Indigenous youth wear upside down USA flags with "Land Back" and "Fuck!!! Genocide" written on them during a protest at Red Lake Treaty Camp. Indigenous-led protests are ongoing against the Line 3 oil pipeline, which is being built to carry tar sands from Alberta, Canada to a port in Superior, WI. © @Chris Trinh
Water protectors Gabe (left) and Rainbow (right) hold hands while facing off with police at Red Lake Treaty Camp, a ceremonial and indigenous-led protest camp against the Line 3 tar sands oil pipeline. July 23, 2021. © Chris Trinh
Kiley Knowles rides her horse through the Shell River during a demonstration against the Line 3 tar sands oil pipeline. July 15, 2021. © Chris Trinh
An armed member of law enforcement guards an Enbridge drill site on the Red Lake River in Northern Minnesota. Enbridge has made a slush fund available to the Northern Lights Task Force, a law enforcement coalition, prompting criticism that police branches are acting as private security for the Candian company while it builds its Line 3 pipeline across Anishinaabe land. August 3, 2021. © @Chris Trinh
Emma Schoenberg works at the Climate Disobedience Center and was part of the training and planning team during the Treaty People Gathering. “We exist in a pluralistic worldview of what nonviolence is,” she told me. “There is no tactically pure violent act and no tactically pure nonviolent act. We all drove in fossil fuel cars to the action that we were being nonviolent at.” In her view, “Nonviolence is a practice. It is muscle-building. It is sometimes punching someone in the nose because that stops the harm in front of you.”Nonviolence is a practice. It is muscle-building. It is sometimes punching someone in the nose because that stops the harm in front of you.
Unidentified water protector stops construction at Enbridge drill site on the Red Lake River. July 21, 2021. © Chris Trinh