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Massive Pipeline Project

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Too many people are worried about their own lives when they should be thinking about taking a stand against the massive pipeline project in North Dakota which is something much bigger than their own and is changing lives. Like I mentioned in North Dakota, where the largest gathering of Native people in opposition to the construction of a massive pipeline project going on near the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. Water and rights describe the fight. This is a sizeable issue that should be addressed because it’s causing harm and should not continue. Nevertheless the story continues. The massive pipeline project is polluting one of the only water sources. Officials there claim the project threatens the only water supply for the reservation, …show more content…

The Army Corps of Engineers held 389 meetings with 55 tribes about the project and met with the Standing Rock Sioux a dozen times. Consequently the tribe wasn’t satisfactory.So let’s imagine a different scenario — in which any group of people in the United States wanted to block development on a certain site. Perhaps it’s the Mormons who hear a skyscraper will be going up in the place where Joseph Smith saw the golden tablets”(Riley). How long can a person survive without water? What would you do if your only source of water was threatened? So what if these questions are raised by a Native person? It isn’t a matter of being Native to understand it, just being human. You might also say, why don’t they just buy the land so it wouldn’t allow the pipeline to trespass through? They can’t buy homes because they can’t have mortgages. They can’t receive loans to start small businesses because they don’t really own their land. They can’t buy and sell land among themselves without the permission of bureaucrats in Washington. What they have is what economist Hernando de Soto calls “dead capital.” After staging protests over the last several weeks, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe has managed to temporarily halt the construction of the $3.7 billion Dakota Access Pipeline. The pipeline, which would carry 470,000 barrels of oil a day from North Dakota to Illinois, doesn’t actually go through the reservation land of the tribe, but tribal leaders say it’s on land that has cultural significance to them. According to this you can tell that the people who are taking a stand is making a

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