This week Co-hosts Jen and Tessa introduce the Madison Area DSA, Forward, Comrades. The episode highlights a letter from front line organizers against Line 3, an update on the F-35s, and info about an upcoming drag march. Check out Safe Skies Clean Water Wisconsin for more info and join the march on Saturday 6/26/21 at 2pm. Check out Sunny Ray Creations and join the Drag March on Sunday at 2pm. The podcast closes with a list of upcoming events and a few things to check out around town.
Juneteenth Link: Angela Davis on The History of Juneteenth and How We Should Commemorate it Today
Line 3:
Donate to the bail fund for the approximately 200 water protectors arrested this week: treatypeoplegathering.com/donate
To learn about other opportunities to join in protecting our water at https://welcomewaterprotectors.com or https://www.stopline3.org/
Music by Luis Perez. Logo by Avalon Clare Illustration
Letter from Gina Peltier, read on Pod by Jen
Dear Madison Area
Monday was a day that touched my heart.
For seven years, my community, the Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) people of Northern Minnesota, and our allies have been fighting against the construction of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline, a terrible threat to our treaty rights, water and climate.
But this week more than two thousand water protectors came together in Northern Minnesota to stand side by side with frontline Indigenous leaders in resisting this dangerous project.
Now we need YOUR help.
As I write this many water protectors are still in jail. And the Biden administration still needs more pressure to honor treaty rights and science by stopping the construction of this dangerous pipeline.
Here is how you can help:
Here is why we needed to take action:
The Enbridge corporation’s Line 3 tar sands pipeline project would expand the production of one of the world’s dirtiest fuels--tar sands crude oil--through 200 bodies of water in our treaty territory. These are lands where we have the right to hunt, fish and gather the sacred manoomin (wild rice). In the face of climate catastrophe, it would carry the carbon impact of 50 new coal plants.
Over the past seven years youth, Indigenous leaders, community groups, scientists and tribal governments have fought this project. The state of Minnesota’s own Commerce Department has joined tribal governments and others in a pending lawsuit saying this project is not needed.
But big money talks loudly and the Trump administration and state regulators let the project go through, without a proper Environmental Impact Statement taking into account treaty rights or climate change.
Please contact President Biden today at 888-724-8946. Then do what you can to support the water protectors—or better yet, join us.
Seeing people from all over, every color, age and religion, Native and non-Native, put their bodies on the line this week told me we can win.
Miigwech (thank you),
Gina Peltier, Water Protector
Organizer, Honor the Earth
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