Dakota Pipeline Case Study

Words: 485
Pages: 2

The dispute between the Standing Rock Sioux tribe and the energy company, Energy Transfer Partners, has turned from a legal struggle to an all out civil unrest.
The Dakota Access Pipeline plans to carry oil from North Dakota to Illinois and would assist the United States to become less dependent on foreign oil from unstable regions and markets of the world. The pipeline would also bring an increase in sales and income taxes to state and local governments as well as add many construction jobs in the states where the pipeline will be routed. Pipelines are very safe, and that oil is essential for the growth, material and economic well-being of our collective society.
Standing Rock officials have become increasingly concerned about the pipeline
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We, as a society, are too dependent on oil and the products derived from it. There are plenty of other renewable resources, but we have a passive system in place that runs on greed rather than intelligence, modern technology, and current science.

A comprise on the location and route, with the help of tribal leaders, would lead to a peaceful resolution between the conflicted parties. Understanding the benefit of the Dakota Pipeline to the United States economy and balancing it with the religious and culture aspects of the indigenous people of that area will produce mutual agreeance and benefit.

The greatest hurdle in the United States is to change our educational system so that it promotes and develops critical thinking, the evaluation of claims and evidence, and the understanding of a rational argument. American citizens could then understand the proof for and consequences of the pipeline, appreciate other cultures and their values, and learn how to evaluate private industry and legislators claims and lies. We could then move past ignorance and prejudice to understanding, kindness, and more active cooperation in shedding ourselves of injustice and