Standing Rock thread

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chris jury wrote:nope- this is nothing. Barely below freezing. When the wind chill hits -60, then you'll know winter has arrived.Yep. I've lived here and worked here for 4 years. This is nothing. Wait for the wind to come. It's all about the wind here.I'm sure all the virtue-signaling East and Left Coast recent arrivals are shivering in their expensive boots and North Face outfits down there now. They ain't seen nothing yet if this turns out to be a bad winter.Urbanites know little of wind except for when an urban valley channels it. Or when they spout it.

Standing Rock thread

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Ike wrote:I think you can get their through the South, though--that's tribal land, and the coppers don't have full jurisdiction there.Yeah the camp is telling people to come from the south. NYT reports as many as 2,000 veterans are showing up to form a human shield Dec 4 - 7. http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/29/us/ve ... .html?\_r=0

Standing Rock thread

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ND is going to try to freeze out and starve thousands of Indigenous people from their own lands. Thanks, 2016. North Dakota law enforcement will begin to block supplies from reaching protesters at a camp near the construction site of an oil pipeline project in an effort to force demonstrators to vacate the area, officials said on Tuesday.Supplies, including food and building materials, will be blocked from entering the main camp following Governor Jack Dalrymple's signing of an "emergency evacuation" order on Monday, Maxine Herr, a spokeswoman from the Morton County Sheriff's Department, said. http://www.reuters.com/article/us-north ... ium=Social

Standing Rock thread

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Class action suit filed by National Lawyers Guild against the sheriff for excessive force. Details of some of the injuries: Vanessa Dundon, a 32-year-old member of the Navajo Nation from Arizona, approached the Backwater bridge as the sun was setting, one of the first people to arrive. She watched as pipeline opponents, who identify as water protectors, removed one of two burned-out trucks that had been blocking the highway since a clash with police at the end of October. Officials had since secured the vehicles to the bridge to act as a barrier preventing people from travelling down the road to reach construction sites. The barrier also required a detour for people trying to get from the Standing Rock Sioux reservation to the cities of Bismarck and Mandan. As she watched, tension began to mount between the protectors and police on the other side of a razorwire roadblock. œI did not have time to move to avoid being hit by the [tear gas] canister, she said. œI instinctively closed my eyes and was struck in the right eye by the canister. As she turned to run away she was shot in the back of her left thigh by what felt like a rubber bullet. She fell to the ground, where two people picked her up and carried her to a minivan. œMy eye was bleeding so much that I could not see and I was worried my eyeball was hanging out, she stated.Dundon was eventually sent to a specialist in Plymouth, Minnesota. œDr. Baggins told me the trauma to my eye will likely affect my vision for the rest of my life and it is unclear at this time if I will be able to see out of my right eye again, she said.Mariah Marie Bruce, a 21-year-old from New Orleans, arrived to the police line at around the same time as Dundon. It wasn t long before she was doused with water, her jacket and skirt freezing solid. As tear gas burned her eyes and nose, a flash bang grenade exploded against her genitals. Feeling little pain at first, she stayed in place until the tear gas became too much and she moved toward medics to treat her burning eyes. œAs my body began to warmup, I started to feel the pain in my vagina and abdomen. The pain suddenly worsened and I began vomiting and the medics became very concerned, she stated in a declaration to the court. She was taken by ambulance to the hospital.David Demo, a 25-year-old living in nearby Cannon Ball, North Dakota, of Penobscott heritage, arrived at the bridge around 9 pm. He moved toward the police line, holding a GoPro camera on a stick. After 30 seconds or so of being sprayed with water, a projectile, possibly a rubber bullet, shot into Demo s middle finger, which was holding the camera. œI was there to observe what was going on, and continue the protest against the pipeline. I was not threatening the officers, he declared. In the morning, at the hospital, he was told his knuckles had broken and he would likely need reconstructive surgery.Israel Hoagland-Lynn, a 42-year-old, from California was shot by a rubber bullet in the top of his head. œI dropped to the ground and lost consciousness, he said. He came to and was carried by ambulance to a hospital, where he received 17 staples to the head.Vanessa Bolin Clemens, a paramedic from Virginia and member of the Cherokee Nation, described treating one man for a seizure and administering CPR to another that appeared to be going into cardiac arrest. She described concussions, respiratory injuries, and, in the morning, ringing ears.https://theintercept.com/2016/11/29/sta ... -violence/

Standing Rock thread

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Yes, ND is cold. But I don't think we have a lock on wind. I am unsure who this Matthew fellow is, but he appears to one of the new breed of complete shitheads who have infested my former homeland. It really is an insufferable place to be now- almost 100% because of the people. Matthew- Please don't pretend to be 'from here'. If you arrived during the good times of the past 8-10 years, then you have no concept of what the place is, or how tough it can be. If you didn't suffer through the poverty of the 70's, and the crushing drought and collapse of the family farms in the 80's, then you have no right to look askew at others from the 'east and left coast' who are also new. You haven't seen a hard winter yet, and you talk about it like a child. During the historically cold winters of 79-85 the reservoir used to freeze and back up. This allowed my father to drive out onto the ice and cut down the big, dead cottonwoods. My job was to collect the small branches and break them into bundles of kindling, and to try to avoid falling through the ice. Sometimes the trees would break through as they fell, and we'd have to come back the next day, when everything had refrozen.
No one is paying you to sit on that bed and cry.

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