product:dakota

  • Verso
    The Colonial Gas Machine: Teargas Grenades, Secular Humanist Police, and the Intoxication of Racialized Lives

    For the privileged, tear gas is an event; for the colonized, it composes a fundamental aspect of life.

    https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/3507-the-colonial-gas-machine-teargas-grenades-secular-humanist-police-a

    Pourquoi ça gaze autant ? Chez nous y’a pas l’OTAN.

    Alors si y’a la guerre, ça va durer longtemps.

    (Why so much gas? Back home, there’s no NATO.

    So, if there’s war, it’s gonna last.)

    Lunatic, “B.O,” Mauvais Œil

    After the deaths of Zyed Benna and Bouna Traoré, two young inhabitants of a Paris banlieue, during a police tracking in October 2005, revolts in Paris banlieues took place for several weeks and then rapidly spread all over France. During the fourth night of combat between the police and the inhabitants of the cité (i.e. “housing projects”) Les Bosquets, the police threw a teargas grenade in the mosque in which Muslim residents were praying during the month of Ramadan. This event defined the frame of discussion of what was happening in Les Bosquets. The combination of toxicity as such and of what was seen as the contamination of sacred space created a sense of scandal that erased all the structural reasons behind the revolts in the first place and how the population itself saw this particular aggression against the mosque. In the following days, no word was uttered in the media about the many, albeit less spectacular grenades that exploded every day in Les Bosquets, and in other cités, and only a few words were spoken about the ton of grenades that were thrown before and after this event. Nothing was said about the life of teargas grenades outside the scandal of their explosive spectacle.

    Indeed, a major contradiction lies at the core of the representation of teargas grenades. On the one hand, these grenades operate every single day in the world, and also potentially everywhere: in occupied territories when the colonized reclaim their land as in Palestine or North Dakota, in urban ghettos in the peripheries of imperial metropoles throughout the West, when inhabitants rebel against the colonial management of their life, in any country of the Global South when the postcolonial state fails to realize its old promises, in the center of imperial metropoles during class protests in times of so-called “crisis” of capitalism. Despite their pervasiveness in the everywhere-and-every-day, teargas grenades are definitely not seen as everyday objects of modern life. Teargas grenades are associated with the logic of event. A teargas grenade explodes with an aura of spectacle, appears during a clash and supposedly in response to a given event. Although the metropolitan leftist activist may occasionally experience the effects of teargas grenades, the latter do not compose an everyday aspect of their life. Toxicity, in our colonial context, is an event only for the privileged while it composes a fundamental aspect of life for the colonized.

  • BREAKING: 13yo Girl Shot In The Face, Tribal Elder In Critical Condition As Police Assault DAPL Protesters – The Indigenous Peoples
    http://theindigenouspeoples.com/2016/11/21/13yo-girl-shot-in-the-face-tribal-elder-in-critical-condition-

    Last night, water protectors near Cannon Ball, North Dakota, attempted to clear Highway 1806 of burned-out military vehicles and wound up under an all-out assault by heavily militarized police, who used tear gas, mace, concussion grenades, rubber bullets, and water cannons — in temperatures well below freezing — in an attempt to clear them from a bridge.

    By midnight, at least 160 people reported suffering injuries, and medics on scene confirmed a 13-year-old girl had been shot in the face, according to Unicorn Riot, which did not say whether the shot was live ammunition or a rubber bullet.

    #pipeline #dakota #sioux #peuples_autichtones #résistance

  • Fracking boom threatens US water supplies | Climate News Network

    http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/2014/06/fracking-boom-threatens-us-water-supplies

    By Valerie Brown

    Campaigners in the US warn that fracking for oil or gas, which has transformed the country’s energy market, is seriously depleting or contaminating supplies of the most vital asset − water

    OREGON, 18 June − Since the onset of the fracking boom almost a decade ago, every state in the US has been examining its geological resources in the hope of finding oil or gas it can access through this extraction method. Almost half the states are now producing at least some shale gas, with a few – Texas, Pennsylvania, California, Colorado, North Dakota – sitting on massive deposits.

    #états-unis #gaz_de_schistes #fracking #énergie #gaz #eau

  • SkyTruth : Help SkyTruth Study Fracking from the Edge of Space
    http://blog.skytruth.org/2013/08/skytruth-the-bakken.html

    #Crowdfunding pour financer un ballon météorologique à la détection des torchères liées au #gaz_de_schiste dans le Dakota du Nord

    To study this issue further, we are teaming up with a non-profit called Space For All to send cameras and instruments on a weather-balloon to the edge of space (well, the upper tropopause), to examine air quality and infrared emissions from oil shale fracking and flaring.

    http://vimeo.com/73005851

  • The New Oil Landscape - Photo Gallery - Pictures, More From National Geographic Magazine
    http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/03/bakken-shale-oil/richards-photography

    Après Alec Soth il y a 2 semaines dans le NYT, Eugene Richards photographie le boom du gaz de schiste au Dakota du Nord.

    The New Oil Landscape
    The fracking frenzy in North Dakota has boosted the U.S. fuel supply—but at what cost?

    #gaz_de_schiste #fracturation_hydraulique #Dakota_du-Nord #Etats-Unis #photographie #forage_horizontal #écologie #environnement

  • North Dakota Went Boom - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/magazine/north-dakota-went-boom.html?_r=0

    Reportage au Dakota du Nord,- gaz de schiste, boom économique et désastre écologique. Avec un magnifique essai photographique d’Alec Soth.

    North Dakota has had oil booms before but never one so big, never one that rivaled the land rush precipitated more than a century ago by the transcontinental railroads, never one that so radically changed the subtext of the Dakota frontier from the Bitter Past That Was to the Better Future That May Yet Be.

    It’s hard to think of what oil hasn’t done to life in the small communities of western North Dakota, good and bad. It has minted millionaires, paid off mortgages, created businesses; it has raised rents, stressed roads, vexed planners and overwhelmed schools; it has polluted streams, spoiled fields and boosted crime. It has confounded kids running lemonade stands: 50 cents a cup but your customer has only hundreds in his payday wallet. Oil has financed multimillion-dollar recreation centers and new hospital wings. It has fitted highways with passing lanes and rumble strips. It has forced McDonald’s to offer bonuses and brought job seekers from all over the country — truck drivers, frack hands, pipe fitters, teachers, manicurists, strippers. It has ginned up an unreleased reality show called “Boomtown Girls,” which follows the lives of “five bold and brave sisters” in the formerly drowsy farm center of Williston, N.D. Williston, whose population has tripled in the past 10 years, lies in the middle of the 150,000-square-mile Williston Basin, a depression in the crust of the earth that geologists now believe contains one of the largest oil fields in the world.

    #gaz_de_schiste #Dakota #Etats_Unis #fracturation_hydraulique