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https:/.../Bloackde_Report_1_SD.mp4

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    (singing and drumming)
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    Mi'kmaq territories in so-called Rexton,
    New Brunswick, October 2013
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    For over 2 weeks now, a coalition of
    people including local Mi'kmaq residents,
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    and anglophone and Acadian settlers,
    have blockaded the road leading to
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    an equipment compound leased to
    Southwestern Energy, or SWN.
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    SWN is a Texas-based energy company
    that has been attempting to conduct
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    natural gas exploration in the area's
    shale formations.
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    It is believed that if significant
    deposits of gas are found,
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    SWN would then employ the controversial
    extraction method of
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    hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking".
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    But since this past summer, protests,
    direct actions, and sabotage
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    have thwarted their work, and have turned
    public opinion on the side of protesters.
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    (Pamela) Fracking is dangerous, it's not
    worth risking our water. Even if they
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    drill five wells and nothing happens,
    if they drill the sixth well it could
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    be a disaster and it's just,
    our water is not worth it.
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    Our land is not worth it, and the future
    generations deserve better.
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    (Narrator) Throughout the summer, police
    arrested dozens of people
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    conducting nonviolent civil disobedience,
    but since the arrival of members of
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    the Mi'kmaq Warrior Society, the police
    have not been as keen
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    to come near protesters.
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    (Jason) Last thursday, we had the highest
    red-alert in New Brunswick,
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    that was involving 500 RCMP members,
    on both sides of the highway,
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    and we did a stand-off with them for a
    few hours, and stuff then was resolved
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    a little bit, peace was resolved, and they
    were on their side,
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    and we were on our side, and we're still
    remaining peaceful,
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    and they're still remaining peaceful.
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    (Narrator) the blockade is preventing SWN
    from operating "thumper trucks",
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    massive vehicles that gather seismic data
    to determine the location of natural gas.
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    (Suzanne) This barricade that has been
    happening here at SWN resource compound,
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    has been costing the company upwards of
    $60,000 per day,
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    which is what they have stated in their
    court proceedings.
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    They have also stated that they're really
    upset and angry with the provisions
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    that we have available to us.
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    (Narrator) During my short stay here,
    I witnessed the cooperation
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    between natives and settlers,
    a partnership that has kept
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    this blockade fully stocked
    and operational.
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    Food, wood, hot coffee, tents,
    and other supplies keep streaming in.
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    All the while, SWN berates
    the police and the media
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    for not arresting the protesters.
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    (Stefanie) We are here for fight,
    for the same reason.
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    So, it's important to everybody
    to stay together.
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    I'm fighting for the heart, the planet,
    the water, the animal.
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    I'm fight for my children.
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    It's important for us to keep
    what we've got now.
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    (Jason) We have Mi'kmaq, we have
    Acadians, we have English.
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    So we all came together.
    That's why we became a unity camp.
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    Before, we were like this.
    We weren't getting along.
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    Til the one, they started messing
    our water. Then we became this.
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    This became stonger. Now, the
    government knows that we are strong,
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    and that we are helping each other,
    we are talking with each other.
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    We are becoming as one.
    And when we become as one,
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    that is the most biggest voice
    we can ever bring, saying
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    "NO to shale gas!"
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    (singing and drumming)
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