Trudeau Government Faces Native Resistance To Trans Mountain Oil Pipeline

BAILEY T. STEEN | THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2018

Thereâs an ocean of oil under Canadaâs feet. The Department of Natural Resources declares thereâs more than 840,000 kilometres of pipeline devoted to transmitting, gathering and distributing oil and natural gas throughout the nation â including 117,000 km in large-diameter transmission lines buried beneath the ground of populated and remote areas. Among those remote areas is British Columbia, a distant Canadian province where a 1,000 km expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline will commence following the governmentâs purchase earlier this week.
The Intercept reports the Canadian governmentâs decision to nationalise the pipeline from energy giant Kinder Morgan was proposed on May 29th, the Trudeau administration presenting citizens with a unilateral decision that, for just the low price of $4.5 billion in their own Canadian tax dollars (around $3.5 billion in USD), the government would be tripling the pipelineâs capacity to 890,000 barrels of tar sands and diluted bitumen flowing daily from Alberta to Vancouver and the surrounding American areas all the way through the British Columbia province. The catch is that Prime Minister Trudeau, the self-hailed progressive environmentalist, is now alienating native populations, the caravan crew known as the âTiny House Warriorsâ, whoâll be enduring the projectâs potential hazards throughout their lands.
According to sources for The Ottawa Citizen, Trudeauâs own youth council is now in a state of division, urging the liberal government to reverse the decision before construction is scheduled to begin in early August. In their letter to the prime minister, securing the signatures of 16 past and present members of the council, they expressed âimmense disappointmentâ with the decision to use government funds to infringe on land they credit to the local Tsleil-Waututh Nation citizens. âThe decision to buy the Trans Mountain pipeline project calls into question your commitment to young Canadians,â the letter reads, adding the populace young and old will be âdisproportionately affectedâ by the pipelineâs effect on the environment.

Their plan? Speaking to local left-wing activist Kanahus Manuel, she revealed to The Intercept that the Tiny House Warriors are set to organise more mass protests like they did on July 3rd â having seven pipeline opponents rappelled from Vancouverâs Ironworkers Memorial Bridge in a daylong blockade of tanker traffic associated with the pipelineâs construction. This is important since tripling the pipelineâs load will result in more tankers crossing the water, increasing the likelihood of a spill. Now the indigenous activists plan to wheel 10 of the communityâs own mobile houses in front of the pipeline expansionâs path in order to resist the government-corporate infringement on their native property rights and environmental grounds.
Following Manuelâs arrest last Saturday, reportedly signalled out by the Royal Canadian Police for a Facebook livestream filming the bridge event on the grounds of âcriminal mischiefâ, Manuel told The Intercept this event could become âthe Standing Rock of the north.â
Thereâs nothing the government and their law enforcement lackeys fear more than another Standing Rock scandal. Back in 2016, Native American activists from North and South Dakota were protesting the Obama administrationâs inaction on the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL), an initiative from multiple petroleum partners â known for their prior construction failures â which would run a pipeline beneath one of the Standing Rock Indian Reservationsâ water supplies. By April 2017, DAPL leaked roughly 84 gallons of crude oil at the companiesâ pump stations, according to authorities who spoke with CNN.
The police clarified the leak didnât harm the indigenous groupsâ water supply, granted, yet it gave credence to fears that corporate pipelines are still susceptible to hazardous accidents which corrupt the occupied environment. This would call into question the integrity of US and Canadian police, echoing the censorship behaviour of those cracking the heads of protestors down in the Dakota states. It would live down as Trudeauâs key environmental failure, against the very same progressive values he was elected to virtue signal on a daily basis, which similarly plagued Obama until the government halted DAPL in December 2016.
These are viewpoints were expressed in both countriesâ law enforcement communications and government reports reportedly obtained by The Intercept, which may have influenced the Trudeau administrationâs decision to outright by the project upon expansion approval. Washingtonâs current governor Jay Inslee wrote an editorial for The Seattle Times labelling the purchase âa major step backwardâ, calling on state police to undergo training on protest response if new activism crosses the United States border.
These documents from The Intercept reportedly have sheriffâs office based in Whatcom County monitoring US activistsâ plans to travel to British Columbia, tipping off U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Washington State Patrol, and the Washington State Fusion Center of potential escalation and possible reason for surveillance of pipeline areas.

Trudeauâs government has a constitutional duty to not only take their citizens voices into account, but minimise state infringement of these property rights if agreements of compensation werenât decided among both parties. Thatâs why a 2017 lawsuit against Kinder Morgan from Squamish First Nation are still under court proceedings, plaintiffs arguing the government has failed to consult and compensate indigenous communities for their decision. They believe theyâll achieve a pipeline overturn similar to the Northern Gateway pipeline which was rescinded under Trudeau on the same grounds.
âWe take it very seriously,â Manuel, also known for being a counter-protester, of DAPL, told journalists Alleen Brown and William Parrish. âWeâve seen so many of our people being wrongfully convicted, being thrown in jail, Indigenous land defenders being criminalised. Everything flows from the land. If the land is destroyed, we are also destroyed. And thatâs why weâll stand so fiercely in defence of this land.â

Thanks for reading!
Bailey T. Steen is a journalist, editor, artist and film critic based in Victoria, Australia, but is also Putinâs Puppet⢠on occasion.
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Cheers, darlings!! đ