greenlight the completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline without an environmental study. The Army’s approval of a final construction permit comes two weeks after Trump signed an executive order aimed at pushing the controversial project forward. Seeming to ignore the concerns of Native American groups and environmentalist, Trump stressed that the project would create “a lot of jobs, 28,000 jobs.
Washington DC, April 29, 2017. On a hot April day tens of thousands marched to the White House in The People's Climate March 2017. A broad and diverse crowd showed their displeasure and dismay at President Donald Trump's anti-environment administration and policies. Later in the day a smaller group staged an action at The Trump Hotel.
Washington DC, The White House, the evening of January 24, 2017. Around a thousand climate justice activists and supporters gathered on Pennsylvania Avenue to protest two memorandums signed by President Trump this morning essentially reauthorizing the previously rejected KXL and DAPL pipeline projects. The KXL memorandum invited TransCanada to re-apply with the promise of a speedy approval with no input from environmental agencies. The DAPL memorandum advises the Army Corp Of Engineers that the project is in our "national interest" and that the environmental review placed on it by Obama should be revoked. After a rally with speeches around a hundred or so folks marched noisily to Trump's Heartbreak Hotel for a secondary rally and 'die in'.
The lady with the cigarette appears to be a very enthusiastic protester, right?
No.
She was drunker than a skunk and wandering around the area waving her arms. She placed herself right in front of the leaders apparently enjoying the noise or attention. Although you can't see it in this photo, she has a brown-paper-bag-wrapped booze bottle near her feet.
Before the rally we saw her outside Nordstrom's dressed in a leopard skin coat. At first glance she looked normal. She asked to pet Henry. Since that is a frequent request, I said sure. She bent down and began to hug and kiss him. Then I saw the bottle and heard the slur in her words.
When she was done, I looked down to see a bright pink spot on the top of Henry's head. Holy crap - do you have any idea how hard it is to get lipstick out of dog fur?
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 2800 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Minneapolis, Minnesota
October 25, 2016
About 200 people gathered outside Minneapolis City Hall to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline. The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-10-25 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Veterans from multiple conflicts, tribes, and generations made their way to #standingrock North Dakota to march for peace on Veterans Day. This Elder was at the lead of the pack, and never shook from his stern demeanor.
Minneapolis, Minnesota
October 25, 2016
About 200 people gathered outside Minneapolis City Hall to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline. The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-10-25 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Initially, daily prayer walks at noon were to the location where the pipeline company originally tried to dig. They were greeted by prayer warriors and the Horse Nation, who came to the front lines to pray for the land being dug up.
Morton County Sheriff's officers started calling in officers from all over the region to come provide relief as they provided protection for the construction crews and began to outwardly show less care for the humans the pipeline threatened.
Both DAPL and the police began intense surveillance of Oceti Sakowin Camp. Around Labor Day, 8,000 people were present.
On Labor Day, September 5th, meer hours after the Tribe's lawyers filed evidence in federal court notifying Dakota Access that their proposed pipeline path crossed sacred burial sites, the company dug up the site. Their security firms attacked, maced and sicceed dogs on pregnant water protectors, children, elders, and others who had come to pray for ancestors whose grave sites the pipeline company had knowingly desecrated.
Daily prayer walks then began to go to the camp formed in the pathway, Sacred Grounds Camp. This place would later be called the 1851 Treaty Camp that was brutally cleared out, elders pulled out of ceremonial sweat in their undergarments, people maced, people and horses shot with rubber bullets. This location would also become the place Bridge 134 was held so that further brutalization would not occur.
yesmagazine.org/the-standing-rock-victory-you-didnt-hear-...
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 2800 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
WATER is LIFE © Linda Dawn Hammond/ IndyFoto Jan.28, 2017. Toronto in Solidarity with Standing Rock protest in front of Trump Tower on Bay St. & Adelaide, Toronto #NoDAPL
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 919 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Washington DC, The White House, February 8, 2017. Around 300 climate justice activists and supporters gathered on Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House in an emergency action to protest the Army Corps Of Engineer's sudden granting of the required easement to proceed with the construction of the last leg of the Dakota Access pipeline. The Corp's action is widely regarded as a capitulation to the climate change denying Trump regime and its cronies and fellow investors in the fossil fuel industry. Facing down militarized police and corporate mercenary violence, brave Native American water protectors and their allies on the ground at Standing Rock have vowed to stage a non-violent 'last stand' against the danger posed to the Missouri River by the pipeline that may be drilled under it any day now.
My mother and sister, observing, documenting, and recording the events of the Standing Rock protests. I'm quite proud of them both.
Minneapolis, Minnesota
December 1, 2016
Protesters gathered outside US Bank and Wells Fargo locations around the USA to protest investment in the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). This photo is from the protest outside US Bank at 919 East Lake Street in south Minneapolis.
The planned pipeline will transport 470,000 barrels of oil per day 1,172 miles from North Dakota to Illinois. Protesters called for a stop of the pipeline construction which will pass upstream from the Standing Rock Sioux Nation. Along with the threat to their water supply, the tribe claims the pipeline will destroy burial sites and sacred places.
2016-12-01 This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License. Give attribution to: Fibonacci Blue
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
New Haven rallies in Solidarity with Standing Rock Sioux and against TD Bank’s financing of the Energy Transfer Partners Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), the genocidal desecration of sacred lands, and the violation of Tribal sovereignty and treaties, TD Bank, 994 Chapel Street, New Haven, Connecticut, Tuesday, February 14, 2017.
Washington DC, The White House, the evening of January 24, 2017. Around a thousand climate justice activists and supporters gathered on Pennsylvania Avenue to protest two memorandums signed by President Trump this morning essentially reauthorizing the previously rejected KXL and DAPL pipeline projects. The KXL memorandum invited TransCanada to re-apply with the promise of a speedy approval with no input from environmental agencies. The DAPL memorandum advises the Army Corp Of Engineers that the project is in our "national interest" and that the environmental review placed on it by Obama should be revoked. After a rally with speeches around a hundred or so folks marched noisily to Trump's Heartbreak Hotel for a secondary rally and 'die in'.
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
Initially, daily prayer walks at noon were to the location where the pipeline company originally tried to dig. They were greeted by prayer warriors and the Horse Nation, who came to the front lines to pray for the land being dug up.
Morton County Sheriff's officers started calling in officers from all over the region to come provide relief as they provided protection for the construction crews and began to outwardly show less care for the humans the pipeline threatened.
Both DAPL and the police began intense surveillance of Oceti Sakowin Camp. Around Labor Day, 8,000 people were present.
On Labor Day, September 5th, meer hours after the Tribe's lawyers filed evidence in federal court notifying Dakota Access that their proposed pipeline path crossed sacred burial sites, the company dug up the site. Their security firms attacked, maced and sicceed dogs on pregnant water protectors, children, elders, and others who had come to pray for ancestors whose grave sites the pipeline company had knowingly desecrated.
Daily prayer walks then began to go to the camp formed in the pathway, Sacred Grounds Camp. This place would later be called the 1851 Treaty Camp that was brutally cleared out, elders pulled out of ceremonial sweat in their undergarments, people maced, people and horses shot with rubber bullets. This location would also become the place Bridge 134 was held so that further brutalization would not occur.
yesmagazine.org/the-standing-rock-victory-you-didnt-hear-...
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.
Initially, daily prayer walks at noon were to the location where the pipeline company originally tried to dig. They were greeted by prayer warriors and the Horse Nation, who came to the front lines to pray for the land being dug up.
Morton County Sheriff's officers started calling in officers from all over the region to come provide relief as they provided protection for the construction crews and began to outwardly show less care for the humans the pipeline threatened.
Both DAPL and the police began intense surveillance of Oceti Sakowin Camp. Around Labor Day, 8,000 people were present.
On Labor Day, September 5th, meer hours after the Tribe's lawyers filed evidence in federal court notifying Dakota Access that their proposed pipeline path crossed sacred burial sites, the company dug up the site. Their security firms attacked, maced and sicceed dogs on pregnant water protectors, children, elders, and others who had come to pray for ancestors whose grave sites the pipeline company had knowingly desecrated.
Daily prayer walks then began to go to the camp formed in the pathway, Sacred Grounds Camp. This place would later be called the 1851 Treaty Camp that was brutally cleared out, elders pulled out of ceremonial sweat in their undergarments, people maced, people and horses shot with rubber bullets. This location would also become the place Bridge 134 was held so that further brutalization would not occur.
yesmagazine.org/the-standing-rock-victory-you-didnt-hear-...
Video coverage of the event from Radical Citizen Media:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZEpCSGFQvs
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HHXPwtPhUc
Led by Chicagoland indigenous organizations, people assembled at Federal Plaza to hear speeches and create a community snake dance against the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). They were joined by a marchers from an anti-Trump protest. The DAPL is often called the "Black Snake”.
The pipeline will run across approximately 1,172 miles of land from North Dakota to Illinois. The DAPL will transfer crude oil, through the Oglala Aquifer, as well as, under the Big Sioux, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The pipeline will run through the traditional lands of the Standing Rock Sioux endangering water and sacred sites.
Energy Transfer Partners has 100% completion of the Dakota Access Pipeline in Illinois, and South Dakota. Resistance in North Dakota and Iowa are our last lines of defense against DAPL.