Sep 11, 2016“The women joined arms, and we started saying ‘Water is life!’ A dog came up and bit my leg, and right after that a man came up to us and maced the whole front line,” Young Bear said.
↩︎ Indian Country Today
#NoDAPL
- Protester arrests are putting a strain on North Dakota's public defense system. Updated Nov 26, 2016 ago
- Skirmishes at Dakota Access border on surreal, and of course the anarchists have all the good stories.
- Ironically, the Dakota Access Pipeline stretches across a state where people are acting on climate by adapting to it. (North Dakota is warming faster than anywhere else in the contiguous US.)
Nov 26, 2016We have absolutely no control over how many people are charged, request an attorney, or are found eligible.
↩︎ Rapid City Journal
Nov 3, 2016The Bureau of Indian Affairs police arrive from the south, disarm the DAPL security guard, and arrest him. They leave everyone else untouched and head back south. For us anarchists, this is a mind-boggling event.
↩︎ CrimethInc
Dakota Warming
Ironically, the Dakota Access Pipeline stretches across a state where people are acting on climate by adapting to it. North Dakota is warming faster than anywhere else in the contiguous United States, and hasn't had an above-average number of cold days in winter since 1980. Farmers have adapted by planting corn instead of wheat, though belief is widespread that this is just a natural cycle rather than an anthropogenic shift.
Sep 13, 2016In a touch of epic derp that would be funny if it didn’t actually reveal how people of color are assumed to be violent, when the Lakota invited relatives to pack their peace pipes and gather with them in solidarity, the (white) county sheriff thought they meant pipe bombs.
↩︎ Outside
The Dakota Access Pipeline has been blocked for a total review from the White House. A leak or spill could contaminate the Missouri River, the only source of water for tribes living in North Dakota; even if that violates their rights, it's been known since the selection of the pipeline route. But Obama stepped in after tribal lawyers brought forward dramatic accusations that officials had destroyed cultural artifacts while casing the pipeline route.
Amidst the Hollywood-heavy PR against the pipeline, mainstream media depict Sioux resistance as quaint and novel, but "the fight against the Dakota Access Pipeline is part of a centuries-long indigenous struggle against dispossession and capitalist expansionism."
A six-month investigation found that the Bureau of Indian Affairs, which is supposed to protect Native interests during negotatiations for use of tribal land, made concessions worth $5 billion to corporations for pittances to families living on the affected land.
The Editors' Longreads Picks
- An excellent essay on poverty and writing by Starr Davis. Updated May 31, 2022
- Novelist Héctor Tobar tries to understand the 1992 Los Angeles riots through the experiences of a single high school.
- Steven Johnson with a long assessment of the current state of A.I. and language. (The illusion has gotten very good.)
Welcome to The Morning News Tournament of Books, 2017 edition.
- Our championship match is decided in the Tournament of Books, with news of a Rooster surprise debuting this summer. Updated Mar 31, 2017
- In Thursday's action, Reyhan Harmanci sets up a colossal final.
- The Zombie round opens with Buzzfeed's Isaac Fitzgerald reading The Nix and The Underground Railroad.
Все ваши Белый дом принадлежит нам.
- "Will Putin expose the failings of American democracy or will he inadvertently expose the strength of American democracy?" Updated Mar 3, 2017
- Wilbur Ross just wanted to make some money in ethically gray areas (that should've prevented him from taking office).
- Jeff Sessions's spokeswoman can't help but continue to lie.
The oceans are under assault, and not just from the White House and friends.
- Trump's assault on the environment begins with American headwaters. Updated Mar 1, 2017
- Don't just blame the oil companies for destroying the oceans—blame sushi restaurants.
- Nothing escapes the deepest trenches of the ocean floor. Not light, not nutrients, not pollutants.