View allAll Photos Tagged Line3
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
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
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Zabrze, ul. Wolności.
Cars #476"+425 (VIN 157+430, built 1975/1976, 1987/1991 ex 105N, #476" ex #420).
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Parque Mestizaje* - Park of Mixed Marriage - is in the northernmost part of the Valley of Mexico, at the foot of the volcanos ringing the city. This is one of the two "Green Indians" (Indios Verdes) in the park, so named because the bronze statues have acquired a green coating. The park includes numerous other statues and the southern terminal of the Guadalupe Aqueduct. Just off Insurgentes Norte, near the Indios Verdes terminals of Metrobus Line 1, Metro Line 3, and numerous bus routes.
The statues originally (1889) located on Paseo de la Reforma. Around 1902 they were moved to flank the Canal de Viga where it entered the Centro Historico from the south. They were moved to the present location in 1941.
There is likewise a monument on Insurgentes at the southern limit of the Valley of Mexico, that one honoring road workers (Caminero).
* The literal translation of this word has gained a negative connotation in English - my translation preserves the meaning.
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
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 $$ while the bank extends huge lines of credit to Canadian oil corporation, TransCanada, to build the Keystone XL pipeline and others investing in fossil fuel infrastructure projects.
Grandmothers from the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe in South Dakota join native people and allies in the Bay Area to bring Thunderbird Woman back to Montgomery Street where she made an appearance November, 2017. While sharing stories of struggle for clean land, air, water and for Indigenous Sovereignty, they call for divestment from Wells Fargo and for Wells Fargo to divest from the fossil fuel industry.
- Native People Are Not For Sale -
- Water Is Life -
- WELLS FARGO DIVEST -
Bayou Bridge - Trans Mountain - DAPL - KXL - Line3
Divest Wells Fargo - Native People Not For Sale
February 24, 2018
THUNDERBIRD WOMAN RISES AGAIN
Wells Fargo World Headquarters
San Francisco Financial District.
With a huge street mural, native people tell Wells Fargo they will not be bought off with greenwashing grant $$ 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
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
DPMLJ Pragoimex T3R.SLF [2018] unit 36 leads Tatra T3M.04 63 while working a DPMLJ Line3 service recorded at Liberec, Viadukt tram stop in October 2024.
All images on this site are exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed written permission of the photographer. All rights reserved – Copyright Don Gatehouse
Cortez's forces tried to escape to Tacuba with their looted treasures on 30 June 1520. He did not know that the Aztecs had dug a deep ditch at the entrance to the causeway here (now the site of San Hipolito church), where he was ambushed and lost 400 men and most of the treasure. The remaining forces, all injured, continued a few miles futher to Popotla where Cortez cried under the "tree of the sad night".
No two sources give the same details of these events; Cortez's "official" account was lost in the battle. The only surviving "eye witness" report was written much later by Bernal Diaz when he was old and blind. He finished writing his history in 1568, almost fifty years after the events described, a work he had begun (probably in the mid-1550s) in response to an alternative history written by Cortés's chaplain, who had not actually participated in the campaign. He called his book the Historia Verdadera ("True History"), in response to the claims made in the earlier work. Díaz died in 1585, without seeing his book published. A manuscript was found in a Madrid library in 1632 and published, providing an eye-witness account of the events, told from the perspective of a common soldier. Examination of the original manuscript, much later, showed that most printings of Diaz's account were heavily sanitized to protect the guilty.
At the busy 6-way intersection above the Metro Line 2 and 3 Hidalgo station. Metro Line 2 follows Cortez's invasion route from the south to the Zocalo and then turns west and follows his escape route to Tacuba by way of Popotla.
In 2013 went into the church late on a Sunday afternoon - it was packed way beyond capacity. Outside, in a protective enclosure, is the "Virgin of the Subway" - an image of the Virgin of Guadelupe formed on the wall of the Hidalgo Line 2 station by water seepage.
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Scarborough Centre Station is located at Scarborough Town Centre (STC), and is one of the main stops on the Scarborough LRT. Located just north of Ellesmere Avenue, the station serves the LRT, several TTC bus lines, and GO Transit buses. Exiting from the station, you can get right into the STC, where there are a wide variety of stores, services, and restaurants for your shopping needs. The ride from Kennedy to STC is noisy, and slow, and takes you above ground all the way. It's convenient - if you really need to get to Scarborough from somewhere on the subway line. The Scarborough LRT has two of the least used stations in Toronto, but it's still faster than taking buses and streetcars out to that part of the city.
The Scarborough LRT system is different from the other subway and LRT lines. It's the first LRT, and was constructed back in 1985 and the cars actually smaller, semi-automated, medium-capacity trains. Instead of building a full subway line from Kennedy Station to McCowan Station, the TTC purchased Intermediate Capacity Transit System (ICTS) Mark I trains built by the Urban Transportation Development Corporation (UTDC). The station still has the 1980s aesthetic, as the line has remained mostly unchanged from the time that it was built. The system is slated to be closed in 2023, however, having more than outlived it's operational life. The system is frequently disabled - by snow and ice, and by mechanical failures. It is slated to be replaced by a 3 stop subway line - new stops at Lawrence East, McCowan, and Sheppard East.
This third Metrobus line was built and running in less than a year. Just try to do that in the USA! It runs from Metrobus Line 2 in the south to a previously underserved area to the northwest. Here it is immediately adjacent to the Metro Line 3 station on the western edge of the Centro Historico. Besides providing needed transit capacity, the Metrobus reduces congestion and pollution by replacing the previous swarm of smaller but less efficient vehicles.
There are 2 groups of very old pyramids near the northern terminal at Tenayuca, where this bus is heading.
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
Częstochowa, ul. Limanowskiego.
In 2012 new route number 3 was built to Błeszno in Częstochowa and I visited it. This is the new Raków Stadium loop.
MPK Częstochowa ordered 7 LF Twist cars from Pesa Bydgoszcz for new line service.
Company: Kolumbus
Operator: Norgesbuss
Line: 6 Sandnes via UiS
Bus number: 2208
Registration plates: RL 10559
Bus: Mercedes-Benz O530G Citaro C2
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Company: Kolumbus
Operator: Norgesbuss
Line: 3 Viste Hageby
Bus number: 2349
Registration plates: RL 10379
Bus: Volvo 8900 Euro 6 (12m)
Contact me if you want to use the photo
Chase Bank, Stop Funding #Line3 Tar Sands Pipeline! Community voices in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, spoke up to demand that Chase Bank stop funding the Line3 Pipeline. Per the Thomas Merton Center: Let’s tell Chase Bank to stop funding construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline across the treaty territory of the Anishinaabe people and the headwaters of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We’ll be outside the Squirrel Hill branch with signs and leaflets to educate the public and demand that Chase Bank stop funding Line 3 before it’s too late.
If completed, Line 3 will transport almost one million barrels of dirty tar sands per day from Alberta, Canada to the shores of Lake Superior in Wisconsin.
Construction is already happening right now, and will require draining five Billion gallons of water from wetlands throughout Northern Minnesota and drilling under multiple rivers, including twice under the Mississippi. The influx of out of state pipeline workers and “man camps” has also intensified the existing crisis of human trafficking, assault, and missing and murdered indigenous women along the construction route.
Chase Bank is heavily invested in this destruction, and will decide on July 22nd whether to renew their loans to the pipeline project.
Line 3 is a project of the Enbridge Corporation, a Canadian multinational responsible for the largest inland oil spill in the US. Enbridge was also one of the companies building the Dakota Access Pipeline, which involved sustained, coordinated violence and military counterinsurgency tactics against peaceful water protectors and indigenous people by national guard, law enforcement, and private security mercenary firms working on behalf of Enbridge and their partners.
Beyond damage to vast areas of wetlands and the Mississippi River, current construction and future oil spills also threaten the Manoomin wild rice that is sacred to the Anishinaabe people. Enbridge is trying to force their dangerous and unnecessary pipeline through indigenous territories while the Anishinaabe people organize a movement to protect the water and sacred rice through everything from lawsuits to resistance camps in the path of the pipeline itself.
Call Chase Bank today and ask them to #DefundLine3.
All the info is here at
stopthemoneypipeline.com/call-chase-defund-line-3/
Spread the word and share the Facebook event! bit.ly/defundLine3
Now is the time to go to Minnesota and join the movement! All the info for showing up at camps is here welcomewaterprotectors.com/
Company: Kolumbus
Operator: Connect Bus
Line: 3 Viste Hageby
Bus number: 2429
Registration plates: EE 24796
Bus: Volvo 7900 Electric
Contact me if you want to use the photo
Pedamma Temple Metro Station (Hyderabad Metro Rail (HMR)) under-construction by L&T Metro Rail (Hyderabad) near Jubilee Hills Pedamma Temple. This stretch is part of Line 3 (Nagole-Shilparamam).
Raw File: image_2 (Picmarkr).IMAG7608.04082014