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January 2021

American Indians furious at Biden's betrayal

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Biden administration has suspended leasing and permitting on federal lands and waters.

On Wednesday, Acting Secretary of the Interior Scott de la Vega signed an order that suspended department bureaus and offices from issuing “any onshore or offshore fossil fuel authorization, including but not limited to a lease, amendment to a lease, affirmative extension of a lease, contract, or other agreement, or permit to drill.”

During the 60-day window that the Secretarial Order 3395 may be in effect, decision-making over these matters will be reserved for department leadership for the purposes of reviewing questions of fact, law, and policy they raise.

According to the Department of the Interior, the order does not impact existing ongoing operations under valid leases and does not preclude the issuance of leases, permits, and other authorizations by those specified.

National Ocean Industries Association President Erik Milito said: “We understand the Biden administration intends to broadly review federal regulatory programs, and we remain optimistic that this secretarial action will not be used in a way that impacts that 345,000 jobs across the country that are supported by oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico.

“The redelegated authority of key positions, such as offshore oil and gas permitting, means that there still should be a process to grant the approval of permits.”

American Petroleum Institute President and CEO Mike Sommers issued the following statement: “Restricting development on federal lands and waters is nothing more than an ‘import more oil’ policy. Energy demand will continue to rise—especially as the economy recovers—and we can choose to produce that energy here in the United States or rely on foreign countries hostile to American interests.

“With this move, the administration is leading us toward more reliance on foreign energy from countries with lower environmental standards and risks to hundreds of thousands of jobs and billions in government revenue for education and conservation programs.

“We stand ready to engage with the Biden administration on ways to address America’s energy challenges, but impeding American energy will only serve to hurt local communities and hamper America’s economic recovery.”

 

01/21/2021


ABC News now formally calls 26 January 'Australia Day/Invasion Day'. How is that consistent with their Charter?

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One of the most polarising dates on the Australian calendar is back, though this year the coronavirus pandemic could mean fewer crowds at events around the country.

January 26 marks Australia Day or Invasion Day, typically seen as a celebration of the nation or a day of sorrow for the colonisation of an ancient culture.

For many First Nations people, it is a day to mourn the past and galvanise the community to address ongoing systemic racial injustice.


Message for Lidia Thorpe about the realities of her idealised Aborigine life

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ZK2A said:
I'm tired of this nonsense. My family ran cattle stations "on the frontier" form 1860, until the last retired in 1976. They had a great deal to do with Aboriginal people, and acquired a fair knowledge of their customs and laws. Under traditional Aboriginal tribal law, a young girl would have been given to one of the tribal elders as soon as she reached puberty. She would have given birth to three or four children, and - if she survived- and he tired of her, and there was a fresh pick of the young girls - she would have been passed on to the young men of the tribe to complete their sex education...when the tribe moved on, and she couldn't keep up, she would have been left behind to die. The matriarch of one of the Noongar clans in Western Australia, was being interviewed on the A.B.C. all those years ago, and outlined the above scenario. "That's what I would have had to look forward to. Some of those tribal elders were really creepy old men. I'm GLAD the white man came!" Funny, the A.B.C. announcer couldn't shut her up quickly enough!