This week we’re sharing a conversation we had with two folks involved in the initiative called Sabal Trail Resistance.
Join us in honoring the February 27 anniversary of the 1973 Wounded Knee Stand-Off on the Pine Ridge Reservation, wherever you are in the world, by declaring your support for Leonard Peltier and opposition to the oil and gas industry.
A group of water protectors are occupying a Citibank branch at Washington and Dearborn Ave in Chicago to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline and the push by the Trump administration to grant the final permit without regard to tribal and public consultation.
The bills carry an emergency clause, which means they would become effective immediately if approved by the Legislature and signed by the governor.
North Dakota police arrested 76 people one day after federal officials suggested that the government could soon approve the final stage of pipeline construction.
Donald Trump’s proposed border wall could face a major obstacle in Arizona, where an indigenous tribe has vowed to oppose construction on its land, paving the way for potential mass resistance following the model of Standing Rock.
In the spirit of Sitting Bull, stand up with strong hearts, help dismantle peace police and liberal disease mentality; these modes and positions of privilege only reinforce our collective enemies and the fascists systems they uphold, and the rich and elite few that they protect.
A federal judge said Wednesday he won’t keep the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from launching a full environmental study of the $3.8 billion Dakota Access pipeline’s disputed crossing under a Missouri River reservoir in North Dakota.
A Mexican indigenous activist who received the prestigious Goldman environmental prize for his crusade against illegal logging has been shot dead, the second award-winner to have been murdered in less than 12 months.
Before dawn on the Dec. 21, 2016, dozens of police raided the headquarters of the Shuar Federation (FISCH) in the Ecuadorian Amazon and arbitrarily detained its president, Agustin Wachapá. The indigenous leader was thrown to the ground and repeatedly stamped on and ridiculed beneath the boots of police in front of his wife.