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American Pipeline Research Paper

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For months, tension have mounted between protestors and law enforcement officials over the faith of an oil pipeline not far from Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. It has become an environmental and cultural flashpoint, stirring passion across social media and drawing thousands of protestors in the United States and around the world.
The Dakota Access pipeline claims to be a $3.7 billion project that would carry 470,000 barrels of oil per day. From the oil field of western North Dakota to Illinois where it will be link to other pipelines. The pipeline is speculated to create 8000-12,000 construction jobs as well as pump millions of dollars into local economies. In contrast, members of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe sees the pipeline as a major environmental and cultural threat. They say it is routed over ancestral land where their forebears hunted and fished and were buried. They argue the pipeline could desecrate their ancestral burial grounds and also contaminate …show more content…

Last Friday night, I was among one of the many people gathered near the vacant lot located at 1734 E. 41st street in Los Angeles to show solidarity with Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota. Before the honorable guest speaker Grandmother Gloria Arellanes spoke, the tribes danced to the sound of a drum and their own voices; while others incorporated bells and rattles. Four of the dancers wore large feather bustles, and three wore a peculiar roached headdress made of hair. Ending the dances with a pipe ceremony, calling upon and thanking the six energies, beseeching to the four directions, the earth and sky, and the Great Spirit. They ultimately knelt with the pipe touched the ground, and says, "Mother Earth, I seek to protect you." Subsequently, spoke the honorable guest speaker Grandmother Gloria Arellanes, who says, "Now more than ever, as threats to our sacred lands, waters and cultures are on the rise, it's critical to

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