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Showing posts with label Flint MI water crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flint MI water crisis. Show all posts

07 August 2018

We can’t be silent about this, STOP DRUMPF'S/TRUMP'S BORDER WALL 3AUG18


NOTHING else can be add to the message in this e mail asking for people to sign the petition to congress demanding they stand up to the drumpf/trump-pence administration and refuse to allocate $ 25 BILLION for a  US-Mexico border wall. Click the link in the e mail to sign. From 350.org, Amnesty International USA, Courage Campaign, Daily Kos, Demand Prrogress, Democracy for America, International Labor Rights Forum, League of Conservation Voters, People Demanding Action, People for the American Way, People’s Action, Progressive Congress Action Fund, Sierra Club, and The Nation.....

This week, Trump has made headlines for threatening to shut down the government if Congress doesn’t vote to fund his racist border wall.
Right now, unprecedented, climate change-fueled wildfires are devastating communities across California. Almost a full year after Hurricane Maria, thousands of Puerto Ricans still don’t have reliable access to power or clean drinking water. People in Flint—and in many more disproportionately low-income communities and communities of color across the country—still have to drink bottled water because their pipes are contaminated with lead.
In the face of all these crises, this is what Donald Trump most wants to spend billions of dollars of our money on: an unnecessary, destructive, and hateful border wall.
Climate change and migration are tied together as climate catastrophes and devastation displace hundreds of thousands. This is already happening in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua — where many migrants crossing the southern border are from. There is no climate justice without immigration justice — which means that as a movement of people fighting for climate justice, what we need to do right now is speak out against this wall.
Trump has consistently targeted the most vulnerable communities among us. Each attack on a different group of people paves the way for the next round of assaults on our collective liberty. 
Now, more than ever, it's important for all of us to stand together.
In solidarity,
Natalia Cardona - 350.org

08 October 2016

THIS SHOULD PISS YOU OFF.....

Photo
JUST another example of why I hate the waste and absurdity of nasa's programs searching for water on Mars and extraterrestrial life in space....

17 September 2016

THE STANDING ROCK PROTEST EXPLAINED. Tribes across North America converge at Standing Rock, hoping to be heard. 16SEP16

Image result for images of standing rock protests
THE Native American protest against the dapl / dakota access pipeline has been going on for about a month and many people have the attitude that the Native Americans are holding up progress and much needed oil and they are rejecting the fact that transporting oil through pipelines is much safer than trains or trucks. This report from the +PBS NewsHour exposes the under reported aspect of  this story. Environmental discrimination is at play here and is the root cause of the Standing Rock protest. The pipeline was supposed to go under the Missouri River north of Bismark, N. Dakota but was rerouted to go under the Missouri South of Bismark after the overwhelmingly White (92%, 4% Native American, median income about $53,000) city of Bismark expressed concerns about their water supply being contaminated if the pipeline ruptured. The Standing Rock Sioux rightly see this as another example environmental discrimination inflicted on many minorities, that they are seen by business and politicians as expendable, that it won't matter if the pipeline ruptures and contaminates their water supply. We have already seen how this attitude and policy plays out with the contaminated water crisis in Flint, Michigan (57% Black, 37% White, median income about $26, 000). Check out this video followed by the transcripts from the +PBS NewsHour report.....

Tribes across North America converge at Standing Rock, hoping to be heard

September 16, 2016 at 6:30 PM EDT
Protestors of the North Dakota pipeline celebrated after the Department of Justice temporarily halted the project in federal jurisdictions last Friday. But while some equipment sits idle, construction in other areas continues. William Brangham visits the Standing Rock Reservation, where more than 100 Native American tribes have gathered, to recap a week of protests.

JUDY WOODRUFF: But, first: As we reported last week, a protest in North Dakota continues to grow against a major oil pipeline continues to grow. Over 100 Native American tribes have joined the fight against the project, saying that it threatens one tribe’s water supply and its sacred lands.
While the U.S. Justice Department has put a temporary halt to part of the project, as the “NewsHour”‘s William Brangham reports, the fight is far from over.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: After months of protest, it was a moment to celebrate. Last Friday, the Department of Justice blocked construction on part of the $4 billion Dakota Access Pipeline, the very pipeline that brought these thousands of protesters here to rural North Dakota.
But celebration soon turned to suspicion. That’s because work on the pipeline hasn’t fully stopped. In areas outside of federal jurisdiction, construction continues, as do efforts to block it. At least 22 people were arrested this week.
LIZ MCKENZIE, Navajo Tribe: It is most definitely not a victory.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Liz McKenzie drove 1,000 miles from Albuquerque to protest with her fellow Native Americans.
LIZ MCKENZIE: People are finally noticing us, not as beings of the past, not as, like, costumes you buy in Halloween stores. Like, we are here, we are still fighting, and that does mean a lot.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The Dakota Access Pipeline begins in North Dakota’s Bakken oil fields, and would carry crude oil almost 1,200 miles through South Dakota and Iowa down to Illinois.
The pipeline’s original path crossed the Missouri River just north of Bismarck, a city that’s 90 percent white. But when concerns were raised about a potential oil spill there, the pipeline was rerouted south to go under the river right next to the Standing Rock Reservation.
The Missouri River is the reservation’s primary source of drinking water. The tribe says a spill there could be catastrophic for them. So, when construction started, a plea for help went out.
LADONNA BRAVE BULL ALLARD, Standing Rock Sioux Tribe: I am asking anybody who’s willing to stand with us to say that water is important to come stand with us.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Ladonna Brave Bull Allard put out that call. She is a member of Standing Rock, and her land looks over the ridge where the pipeline would be built.
LADONNA BRAVE BULL ALLARD: When I put the call out, I really thought maybe 40 people would come. It’s overwhelming. In my own vision, I didn’t expect this.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Now over a hundred Native American tribes from across North America have joined Standing Rock’s movement. And in this sprawling camp, a community has formed.
This kitchen serves donated food to all. Kids can take classes at a makeshift school. Cords of donated firewood are split and stacked, free for the taking.
Why do you think that this has taken off and spoken to so many people from so many parts of the country?
LADONNA BRAVE BULL ALLARD: The water. We know how precious that water is. We know that we must stand for the water.
Mni Wiconi, we say, water of life. So, every time we drink water, we remind ourself how important the water is. Don’t you do that? You will now.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Protecting the water spurred Brenda Guachena to drive 30 hours from Southern California to be here. She’s from the Rincon Band of Luiseno Indians. She came with dozens of people, including her grandkids, and brought trucks full of donated supplies.
BRENDA GUACHENA, Rincon Band of Luiseno Indians: Walking in, it was so humbling to see all of these flags. All of the people, of the native people in all the reservations that showed up here to show Standing Rock, we’re here to support you, and we’re not going to let people do this to us anymore.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Guy Jones was born in Standing Rock. He says the tribes are tired of being ignored.
GUY JONES, Standing Rock Sioux Tribe: They didn’t want it in Bismarck, but it was, oh, it’s OK if the Indians — you can go down and run it through the reservation where all those Indians live. You know, who cares about the Indians? And that’s one of the things that kind of incensed people.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The company that’s building the pipeline energy, Energy Transfer Partners, says it’s followed all the rules. And it points out the pipeline isn’t even on a reservation land. Plus, it argues that moving oil via modern pipelines is a far safer way than putting it on trucks or trains, which statistics show are far more likely to crash and spill.
It also says the pipeline will generate revenue and jobs for North Dakota. We asked the company several times to talk with us on camera. They didn’t make anyone available.
We did speak with Ron Ness, president of the North Dakota Petroleum Council, the trade association that includes Energy Transfer Partners.
RON NESS, North Dakota Petroleum Energy Council: Pipelines are the most safe — most efficient, safest, and cost-effective way to move oil to market. And the products get there virtually 100 percent of the time without issue.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: That said, the 2.5 million miles of oil and gas pipelines across the U.S. do sometimes leak and rupture, and when they do, they often spill far more oil than a single train car carries. Since 1995, there’s been more than 2,000 significant accidents on oil and gas pipelines, causing about $3 billion in property damage.
For example, in July 2010, at least 800,000 gallons of crude oil spilled into the Kalamazoo River near Marshall, Michigan. It was one of the largest inland oil spills in U.S. history, and the costliest. Almost 5,000 acres of wetland habitat was inundated with oil. Hundreds of animals were killed. Thousands more were recovered, cleaned and released. Full recovery could take decades.
And just this summer, a pipeline in Canada spilled about 65,000 gallons of oil and other toxins into the North Saskatchewan River, polluting the drinking water used by the James Smith Cree Nation.
The Petroleum Council says those kinds of spills near the Standing Rock Reservation are very unlikely.
RON NESS: This pipe is 90 feet below the riverbed. It’s not going to leak right into the river. It’s got the detection equipment and the shutoff valves on each side of this pipeline.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: But Ladonna Allard doesn’t believe the industry’s assurances. She says half-a-million gallons of oil coursing every day under their drinking water is not safe.
LADONNA BRAVE BULL ALLARD: When that oil spills, who’s going to come save us? We’re Indian people. We’re expendable. Who is going to come? Who is going to come and give us water?
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The tribe’s other concern is that, even though the pipeline is just off their reservation, it still runs right through areas they say are sacred ancestral grounds.
Ten days ago, the tribe submitted evidence of newly discovered artifacts and burial sites, asking a state court for an emergency injunction. But before the court could make a decision, bulldozers started digging in that area. Protesters broke through a fence to try and stop them. They were met with pepper spray and guard dogs.
Last month, the tribe sued the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, arguing that, in its meetings with the tribe, the Corps ignored their concerns.
David Archambault II is chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe.
DAVID ARCHAMBAULT II, Chairman, Standing Rock Sioux Tribe: They never heard us. It was just a process that keeps moving forward because of the interest of economic development, the interest of money, the interest of greed.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: But, last Friday, a federal court in Washington rejected the tribe’s suit, allowing the pipeline to proceed. It was at that point that the Justice Department halted the project, directing the Corps and other agencies to take a second look at the tribe’s concerns.
Now that the Department of Justice has stepped in and said they’re going to halt this construction, temporarily at least, is this over for you?
DAVID ARCHAMBAULT II: It’s far from over, and we knew this coming in. Regardless of the outcome from the court’s decision, this was the beginning. It’s the start. We finally are getting people to hear.
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: For now, on the lands near the reservation, construction equipment sits idle while the federal reviews are under way. Despite this delay, work on the pipeline continues elsewhere in North Dakota.
Back at the camp, people have begun building shelters, so their vigil can carry on through the coming winter.
For the “PBS NewsHour,” I’m William Brangham near the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota.
JUDY WOODRUFF: On a related note, a large gasoline pipeline that supplies the Eastern United States was shut down this week after a quarter-million gallons of gasoline leaked near Birmingham, Alabama.
And, online, you can hear more Native American voices from the front lines of the Standing Rock protest in an audio slide show. That’s on our Facebook page, Facebook.com/NewsHour.

15 September 2016

VIDEO Flint Church Pastor Interrupts Donald Trump &Trump Criticizes Flint Pastor — But Misstates Key Facts About Their Encounter &Trump on Flint pastor: 'She was like a nervous mess' By NICK GASS 09/15/16 07:37 AM EDT Updated 09/15/16 10:15 AM EDT 15SEP16

The Rev. Faith Green Timmons interrupts Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump as he speaks during a visit to Bethel United Methodist Church in Flint, Mich.
Evan Vucci/AP
AMERICAN MEDIA, reporters, take note. YOU can challenge donald drumpf/trump and survive the encounter, this lady pastor shows you how to do it. And yes, drumpf/trump will lie and try to make you out to be the bad person in the story, but the pictures, videos and other reporters will record the truth and it will be out there for God and everyone to see, like this from +The Associated Press , +NPR and +POLITICO .....


04 March 2016

Democracy Now! Daily Digest 3MAR16


Democracy Now! Daily Digest

A Daily Independent Global News Hour with Amy Goodman & Juan González

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Stories

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday in the most significant abortion case in a generation. Abortion providers in Texas, led by Whole Woman's Health, have ... Read More →
The New York Times has published a major two-part exposé titled "The Libya Gamble" on how then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pushed President Obama to begin ... Read More →
With the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia less than three weeks ago, the Supreme Court has only eight justices opening the way for a 4-4 tie in what many ... Read More →

Headlines →

25 February 2016

Tell the DNC: Focus on Racial & Environmental Justice in March 6 Flint Democratic Debate! & "Thirsty for Democracy: The Poisoning of an American City": Special Report on Flint's Water Crisis 25&


THE people of Flint, Michigan have been poisoned, lied to, abused and neglected by all levels of government, by both political parties. The have been ignored and neglected by the mainstream media and most of the nation. What the rest of America doesn't realize is Flint is a canary in the national coal mine. What is happening in Flint will be coming to your neighborhood sooner than you think if we the people continue to elect officials on the local, state and national level who see their primary responsibility is to protect the rich, corporate America, the 1% from having to pay their fair share into the American Social Contract so we can start to rebuild our failing national infrastructure. Our slide to becoming Third World America will hasten as long as we spend more on weapons systems we do not need and get involved in conflicts we have no business being in. Demand the 2016 presidential candidates debate climate and environmental justice at the Democratic Presidential Debate in Flint, MI on 6 MAR 16. And demand CNN robustly moderate the debate so it doesn't become a campaign commercial for either candidate. Click this link to sign the petition from GreenPeace, and then check out the report from +Democracy Now! on the Flint water crisis......
n Flint, Michigan, thousands of children and adults have been exposed to toxic levels of lead in their water — and even the bacteria linked to Legionnaires Disease. This is a national crisis. 

But what’s happening in Flint is not a natural disaster. Flint’s leaders systematically and blatantly betrayed the people of Flint. For over two years, Flint residents complained about the quality of their water, but local and state officials ignored them. The very people who were supposed to protect the children of Flint let them drink poisonous water.

This is a national tragedy — but it’s barely made a dent on the national news. That’s why we need to speak up now to make sure the people of Flint get the justice they deserve. 

On March 6, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders will have a presidential debate in Flint. This debate is the perfect time to take the concerns of the people of Flint to the National stage  especially to address the root causes of racial disparity and environmental justice that caused this crisis.

So we’re partnering with Daily Kos, 350, Color of Change, and 15 other progressive organizations to call on the candidates to talk about racial, climate and environmental justice at this debate. 

Join us and tell the Democratic National Committee to make the March 6 presidential debate about racial, climate, and environmental justice (clicking this link will take you to a petition hosted by our partners).


The situation in Flint shows us what can happen when people do not have a voice in how their government is run, when leaders are not held accountable to the communities they serve.Between 2011 and 2015, Flint was led by a series of unelected “emergency financial managers”  officials who are appointed by the governor with no input from or accountability to residents. Flint, like many cities in Michigan that have been assigned unelected emergency financial managers, is majority African American. Over half of Michigan’s African-American residents  compared with only 2% of white residents have lived in a city with an emergency financial manager over the last decade.

During Flint Emergency Financial Manager Jerry Ambrose’s term, he was informed about an outbreak of Legionnaire’s Disease, which ultimately caused the deaths of 10 residents. Just two weeks after hearing this news, Ambrose publicly called Flint’s water “safe” to drink.

This is the breaking point. Low-income communities and communities of color have been subjected to these injustices for too long and have never been offered a comprehensive national solution or supported in implementing solutions that they put forward. The water crisis in Flint is just one example of many similar issues affecting communities of poor people and people of color nationwide. We can’t ignore these issues  they need a public stage.

Tell the Democratic National Committee, its chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, and broadcaster CNN to focus the Flint debate on justice for Flint residents in the short and long term. It’s time for a national conversation about climate and environmental justice, before we have more crises like what’s happening in Flint. 

For justice for the people of Flint,

Sarah Rasmussen
Democracy Team, Greenpeace USA

P.S. In just a couple of weeks, the eyes of the nation will be on Flint as Clinton and Sanders debate there. This is the moment for something more than just campaign promises. Tell the DNC to make the debate a meaningful conversation about justice.

Stories


Today, we go to Flint, Michigan, for a Democracy Now! special on the ongoing Flint water crisis. In 2014, an unelected emergency manager appointed by Michigan ... Read More →

As Flint residents are forced to drink, cook with and even bathe in bottled water, while still paying some of the highest water bills in the county for their poisoned water, we turn to ... Read More →

In October 2014, General Motors recognized the Flint water was corroding its engines. They got permission from the city's unelected emergency manager—who was appointed ... Read More →

To learn more about how how Flint ended up with an unelected emergency manager, we spoke with Flint City Councilmember Eric Mays. Eleven months ago, in March ... Read More →

We speak with Curt Guyette of the ACLU of Michigan. He is an investigative reporter who was just named Michigan Journalist of the Year by the Michigan Press Association. ... Read More →