
© AP / the Bismarck Tribune
Construction on the controversial Bakken pipeline is set to begin any day now, forcing both landowners and Native American tribes in North Dakota to intensify their desperate attempt to
protect their land from eminent domain laws.Twelve people were arrested at a Sioux tribe's protest Thursday after they
staged a peaceful protest to keep pipeline construction off of their lands. Members of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation are concerned that the pipeline could potentially
contaminate their drinking water and damage sacred lands.The Bakken pipeline, also known as Dakotas Access Pipeline, rivals the Keystone Pipeline XL in terms of length and has been given the greenlight to begin construction in Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota and Illinois and received federal approval in July.
In an effort to stave off construction, the Standing Rock Sioux tribe staged peaceful protests this week. LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, a tribal historian at Standing Rock,
told AP: "Everybody is nonviolent and peaceful," adding, "We want to hold them back until we can get to court."
Comment: Modern society in a nutshell.