Transcanada ordered Texas police to pepper spray and taser peaceful protesters
source: http://www.filmsforaction.org/News/Whats_at_Stake_as_TransCanada_Moves_to_Forcefully_Suppres...
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- JanforGore
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The resistance is getting under the skin of TransCanada. Just yesterday, as Jane Hamsher detailed, TransCanada encouraged law enforcement to use torture tactics on blockaders. Now, three days into the blockade, TransCanada’s machinery for cutting down trees is twenty feet away from blockaders, a violation of federal safety regulations. The corporation is refusing to turn off their machinery and leave.
I spoke with Ron Seifert, a spokesperson for the Tar Sands Blockade. He recounted what happened to blockaders yesterday and then explained why activists find it critical to be out resisting construction of the tar sands pipeline.
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KEVIN GOSZTOLA, The Dissenter: To start off, how long has the Tar Sands Blockade been engaging in action?
RON SEIFERT, spokesperson for the Tar Sands Blockade: The Tar Sands Blockade campaign launched in mid-August, however, the sustained tree blockade is now in its third day.
GOSZTOLA: How is the blockade being mounted? How are you blockading the Keystone XL pipeline project?
SEIFERT: There’s two different tactics being employed. There is a tree village. There are platforms and a full tree house, two-story tree condo, if you will, that are all connected via zip lines and traverses throughout an old oak forest. Altogether, there are over a dozen trees that span the entire pathway of the Keystone pipeline. Additionally, there is a scaffolding—a structural wall made of timber—and built along the top of that wall is a catwalk, an additional platform supporting blockaders as well. Between the timber wall and the tree blockade, there are nine different blockaders all dedicated to maintaining their positions and holding out as long as it takes to stop the Keystone XL pipeline once and for all.
GOSZTOLA: These structures were put in before construction was to begin?
SEIFERT: That is correct. Unfortunately, the massive project is ongoing at multiple locations, every day simultaneously. As much as the blockade wants to stop and protect every piece of land that is being destroyed and permanently scarred by construction as we speak, we understand that we have to hold basically one place and really dig in and this is a great opportunity to draw a line in the sand and let the world know that we are rising up to defend home. We are going to fight for a future with out the tar sands pipeline.
GOSZTOLA: I understand that some of the members, who have participated in the blockade, have been arrested. What can you say about the arrests?
SEIFERT: To date, there have been fourteen blockaders arrested at various construction sites for shutting down construction and protecting Texas land and Texas homes from construction. Yesterday was the most abusive confrontation with TransCanada and law enforcement. TransCanada supervisors encouraged law enforcement to use escalated pain compliance techniques on our blockaders. They stood by and watched while blockaders were effectively tortured. They were handcuffed into stress positions. While they were pepper sprayed and tasered, they were put into chokeholds. They were physically abused all while TransCanada supervisors watched and, when blockaders were removed from the scene and arrested, TransCanada supervisors thanked law enforcement and commended them on a job well done.
GOSZTOLA: So this is an escalation? In the days before, you didn’t see this sort of conduct?
SEIFERT: No, for the most part all of our interactions with law enforcement have been relatively civil. There was one encounter where a blockader was contorted into an uncomfortable position, but this is the first time that non-lethal weapons were used on blockaders and it is also the first time that they were handcuffed and physically restrained. Basically, law enforcement handcuffed blockaders to the equipment so they could not move, immobilized them, and then proceeded to use non-lethal weapons on them.
GOSZTOLA: Were the people arrested released? Were any of them injured by the use of weapons or torture tactics? Did they return to take positions in the blockade again?
SEIFERT: They do have bruises and emotional scarring from the incident. Of course, they were in overwhelming pain for periods of time for doing nothing more than peacefully protesting. There was absolutely nothing violent or not even one word uttered by the blockaders. It came from reports on site that it was at TransCanada’s discretion that these pain-inducing tactics were utilized.
As far as the blockader’ health, they are surprisingly in good spirits. They want to encourage folks across the country to not let these brutal tactics stand behind them and their conviction, that the only way we can stop this pipeline is to collectively rise up and show this multinational corporation that their brutality will not deter our resistance.
They are out of jail. They were released last night on bond. They were $2000 bails. They are with friends and family right now recovering.
GOSZTOLA: Finally, what is at stake here? What does it mean that a multinational corporation, TransCanada, is recruiting law enforcement to suppress people who are resisting their construction?
SEIFERT: Maybe we shouldn’t be surprised that TransCanada is recruiting the state to do its dirty work because they’ve already co-opted the state power of eminent domain, which is an extraordinary ability for a third party to seize unilaterally private property which is intended for a public good or a public use. In the case of the Keystone XL pipeline, this multinational corporation has been granted the ability to seize private property for their own private good, private gain. So, it’s an egregious overreach that is resulting in the transference of thousands of acres of private property in Texas to this multinational corporation so they can further enrich themselves.
To do this, this is all predicated on tar sands exploitation. Tar sands exploitation in Alberta [in Canada] is the most ecologically devastating project right now on planet Earth. And I know that sounds a bit hyperbolic but it truly is the case. Industry has earmarked over 53,000 square miles of boreal forest for clear-cut and strip-mining, forest area the size of New York state that will be permanently destroyed and permanently lifeless.
The amount of carbon that exists in the tar sands formation is enough to put Earth over the edge. Our global climate would never recover if every drop of tar sands is allowed to be mined, processed and burned. We simply don’t have the carbon budget for it, and, accordingly stopping the Keystone XL pipeline, which will open the floodgates to this type of exploitation, is a necessary condition for protecting a viable future on this planet. If we do not do this, it really is game over for future generations. This is something that must be stopped. It’s dangerous. It affects us all. And for those directly impacted that are in the lines of the pipeline itself, these are folks whose water and land are threatened and folks in most cases wanted nothing to do with this pipeline and were forced into harm’s way by TransCanada.
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Steamed_N_More
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Stay with it, folks! Eastern Utah tar sands are flagged now. A major natural gas pipe line crossing many of the same states was sold to oil production company. The crude to be piped is anyones guess. How to stop an existing pipelines change of use without regulation is the next issue. Devious, eh? But not hidden from view.
- 8 months ago
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Steamed_N_More
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warman1138
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So now a corporation can order law enforcement to torture people. Just one step away from corporate sanctioned murder. I thought the police worked for the public......silly me.
- 8 months ago
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warman1138
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JanforGore
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warman1138:
And a "foreign" corporation to boot. I wonder what the people of Canada think about a corporation from their country ordering the torture of American citizens defending trees? Oh wait, they don't even know because this is more than likely being hidden by their media as well...
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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Wyley_Wombat
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warman1138:
The merging of corporate and government is the core principle of fascists. This is fascism in action.
- 8 months ago
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Wyley_Wombat
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Paratus
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warman1138:
Uh, who owns the property these people are on? Generally only a property owner can ban someone from the property, absent a judges order. Personally, if I were the officer in charge the company onwers or some supervisory employee would have to press charges and appear in court to testify against the protesters otherwise I would not lift a finger. If I had to arrest them for trespass they would come down if I had to chain saw the tree.
- 8 months ago
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Paratus
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artemis6
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warman1138:
Corporations have been in charge for a very long time ..... they simply no longer bother to HIDE it !
- 8 months ago
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artemis6
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JanforGore
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http://planetsave.com/2012/09/27/tar-sands-opposition-escalates-human-blockade-t...
Protesters have vowed not to move until the pipeline is stopped permanently.
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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think_more_do_more [removed]
- This comment was removed by its owner.
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think_more_do_more [removed]
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coolplanet
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think_more_do_more:
That's what I love about Current.
- 8 months ago
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coolplanet
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JanforGore
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think_more_do_more:
You're welcome. People need to know what is happening regarding this pipeline and that Americans of all politics are standing together to stop it.
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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mrpuma2u
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Big business says jump, and the cops say how high. Sadly not too surprising. Good post Jan.
- 8 months ago
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mrpuma2u
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MSII
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mrpuma2u:
Truth! Exactly what i expect in the ever increasingly corporate-FASCIST-police-states-of-amerika!
- 8 months ago
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MSII
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JanforGore
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mrpuma2u:
I am praying these protesters remain safe. No media coverage assures that Transcanada can get away with anything. That cannot happen. The light must be shone on them for this.
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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PROTECTING TREES IS NOW A CRIME IN AMERICA.
And yes, I used caps. I am outraged. I think we need more outrage in this country regarding what is being done to our environment and those who stand up for it globally so we have something left to give our children! THIS IS BS.
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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coolplanet
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JanforGore:
but let's wait till after the election
- 8 months ago
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coolplanet
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JanforGore
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coolplanet:
Oh of course.
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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http://fdlaction.firedoglake.com/2012/09/26/transcanada-urges-texas-police-to-us...#comments
"According to Sprague, Bebe and Franklin began their peaceful protest yesterday at 10:30 am, along with several observers. Sprague indicated that the group’s interactions with the police had been amicable and peaceful until TransCandada representatives showed up and encouraged the police to “run off” the observers.
Once there were no cameras in sight, Sprague says that TransCanada officials huddled with police. Shortly thereafter, the police commenced putting Bebe and Franklin in stress positions by bending their free arms backwards as far as possible and twisting their handcuffed hands backwards, and holding them there for 10 minutes.
Following that, they used the locking mechanisms of their handcuffs to twists their arms badly relative to the pipe the two had connected themselves to. The police then sprayed their arms with pepper spray, burning their skin.
Police then tasered both Bebe and Franklin. Franklin was tased a second time, and the two relented when police threatened to keep tasering them until they did so. Sprague said that because of a heart condition, one of the protesters feared for their life. Franklin described the pain as “immense and almost physically unbearable.”
The protest ended at approximately 3:30 pm.
According to the group, TransCanada employees heartily congratulated the police for torturing the protesters:
After the torture session ended, John, the senior TransCanada supervisor openly congratulated the aggressive Sheriffs Department Lieutenant on a “job well done.” To which the Lieutenant replied: “if this happens again we’ll just skip to using pepper spray and tasing in the first 10 minutes.”
TransCanada is a foreign company that has used the threat of eminent domain to coerce landowners into ceding their property to the pipeline.
They have the support of both major party presidential candidates (h/t Tom Weiss):
“And today, I’m directing my administration to cut through the red tape, break through the bureaucratic hurdles, and make this project a priority, to go ahead and get it done.”
- President Obama, speaking about the southern leg of Keystone XL in Cushing, OK (March 22, 2012)“If I’m President, we’ll build it if I have to build it myself.”
- Governor Romney, commenting on the Keystone XL pipeline in Pittsburgh, PA (May 4, 2012)
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A foreign company being allowed to torture Americans in their own country and our government condones it. Oh yes, I want to keep voting for that. Looks like Paraguay is not that far away. http://current.com/technology/93912950_monsanto-are-merchants-of-death-in-paragu... It's right here in Texas. - 8 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Of course, there's more to think about than climate meltdown and the cutting down of all of our forests and the people putting themselves on the line to protect it all for your children and grandchildren... And of course, the media won't dare cover this; might not make our "candidates" look good.
- 8 months ago
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JanforGore
