Albuquerque Journal

Sen. Heinrich shows the way forward in SD

Dialogue and undeniable reason may help ease tensions over Dakota Access pipeline — and the next four years

- BY STEPHEN FOX SANTA FE RESIDENT

Regarding Sen. Martin Heinrich’s letter to President Obama requesting that he rescind Monday’s eviction at Standing Rock: This is a very welcome breakthrou­gh.

With Heinrich’s leadership, other senators and Congress members will step forward. I also predict that the “arbitrary” date of Dec. 5 will be overturned by the president. In due course, as Heinrich and Sen. Harry Reid have asked, the pipeline may be rerouted or scrubbed altogether.

To me, Dec. 5 was never anything but a contrived date convenient­ly determined after the announceme­nt that 5,000 veterans and Hawaii congresswo­man Tulsi Gabbard would converge at Standing Rock on Dec. 4.

Perhaps the Army Corps of Engineers indulged in wishful thinking that they thus could get rid of everybody on Dec. 5?

True participat­ory democracy doesn’t work that way.

Sen. Tom Udall, Rep. Ben Ray Luján and Rep. Michelle Lujan Grisham could send similar letters to the current president and the president-elect; thus, we could win this without resorting to fighting back at bestial weapons, rubber bullets, water cannons, tear gas, pepper spray, attack dogs and huge amounts of overtime subsidizin­g even more police brutality.

One 21-year-old’s arm may still be amputated; her name is Sophia Wilansky.

The Dakota Access Pipeline was as illconceiv­ed as was the MX Missile Project in Utah, which was never commenced because of eventual strong opposition from the Mormons. I had a small hand in that through my correspond­ence with Spencer Kimball, president of Latter-day Saints in the late ’70s. His interventi­on quietly, permanentl­y squelched that deranged Rube Goldberg plan, with its 800 miles of undergroun­d railroads and missiles mounted on train cars, despite Sen. Orrin Hatch’s and Sen. Jake Garn’s coddling.

This pipeline is, however, 80 percent complete and would carry North Dakota oil that is so inferior it can be sold only to China. How horrific is this Dallas billionair­e’s clout to precipitat­e the “inexcusabl­e brutality,” as Heinrich put it in his Facebook Thanksgivi­ng post, of unarmed people!

Heinrich and Wisconsin’s Sen. Tammy Baldwin were the only senators to cosponsor Sen. Bernie Sanders’ Save Oak Flat Act to prevent the privatizat­ion of the Tonto National Forest and Oak Flat land sacred to the San Carlos Apaches. This is Sen. John McCain’s megaplan to dig North America’s largest copper mine in a national forest with a corporatio­n that has a shocking environmen­tal degradatio­n records, Rio Tinto Mining of Australia.

This wreckage of Oak Flat is becoming 20 times more likely with the incoming administra­tion, despite the historic Republican support that created national forests led by presidents Teddy Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower.

Will President Trump abandon Teddy’s and Ike’s land stewardshi­p principles? Stay tuned, there is really a lot at stake: our Western pristine environmen­t, our Native Americans, and the sanctity of our public lands and national forests. I am not holding out for a miracle during the next four years.

This may become the next decade’s defining issue, like Vietnam shaped the consciousn­ess 50 years ago. As a longtime supporter of Native American causes, Heinrich deserves our accolades for long overdue progress.

In a larger sense, Heinrich is showing us by example how to get through the next four years, through dialogue and undeniable reason, rather than weapons, bluster and confrontat­ion — all of which is even more applicable in the internatio­nal context.

Hopefully, others in the Senate will also see this and I thank him profoundly for his unparallel­ed leadership.

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