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Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
5/25/2016 4:59:22 PM

Initial Community "Talk" thread, attached to JazLive blog ... changed to this forum

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
5/25/2016 5:16:27 PM
Sioux Nation Threatened by Massive Pipeline

Members of the Yankton Sioux protested the Keystone XL Pipeline in 2013.

Members of the Yankton Sioux protested the Keystone XL Pipeline in 2013. | Photo: Facebook / Yankton Sioux: Lake Andes, South Dakota

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
5/25/2016 5:20:45 PM
Leo DiCaprio protests North Dakota Access pipeline

Image courtesy of Siebbi/Wikimedia Commons.

Leonardo DiCaprio is among several high-profile actors who are protesting a proposed oil pipeline on social media.

According to EcoWatch, DiCaprio shared images on Instagram and Twitter voicing support for efforts being led by members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe to oppose the Dakota Access Pipeline.

DiCaprio also shared a link to a Change.org petition that is urging the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to stop the pipeline from being constructed.

Read more

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63 Indian reservations join land program
5/27/2016 12:49:09 AM
By MATTHEW BROWN
Associated Press

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) - U.S. officials are adding 63 American Indian reservations across the Midwest and West to an initiative that seeks to return millions of acres of land to tribal ownership.

The move comes as the Interior Department warns the $1.9 billion effort to return up to 3 million acres of land to tribes is running out of time and money.

The Associated Press obtained details in advance of a planned Tuesday announcement. Reservations in 16 states are joining the program.

It's the result of a legal settlement with American Indians led by Elouise Cobell of Montana, who said the U.S. mismanaged trust money held on behalf of hundreds of thousands of Indians.

Since 2013, the U.S. has paid $742 million to restore 1.5 million acres to tribal control.

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RE: Native Americans join together in protest of Dakota Access Pipeline
5/27/2016 12:54:05 AM
North Dakota protest stays feisty, but not nasty

"I’m overjoyed. Don’t focus on numbers; focus on the fact that a protest like this doesn’t happen every day in North Dakota,” said Klein, explaining he got the rally going because he has strong feelings against racism.

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