Indigenous Peoples and Human Rights

November 12, 2011

Rally in Nebraska to Stop Keystone Pipeline


Tom Weis' Rocket Trike with Lakotas
Photo Lakota Media Project
Published with permission at Censored News
CITIZENS RALLY AT STATE CAPITOL TO DEMAND STATE LEGISLATURE PASS BILL REGULATING PIPELINE ROUTES


LEADERS CALL ON PRESIDENT OBAMA TO REJECT TRANSCANADA’S PERMIT BEFORE ELECTION & DEVELOP GREEN ENERGY PLAN FOR AMERICA

By Tom Weis
ronseif@gmail.com
Censored News

LINCOLN, NE – (Nov. 12, 2011) Today, the Keystone XL “Tour of Resistance” landed at Nebraska’s capital. A diverse coalition of farmers, ranchers, indigenous leaders, environmental leaders, Occupy Lincoln activists and others biked and marched to the Capitol dome to demand state and federal action to oppose TransCanada’s Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. They formed a human wall on the Capitol steps as a symbolic “line in the sand” against Keystone XL.

The Lincoln
 march and rally come less than a week after 12,000 people surrounded
 the White House in opposition to Keystone XL, and just days after the
 Obama administration announced delaying a decision on the pipeline until after the
 2012 election. The organizers are calling on the State Legislature to pass a bill regulating pipeline routes, and for President 
Obama to reject Keystone XL without delay.
Describing Keystone XL as a “dagger into the heartland,” Tom Weis, President of Climate Crisis Solutions, said, “We don’t need more studies to know Keystone XL threatens America. Obama’s announcement to put off a decision on the pipeline until after next November is a deeply cynical political ploy. The President needs to make a decision before the election and develop a green energy plan for our nation that puts unemployed Americans back to work.”
Cindy Myers, a lifetime resident of the Sand Hills, questioned the new environmental review being called for by President Obama saying people living on the land understand their water resources better than anyone. “There’s been so much corruption at the local, state and federal level around Keystone XL, I don’t trust our government to do these studies right,” she said. “It’s like our government has been taken over by Big Oil.” Citing concern about the State Department’s delay announcement, Myers said, “It is of the utmost importance to Nebraska that we get this pipeline routing legislation in place now.”
Robert Bernt, an organic dairy farmer from Wheeler County, criticized TransCanada for their lies and manipulation of the facts. “They’re ruthless, they’re careless, they have no concern for their fellow man or the land,” he said. “They buy their way, force their way, and threaten eminent domain.” Referencing threats to the Ogallala Aquifer, which supplies drinking water to nearly two million Americans and one-third of America’s farmland irrigation water, he said, “The American people need to step up and protect one of our nation’s most precious natural resources, the Ogallala Aquifer.”
Lynda Buoy, farmer, rancher and President of the Nebraska Farmers Union, Sand Hills Region, called on President Obama to intervene. “I think it’s a disgrace that this could happen in the United States: a foreign company coming into this country and badgering people to the point that they sign easements because they’re afraid not to do it.”
“If Keystone XL goes through, we’re going to erect a monument with a big brass plaque on top of it so people in the future will know who contaminated our water,” said Todd Cone, Nebraska rancher and licensed pump installation contractor. “It will have people in the Obama administration on it and all the Nebraska State Senators and how they voted.”
As reported by CNNMoney on November 10, TransCanada's president and chief executive officer, Russ Girling, said, “We remain confident Keystone XL will ultimately be approved.” According to CNNMoney, the company confirmed it has already bought $1.7 billion worth of steel pipe.

Weis is leading a “rocket trike” tour along the 1,700-mile proposed pipeline route to focus the nation on threats posed to America’s breadbasket by Keystone XL. He has pedaled over 1,000 miles since leaving the U.S./Canada border a month ago. Weis was one of 1,253 people arrested in front of
 the White House earlier this summer protesting the tar sands pipeline, spending two nights in DC’s Central Cell Block.
For more info: https://sites.google.com/site/nokxllincoln and http://www.
rideforrenewables.com
Principal Sponsors: AllEarth Renewables, Inc. and EcoWatch

Also see:
AP: Human wall in Nebraska: No Pipeline!
http://www.omaha.com/article/20111112/NEWS01/711129878
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