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Standing with Standing Rock

Posted by Sydni Breitenbach in Environmental Science · Aziz · E on Monday, November 28, 2016 at 10:39 pm

People are using social media to fight for social justice in this particular situation by providing updates as well as information. However according to Michael Bennet in the article “Cohn, Michael Bennett. "The Dakota Access Pipeline Protectors Won't Give up." Newsweek. N.p., 2016. Web. 28 Nov. 2016.” New reports and social media told two different stories. A popular hashtag they have been using on twitter is #dakotaaccesspipeline. Considering many people use social media it is a very good method of action going into this. But if you mean methods they are using to solve this issue a very good method they are using is their protesting. Although the protesting has been getting a little violent it has still been getting the point across and spreading awareness on this issue. Social media plays a huge part in environmental justice in this issue. I took a look at the twitter hashtag and it looks like social media is bringing for people together for this issue. Social media also got people who are well known also involved. This is getting justice for an environmental issue. A way to improve their strategy is by trying to stay away from the violence part of things. I understand protesting and getting your point across in social media. But when it comes to things like rioting, that just makes it worse.

In this article they were a lot more logical. They broke down the pros and cons to each option they had dealing with this Dakota Access Pipeline. In my opinion I actually agree with this article. It is discussing how we can help/address the issue but it is also being logical about it. American people and the government can help the environment in many ways. You can help the environment is by reducing how much food you waste. This may not sound like much of a big deal but food waste is really bad for the environment. 40% of the food in the United States is wasted, when this food could be filling up 1 billion of the people starving in America, it is instead too busy filling up landfills and eventually turns into to methane. The solution to this issue is quite obvious. Just don’t bite more than you can chew, and try not to waste food.


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Standing with Standing Rock Blog

Posted by Jada Martin in Environmental Science · Aziz · E on Monday, November 28, 2016 at 10:37 pm

People are using hashtags such as #dakotaaccesspipeline, #dapl, and #nodapl to create awareness. When people use these hashtags they are fighting and spreading the issue. This method of action is very effective because social media is consistently being used and people across the world can know about this environmental justice issue. Environmental justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies.

The article “Norway's Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company” was about how a very important and large Norwegian bank is pulling 3.5 billion dollars worth of assets in the companies that are behind the North Dakota Access Pipeline. American people and the government can create an evironmentally safe place for America by the government supporting environmental educational programs.

"Norway's Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company." Democracy Now!N.p., 18 Nov. 2016. Web. 28 Nov. 2016. <https://www.democracynow.org/2016/11/18/headlines/norways_largest_bank_sells_assets_in_dakota_access_pipeline_company>.


PATaxDollarsPSA
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#IStandWithStandingRock

Posted by Zoie Jones in Environmental Science · Aziz · E on Monday, November 28, 2016 at 9:56 pm

The Dakota Access Pipeline is an underground oil pipeline that runs 1,272 miles long. The planned route begins in the Bakken oil fields in northwest North Dakota and travels through South Dakota and Iowa. The pipeline has been controversial in its impact on the environment as well as in its necessity. A number of Native Americans in Iowa and the Dakotas have opposed the pipeline.


These Native Americans have protested the construction of the pipeline and the treatment of these protestors has been a highlight in the media. These protests have gained international attention. During the latest clash between police and protesters, law enforcement officials used tear gas and water cannons in freezing temperatures to disperse a crowd of some 400 protesters trying to cross a blockaded bridge. These protestors are determined fight the construction of these pipeline that they say will bulldoze sacred sites on Native American reservations. Tribes also want to protect the Missouri River which is the primary water source for the Standing Rock Reservation, from a potential pipeline leakage.


Millions of people have joined in the fight against the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline via social media. In October 2016, more than 600,000 ‘“checked in” at Standing Rock, according to Facebook. The action of “checking in” was used as a means of showing solidarity with those in Standing Rock fighting the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Social media has been an important instrument in spreading the word about what is going on at Standing Rock. There have been instances where protesters at Standing Rock have used Periscope, a live streaming service through Twitter, to show the public how protesters are being treated by law enforcement. These live streams lets people internationally see what is going at Standing Rock in real-time.


If you are like me, after reading all of this information you may feel like there is nothing that we can do to help being that we are so far from Standing Rock. This is in fact untrue. There are several ways to help those fighting the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock.


Sign a petition to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline.

https://www.change.org/p/stop-the-dakota-access-pipeline


Voice your opposition to the Dakota Access Pipeline.

Call:

North Dakota Gov. Jack Dalrymple, at (701)-328-2200.


The White House, 202-456-1111


Energy Transfer Partners, pipeline owner--Lee Hanse, executive vice president, 210-403-6455.


Donate to the Standing Rock Sioux.

The tribe is raising money for legal, emergency and sanitary purposes via Paypal.

http://standingrock.org/news/standing-rock-sioux-tribe--dakota-access-pipeline-donation-fund/
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Standing with Standing Rock by David Baker

Posted by David Baker in Environmental Science · Aziz · E on Monday, November 28, 2016 at 6:10 pm


David Baker

Ms. Aziz

Environmental Science

28 November, 2016


Standing With Standing Rock


People are using social media to fight for social justice by using hashtags such as: #dakotaaccesspipeline, #dapl, and #nodapl. These hashtags are spreading awareness and have even been used to organize rallies and protests against the big oil companies. It is great to see people of all different backgrounds coming together uniting against a common enemy. Social media is a great way to spread information about something you care about. Almost everyone uses some source of social media and that makes it a great and reliable way to spread information.


Where do you think your tax dollars go; to strengthen our police force, pave the roads, or to teach our children? What if I told you they were going to siccing dogs on Native American protesters. The people of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe were attacked by dogs for exercising their right to protest. Sheriff Bull Connor sicced dogs on civil rights protesters in Birmingham a half century ago. The North Dakota pipeline is a $3.8 billion dollar project that paves right through a Native American reservation. If installed the pipeline will spew oil into a nearby river that the Sioux Tribe depends on for freshwater and food. Not only are the Sioux Tribe being affected by the pipeline, farmers in Iowa are losing their land. The pipeline is calculated to carry 570,000 barrels of oil a day through the Dakotas and Iowa. We are not sure if the oil is for U.S. citizens.


The article “Norway’s Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company” talks about how the largest bank in Norway funding nearly 3.5 billion dollars into the pipeline project. This is very bad for the people of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. The money from the bank will not only push the project back on track, but it may also bring in more investors to fund the pipeline. If this large norwegian bank sees this as profitable, than others may invest further to make more money by killing Native Americans on their land. The reward is not worth the outcome, If this goes through they will lose a ton of customers that are protesting the pipeline.

Screenshot 2016-11-28 at 17.50.30.png



Sources:

"The Energy Story - Chapter 8: Fossil Fuels - Coal, Oil and Natural Gas." The Energy Story - Chapter 8: Fossil Fuels - Coal, Oil and Natural Gas. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Sept. 2016.

"Fossil." Department of Energy. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Sept. 2016.


"Dakota Pipeline: Army Corps Orders Protesters out." CNN. Cable News Network, n.d. Web. 28 Nov. 2016.



"Norway's Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company." Democracy Now! N.p., 2016. Web. 28 Nov. 2016.



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Standing With Standing Rock Blog Post: Created By Eliza Meketon

Posted by Eliza Meketon in Environmental Science · Aziz · E on Monday, November 28, 2016 at 12:31 am

How are people using social media as a way of fighting against the
North Dakota Access Pipeline?
People are promoting awareness, which in turn helps get others to join the cause and come and protest. Activist members are also using social media as a way to get viewers to write to their government officials, and then get them to lobby against the oil company so they can no longer carry out their plan to build a pipeline through sacred burial ground, while simultaneously polluting the Sioux Tribe's main source of water. Hashtags have played such an important role in launching this cause, mostly because social media directs people to places that show solidarity with Standing rock, such as buying things to protect the protesters from the bitter cold off an Amazon wish list made by the Standing Rock Medic and Healer Council, or donating to the Sioux fund for legal council. Even though I think social media has a lot of flaws, it has been very inspiring to be able to see how the community has been able to interact and enlighten one another on the injustices that have been committed by the oil companies from across the country. Lately we have been told to focus on are differences, but social media has allowed us to come together and show that we do not stand for injustice or the pollution of our basic human rights.

Hashtags that have been used during this environmental justice event

After doing some research some of the most common hashtags that has been used is #NoDAPL, #standingrock, #standingwithstandingrock, and #waterislife. While there are probably hundreds more, these seem to surface the most.

Are these methods truly effective?
Social media is constantly being updated and viewed by people across the globe and it’s users range from a wide spectrum of ages. No longer are teens and young adults the only slaves to social media. I think especially since our presidential nominees started using it as a way to connect to younger audiences, it has gotten older generations to join in on the virtual conversation. Meaning your grandmother is as avid a user as you are now. I think social media is such a great platform for activist groups because now they can communicate with a bigger audience and people can show support much easier than in previous years. For a long time signing some petition was thought to be the only way to show your support for something, but now it is so much deeper than that. Today, people have such a variety of options. They can donate money to support protesters, they can actually go out and protest, they can call write a letter to the president voicing concern and outrage over the pipeline, they can spread awareness by telling friends to go look up the issue, or they can tweet and get other people to join the movement, the options are endless, all these options make this form of promotion and campaigning so effective. People don’t like feeling like they are being forced to do something. When they are given the option to put in as little effort as possible, while feeling all the glory that being a “good” person comes with. I think this is evident by seeing just how many celebrities have joined the movement. Now I am not saying all of them are doing this for publicity, but it is definitely a perk. This is the invisible hand at its finest, i.e the way in which one's individual pursuit of self-interest can lead to good results for society as a whole.
How do you define environmental justice 
&
      what role does social media have in fighting against it                                                                                 

According to the Environmental Protection Agency “Environmental justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income, with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies.” There has been environmental injustice for as long as there has been people. In recent years however, there has been an explosion of environmental activism due to the ever growing popularity of social media platforms, such as Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat, and Instagram. Now people can just snap a picture of them holding a protest sign and people will understand the message they are trying to get across. Showing solidarity with a cause is just so much easier due to the introduction of hashtags. People can just type in the #standingwithstandingrock with a picture of a drop of oil and they have done their activists duty for the day. Also causes can go viral a whole lot easier than let's say fifty years ago. Back then if you wanted to get a cause off the ground and you wanted to organize a protest, the only way you could reach out to people is by word of mouth or by passing out flyers. Now you could just make a well worded post, and share it with family and friends, they then share it with their family and friends, and soon the cause has blown up everyone's feed. It is almost inescapable. Causes now have a following and communities dedicated to raising awareness. Before people could just throw away flyers or ignore the weirdos on the sidewalk yelling at them to save some endangered animal with a weird name. There is just too hefty of a price to pay if you don’t want to go on social media. You essentially have two choices, be bombarded with whatever people want you to be interested in or be completely in the dark on what is going on society and the thing people are most likely to be discussing at school or work the next day. While it may be annoying to have every little cause someone deems important constantly blowing up your feed, it is necessary to have people be so addicted to this staple in our current culture. Without it, people wouldn’t be given the opportunity to take a second, third, fourth, or fifth glance, at a cause because they dismissed the first time around. While this is not directly aimed at environmental justice, it has everything in the world to do with it. I am not going to lie, it is extremely hard to get people interested in something that may not directly have an effect on them, that is not a insulation on the lack of care people have for one another, but a comment on how people need a push when it comes to justice of any kind. We need to see other people getting involved in order to know it is the thing will make us more socially accepted in society, I think what it truly comes down to is we want to fit in, it is easier to see that all our friends have joined in with supporting a cause when all of them have the #NoDAPL as their profile picture rather than seeing the third person in a row throw out the Stand Rock flyer they just received.

How can we improve upon this strategy?


Frankly, I believe the number one problem with launching causes purely on social media, is that people look to improper sources for information. You could have a properly vetted source, someone who has been on the front-lines, is an organizer of events and protests, as well as done some personal research, and can be classified as an expert on the cause. Then you could have someone who just joined because yesterday, still has very little understanding of the deeper meaning behind the cause, is actually just doing it to get some pictures for Instagram, but takes great pictures, uses snappy phrases, and gets the group a lot followers on social media. Which person is worth more to the cause? Someone who knows all the facts and is truly dedicated to getting the cause off the ground, or someone who brings a lot of attention to the activist group, but under false pretenses, and incorrect facts? Social media has blurred the lines on what's ok and not ok to say, it is not only completely new, but pretty much unregulated territory. This makes it that much more difficult for people who are educated on the issues and are trying to deliver the facts for viewers trying to join the cause who are getting turned off by people spewing nothing but dishonesty and garbage.

            

                                    Summary and impression on the Democracy Now article


The article “Norway's Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company” was about how a very important and large Norwegian bank is pulling 3.5 billion dollars worth of assets in the companies that are behind the North Dakota Access Pipeline. This comes as no surprise due to the the deadlines being missed by the Energy Transfer Partners and the new projected deadlines being nowhere near close to the original finish date. This has lead to some speculation on whether the oil companies will pull out on their contract with the pipeline companies.There is even talk of canceling the project entirely. I honestly believe this was all inevitable. You can’t have so much opposition to a project and not run into some snafus. With all the negative press the protesters have been getting, it is no wonder why being in cahoots with the pipeline company might not be the best image booster. With all the demonstrators doing whatever they can to delay the pipeline construction, it only makes sense that the builders would not meet deadlines.

As previously mentioned this is the invisible hand at it’s best. Companies/businesses are amoral, but this kind of works in society’s favor due to the fact that you only get people to invest or purchase your product is by getting them to like your company and think that your product is good. People invest/buy with their gut, brains are great but we are creatures that have had millions of years of evolution behind us, and the only way we have gotten to where we are today is because of instincts. They have allowed us to survive in all types of deadly situations. Even though we no longer have to fight off savage animals, instincts help us distinguish the beasts from the average joe. Companies understand that and even though installing a pipeline might make the company might sound like a smart investment in the future, it is costing them customers now. The payout isn’t worth the cost of losing so many customers. If they don’t see themselves getting out what they are putting in, it just doesn’t make the financial sense to continue with this money pit of a project.

                                                                                                                             

How America should react after the recent DAPL Divestment

&

As well as how America's people and government can work to

create an environmentally just society

I think the American people need to probe deeper into the situation going on and ask themselves if desecrating ancient burial grounds and possibly polluting an already marginalized group’s main water supply, is worth getting an outdated source of energy. Big surprise it is not! To be honest, if I have had no previous knowledge of this situation and someone handed me the story without mentioning to many specifics, I would instantly think this happened at the very most four decades ago, not in 2016! This is honestly disgusting and anyone who doesn't understand why, needs to retake some history classes because this exactly why we have them, to remind us of past events so we don’t repeat them.

Too many groups of people have been completely tossed aside by the American government especially Native Americans, who from day one have been massacred, robbed, and utterly deprived of human dignity and it absolutely needs to stop. Once you step foot onto American soil you deserve the rights that were fought and died for by our founding fathers, who understood what it felt like to be denied civil liberties by an oppressive government. I think our current government needs to update those rights to include environmentally centered ones that focus on laws that prevent things such as environmental racism. This would mean an update to the constitution and in turn amendments that would make it unconstitutional to commit environmental injustices. We really need the government to take environmental based crimes seriously, because the EPA and groups like the ACLU can only do so much. We need actual laws to come into play that specifically aimed at people getting taking advantage of by oil, lumber, energy, and other polluting companies. These heartless corporations look for the most vulnerable communities, usually targeting people from low income housing, only high school educated, or people of color, and they dig their teeth in. We need to let these companies know that every citizen deserves the right to clean air, water, and soil. Once these amendments become official, big corporations will have to think twice about dumping toxic sludge into a communities only water source or fracking for oil in your neighbor's backyard. The truth of the matter is we all should want to protect our planet and defend it against anyone who tries to poison it. The sooner we realize that, the sooner we can get back on track and try to restore all the damage that has been done. We need to stand together, because regardless of you are or where you come from, we all have the same home, and that is earth.

Please enjoy my North Dakota Access Pipeline PSA


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​                                      Sources

#nodapl Hashtag Analytics. (n.d.). Retrieved November 27, 2016, from https://ritetag.com/hashtag-stats/nodapl

Amazon Standing Rock Medic & Healer Council Supply List. (2016, October 5). Retrieved November 27, 2016, from https://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/ref=sr_1_1_acs_wl_2?cid=A1Z3AZARV3IRKL&ie=UTF8&qid=1480202484&sr=8-1-acs.



Dicker, R. (2016, September 8). A Lot of People Aren't Fans of This Pipeline in North Dakota. Retrieved November 27, 2016, from http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-09-08/dakota-access-pipeline-protest-spurs-multiple-hashtags-justice-league-support

Environmental Justice. (2016, November 3). Retrieved November 27, 2016, from hthttps://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice


Re: NoDAPL [Web log comment]. (2016). Retrieved November 27, 2016, from hthttps://twitter.com/NoDAPL

Norway's Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company. (2016, NNovember 18). Retrieved November 27, 2016, from

https://www.democracynow.org/2016/11/18/headlines/norways_largest_bank_sells_assets_in_dakota_access_pipeline_compan


Popular Twitter hashtags for dapl. (n.d.). Retrieved November 27, 2016, from

https://ritetag.com/best-hashtags-for/dapl


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I Stand With Standing Rock

Posted by Moesha Grant in Environmental Science · Aziz · E on Sunday, November 27, 2016 at 11:22 pm

Currently, protestors in Dakota are being tear-gassed because of them preventing the Dakota Access Pipeline from being built. Why are these people protesting?

These people are protesting because of environmental injustice. The current group of people being discriminated against native to the land the Dakota Pipeline is being built over. This pipeline could possibly poison their water source. This pipeline is in Dakota, but it affects us Philadelphians. Our tax dollars and teachers’ pensions are being used to pay part of this project. If this project could possibly endanger others why are we funding it? This question has been avoided.

The government hasn’t made any solutions to the conflict surrounding the Dakota Pipeline, but this hasn’t stopped the efforts of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. They’ve been creating social media pages, petitions, hashtags, and protests. There might be hope the ending of the Dakota Access Pipeline in the near future. A big foreign investor has divested from the Dakota Access Pipeline. The Energy Transfer Crude Oil Company is scrambling for money to continue their project, but they’re running thin in time to meet their deadline.

“Pennsylvania Oil Spill”

Pennsylvania…. The place where the greatest things of this country were accomplished. Where the representation of what Brotherly Love was originated. What is this happy place? Full of different people as idealistic as can be. Children sprouting with knowledge like vines. The perfect state and perfect home, but where there is light it must be darkness.

A third-grade teacher 15 years into their career pray for a peaceful retirement. Not only peaceful but guaranteed like how you expect the ground always to be beneath your feet when you take your next step. A monstrous oil poisons and forbids our pursuit of happiness as Pennsylvanians. We’re blinded of where these “tax dollars” that supposedly help to make a better society go…
Our money has no intent to be used for good, but to harm the water supply of others. Yes, water the source of all life! Without water we wouldn’t be in existence. Yet our voices are gripped and ripped apart by officials that don’t care about our lives. Let your voice be heard or continue to let your tax dollars get burned!

NoDAPL WaterIsLife StandingRock

Sources:

“DAPL.” Twitter. Twitter, n.d. Web.

“Norway’s Largest Bank Sells Assets in Dakota Access Pipeline Company.” Democracy Now! N.p., 18 Nov. 2016. Web. 27 Nov. 2016.

Post, By The Washington. “Standing Rock Sioux Making Last Stand to Block Controversial Dakota Access Pipeline.” The Denver Post. N.p., 25 Nov. 2016. Web. 27 Nov. 2016.

“Standing Against Dakota Access Pipeline- No DAPL.” Facebook. N.p., n.d. Web. 25 Nov. 2916.

“Standing Rock Sioux.” Facebook. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 Nov. 2016.

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