View allAll Photos Tagged StopTheMoneyPipeline
Climate activists with Stop the Money Pipeline held a rally in midtown Manhattan on April 17, 2021 first at BlackRock’s HQ and then march to JP Morgan Chase’s HQ, -two of the world’s biggest funders of climate destruction in their opinion- to urge the two companies to end their support for the dangerous proposed Line 3 pipeline project, and stop funding fossil fuels and forest destruction. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
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/
Activists with Rainforest Action Network and The Illuminator projected 30ft tall images on the side of a building in the New York financial district on January 6, 2021 with messages opposing the sale of land for oil extraction in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
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/
Local climate activists, working with the Insure Our Future Network, gathered outside AIG Headquarters in Manhattan on March 1, 2021 to throw an “office warming” party complete with cake, and balloons welcoming AIG’s new CEO, Peter Zaffino--and to demand that AIG take action on climate change. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
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/
Photo credit : Erik McGregor
An activist holds a sign with the message "stop the money pipeline" at a Defund Climate Chaos mobilisation in New York United States
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/
On May 25, 2022 more than 100 New Yorkers on the frontlines of the climate crisis, including faith leaders and youth, held a protest outside BlackRock Headquarters in Manhattan, where their annual shareholders’ meeting took place. Participants and speakers at this event demanded that BlackRock exclude companies expanding fossil fuel production from its active and passive funds. At least twelve protesters were arrested, including six faith leaders. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
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/
Environmental activists with the Stop The Money Pipeline Coalition held demonstrations outside JPMorgan Chase headquarters and BlackRock offices in New York City on October 2, 2020 to denounce both companies' participation in the destruction of the Amazon rainforest, to protest their reckless financing of fossil fuels, demanding them to divest from fossil fuels and to stop bankrolling climate chaos. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
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/
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/
On the night before JPMorgan Chase’s annual shareholder meeting, activists with Stop the Money Pipeline projected 30ft tall images of people holding protest signs with messages calling on CEO Jamie Dimon to “stop funding fossil fuels” on a wall across from his apartment in New York City. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
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/
On May 25, 2022 more than 100 New Yorkers on the frontlines of the climate crisis, including faith leaders and youth, held a protest outside BlackRock Headquarters in Manhattan, where their annual shareholders’ meeting took place. Participants and speakers at this event demanded that BlackRock exclude companies expanding fossil fuel production from its active and passive funds. At least twelve protesters were arrested, including six faith leaders. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
Photo credit : Erik McGregor
An activist holds a sign with the message "no more business as usual" at a Defund Climate Chaos mobilisation in New York United States
On May 25, 2022 more than 100 New Yorkers on the frontlines of the climate crisis, including faith leaders and youth, held a protest outside BlackRock Headquarters in Manhattan, where their annual shareholders’ meeting took place. Participants and speakers at this event demanded that BlackRock exclude companies expanding fossil fuel production from its active and passive funds. At least twelve protesters were arrested, including six faith leaders. (Photo by Erik McGregor)