Sunday, December 31, 2023

 

Controversial Line 5 Pipeline Gains Key Permit Despite Indigenous Opposition and Environmental Concerns

Enbridge Energy secures key permit to build a new section and tunnel underneath, sparking controversy and legal battles.

Waste segregation bins are seen in the campsite on the White Earth Nation Reservation near 
Waubun, Minnesota, on June 5, 2021.KEREM YUCEL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

The Line 5 oil pipeline that snakes through Wisconsin and Michigan won a key permit this month: pending federal studies and approvals, Canada-based Enbridge Energy will build a new section of pipeline and tunnel underneath the Great Lakes despite widespread Indigenous opposition. You may not have heard of Line 5, but over the next few years, the controversy surrounding the 645-mile pipeline is expected to intensify.

The 70-year-old pipeline stretches from Superior, Wisconsin, through Michigan to Sarnia, Ontario, transporting up to 540,000 gallons of oil and natural gas liquids per day. It’s part of a network of more than 3,000 miles of pipelines that the company operates throughout the U.S. and Canada, including the Line 3 pipeline in Minnesota where hundreds of opponents were arrested or cited in 2021 for protesting construction, including citizens and members of the Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians and White Earth Band of Ojibwe

Activists Risk Arrest — and Smoke Inhalation — to Fight Mountain Valley Pipeline The backdrop to our recent protest against the Mountain Valley Pipeline was the continent’s latest climate catastrophe. By Denali Sai Nalamalapu , TRUTHOUT  June 13, 2023





Now, Enbridge Energy, with the support of the Canadian government, is seeking approvals to build a new $500 million conduit to replace an underwater section of Line 5 in the Straits of Mackinac, while facing lawsuits backed by dozens of Indigenous nations as well as the state of Michigan.

A key concern is the aging pipeline’s risk to the Great Lakes, which represent more than a fifth of the world’s fresh surface water. Environmental concerns are so great that three years ago, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer ordered Enbridge’s dual pipelines that run for 4 miles at the bottom of the Straits of Mackinac to cease operations.

“The state is revoking the easement for violation of the public trust doctrine, given the unreasonable risk that continued operation of the dual pipelines poses to the Great Lakes,” the governor’s office said at the time.

The move came just a year after the Bad River Band tribal nation filed a lawsuit against Enbridge regarding another, separate section of Line 5 in Wisconsin located across 12 miles of the Bad River reservation. The pipeline had been installed in 1953 and, at the time, had received easements to do so from the Bureau of Indian Affairs.

But the easements expired, and in a court filing, the tribal nation said the company “has continued to operate the pipeline as if it has an indefinite entitlement to do so,” despite federal law that bans the renewal of expired right-of-way permits on Indian land and would require Enbridge to obtain new permits and approvals from the Band.

The Bad River won a key victory last summer when a Wisconsin judge ruled that the company must shut down the portion of its pipeline that trespasses on the reservation by 2026.

Enbridge has resisted calls to cease Line 5 operations. Instead, the company contends that it has the right to continue operating there, citing a 1992 agreement with the Band, and is planning to reroute the pipeline while appealing the Wisconsin judge’s decision. The company also argues that building a new pipeline 100 feet below the lake bed through the Straits of Mackinac will virtually eliminate the chance of a spill.

“Line 5 poses little risk to natural and cultural resources, nor does it endanger the way of life of Indigenous communities,” company spokesperson Ryan Duffy said. “Line 5 is operated safely and placing the line in a tunnel well below the lake bed at the Straits of Mackinac will only serve to make a safe pipeline safer.”

To that end, Enbridge successfully appeared before the Michigan Public Service Commission, the state’s top energy regulator, this month and got permission to build a new concrete tunnel beneath the channel connecting Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. The commission cited the need for the light crude oil and natural gas liquids that the pipeline transports, and said other alternatives like driving, trucking or hauling by barge or rail would increase the risk of a spill.

The commission’s approval contradicts Governor Whitmer’s efforts to shut down the pipeline. In the wake of the permit, the governor’s office told reporters the state commission is “independent.” Both of the governor’s appointees on the board voted in favor of the permit.

The approval doesn’t mean that the project will proceed, but it is encouraging for the company as it seeks federal clearance. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is in the process of putting together a draft environmental impact statement for the project. That document isn’t expected to be published until spring 2025.

In the meantime, Line 5 has gotten lots of support from the government of Canada, where Enbridge Energy is based. The government has repeatedly invoked a 1977 energy treaty between the U.S. and Canada to defend the pipeline.

That’s frustrating to Indigenous peoples who have seen their treaty rights repeatedly violated.

“What we’re simply trying to continue to preserve and protect is an Indigenous way of life, which is the same thing our ancestors tried to preserve and protect when they first entered into those treaty negotiations,” said Whitney Gravelle, chairperson of the Bay Mills Indian Community, one of numerous tribal nations opposing Line 5.

The Straits are also the site of Anishinaabe creation stories, the waters from which the Great Turtle emerged to create Turtle Island, what is currently called North America. Gravelle said that maintaining clean lakes where Indigenous people can fish is about more than just the right to fish. It’s about the continuation of culture.

“It’s about being able to learn from your parents and your elders about what fishing means to your people, whether it be in ceremony or in tradition or in oral storytelling, and then understanding the role that that fish plays in your community,” she said.

Last summer, José Francisco Calí Tzay, United Nations special rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, called for suspending the pipeline’s operations “until the free, prior, and informed consent of the Indigenous Peoples affected is secured.” Free, prior, and informed consent is a right guaranteed to Indigenous Peoples under international law that says governments must consult Indigenous nations in good faith to obtain their consent before undertaking projects that affect their land and resources — consent that Bad River, for instance, has refused to give.

“Canada is advocating for the pipeline to continue operations, following the decision of a Parliamentary Committee that did not hear testimony from the affected Indigenous Peoples,” Calí Tzay wrote, adding the country’s support for the pipeline contradicts its international commitments to mitigate climate change in addition to the risk of a “catastrophic spill.”

Part of what makes Line 5 such a flashpoint is the importance of the Great Lakes and Enbridge’s spotty environmental record. As the Guardian reported last month, the Great Lakes “stretch out beyond horizons, collectively covering an area as large as the U.K. and providing drinking water for a third of all Canadians and one in 10 Americans.”

In 2010, two separate pipelines run by Enbridge ruptured, spilling more than a million gallons of oil between them into rivers in Michigan and Illinois. The Environmental Protection Agency found that Enbridge was at fault not only for failing to upkeep the pipeline but also for restarting the pipeline after alarms went off without checking whether it failed. The company eventually reached a $177 million settlement with federal regulators over the disaster.

A 2017 National Wildlife Federation analysis found that Line 5 has leaked more than a million gallons on 29 separate occasions. The company said just five of these instances were outside of Enbridge facilities, and that no spills have occurred in the Straits of Mackinac or on the Bad River Reservation. Still, the section of the pipeline on the floor of the Straits of Mackinac has been dented by boat anchors dropped in the lakes, including from Enbridge-contracted vessels.

Despite Indigenous peoples’ concerns, Line 5 continues to gain momentum, in part because of the amount of energy it supplies to the U.S. and Canada and the countries’ continued dependence on fossil fuels. While the international community agreed to curb fossil fuels this month at COP28, there’s no agreed-upon timeline for actually doing so, and the consumer demand for affordable energy remains high, especially in light of inflation driving the prices of food and housing.

Meanwhile, more than 60 tribal nations, including every federally recognized tribe in Michigan, have said the pipeline poses “an unacceptable risk of an oil spill into the Great Lakes.”

“The Straits of Mackinac are a sacred wellspring of life and culture for tribal nations in Michigan and beyond,” the nations wrote in an amicus brief supporting a lawsuit challenging the pipeline.

To Gravelle from the Bay Mills Indian Community, the issue is deeply personal and goes beyond maintaining access to clean water and the ability to fish safely. Fishing is deeply intertwined with her peoples’ culture. When a baby is born, their first meal is fish, and when her people hold traditional ceremonies, they serve fish.

“Our traditions and who we are as a people are all wrapped up into what we do with fish,” Gravelle said. “Our relationship with the land and water is more important than any commercial value that could ever be realized from an oil pipeline.”


'Hard-Won Movement Victory': MVP Extension in NC Halved


"Mountain Valley Pipeline and its Southgate extension have been poorly conceived from the beginning, but today some of the communities in harm's way can breathe easier," said one campaigner.




Empty pipeline segments are shown on the property of Maury Johnson, a local farmer and landowner challenging the Mountain Valley Pipeline, on August 26, 2022 in Greenville, West Virginia.
(Photo: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images)

JESSICA CORBETT
COMMONDREAMS
Dec 30, 2023

Frontline critics of the Mountain Valley Pipeline celebrated after Equitrans Midstream revealed Friday in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that the distance of the proposed Southgate extension project has been cut in half.

The partially completed MVP project—long delayed by legal battles until congressional Republicans and President Joe Biden included language to fast-track it in a debt limit deal earlier this year—is set to cross 303 miles of Virginia and West Virginia.

The MVP Southgate extension into North Carolina was supposed to be 75 miles, but the filing details plans for a redesigned 31-mile gas project that "would include substantially fewer water crossings and would not require a new compressor station."

Responding to the development Friday evening, Denali Nalamalapu, communications director of the Protect Our Water, Heritage, Rights Coalition, said that "despite receiving a free pass from the federal government, the MVP continues to crumble before our eyes. For nearly 10 years, communities along the route have declared this project impossible and deadly. Now, after meeting with its clients, we see further admission from MVP that they can't follow through with the foolhardy plan they set out with."

"This news is a win for the movement that will be celebrated by emboldened resistance in the new year."

"This news is a hard-won movement victory: Fewer people will be harmed now that the Southgate extension plan has been halved," she stressed. "The MVP has always known it poses a horrific danger to the communities along the route—but their bottom line takes priority."

"With this new plan, the company admits that fewer waterways will be harmed and a compressor station will be avoided, gesturing towards the devastating water pollution, air pollution, and health impacts it will and has caused," she added. "This news is a win for the movement that will be celebrated by emboldened resistance in the new year."

Appalachian Voices Virginia field coordinator Jessica Sims also welcomed the news as a win for communities on the frontlines of the climate-wrecking gas project.

"Mountain Valley Pipeline and its Southgate extension have been poorly conceived from the beginning, but today some of the communities in harm's way can breathe easier," Sims said Saturday. "We know these changes resulted from sustained opposition to this unnecessary methane gas pipeline and its Southgate extension, and our opposition continues."

The new Equitrans Midstream filing follows a pair of Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) orders last week, one that allows MVP to raise gas transportation rates and another that extends the timeline to build the extension.



"The recent decision by FERC to extend Southgate's federal certificate was dependent on the pipeline having a contract with another entity to buy the gas," Appalachian Voices North Carolina program manager Ridge Graham noted Saturday.

"With a wholly new project that requires an 'open season' to find customers," Graham argued, "FERC should cancel the original Southgate Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity and send the developers back to the drawing board."

With MVP opponents "facing increased repression from the state and the companies behind the pipeline," another group that has spent years battling the project, Appalachians Against Pipelines, is calling for solidarity actions across the United States January 29-31 "to bring the fight to every company and bank involved."

‘There Will Be Blood’: How Neo-Nazis and White Supremacists Are Fueling Ohio’s Anti-Lgbtq+ Movement

 

Across the state, white supremacists are targeting LGBTQ+ communities, driving and capitalizing on a massive uptick in anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and legislation. This is how we got here — and why experts warn that a grim history could repeat itself.

 

By H.L. COMERIATO (THEY/THEM), Buckeye Flame

On March 11, 2023, members of the neo-Nazi group “Blood Tribe” descended on a drag storytime event in Wadsworth, Ohio

In video footage posted to YouTube, they waved swastika flags and performed the “Hitler salute,” pounding their chests and screaming “Sieg, Heil!” in unison.

Blood Tribe’s leader and former U.S. Marine Christopher Pohlhaus led masked members in a series of violent call-and-response chants, including one notable declaration: “There will be blood.”

Dozens of members of the white nationalist and white supremacist groups Patriot FrontWhite Lives Matter and the Proud Boys were also in attendance, crowded behind a metal barricade.

Just a few yards away — huddled beneath a stone park shelter — a small group of children listened to a local drag performer read out loud from a picture book.

In the wake of the incident, residents of the overwhelmingly white community expressed shock and disbelief, but experts said they aren’t surprised: Neo-Nazis and other white supremacist groups adhere to anti-LGBTQ+ ideologies designed to eradicate LGBTQ+ people — and displays of anti-LGBTQ+ violence and intimidation have historically been part of that process.

With a record-breaking number of anti-LGBTQ+ bills at the Ohio Statehouse, legal experts and historians say white supremacists are seizing the political moment, ramping up recruitment efforts and preparing to recreate across Ohio a violent and dangerous history.

For more than three years, The Buckeye Flame has embraced a solutions journalism framework, empowering Ohioans to shape their own futures and communities. However, experts and historians describe the most recent wave of anti-LGBTQ+ sentiment and legislation as unprecedented and insidious — rooted in massive political narratives that frame LGBTQ+ people as threats to children, families and communities.

In Ohio and across the country, neo-Nazis and white supremacists have worked alongside conservative lawmakers to craft an anti-LGBTQ+ social and political strategy more effective than any other in the last 100 years.

Who are these anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups? How are conservative Republicans emboldening them? And why are experts warning that a grim history could repeat itself?

What is white supremacy?

Since 2015, the number of designated hate groups operating in Ohio has nearly doubled, corresponding with a national uptick in white supremacist, white nationalist and other hate-group activity.

Jake Newsome — a California-based writer, researcher and public historian with a Ph.D. and specialization in LGBTQ+ German, Jewish and American history — said the current influx of anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and legislation can be traced back to the launch of former U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.

“Some of [Trump’s] most extreme rhetoric involving racism, anti-semitism and homophobia had been previously pushed to the margins by mainstream society, but it slowly became more acceptable in politics,” Newsome said. “Suddenly, these ideas have a tiny, but growing platform. These [white supremacist] groups that had taken a hit suddenly felt like they had an ally. They felt more emboldened to take to the streets.”

In November, 2017, one year after Trump’s election, hundreds of white nationalists and white supremacists did exactly that during the ‘Unite the Right Rally’ in Charlottesville, Virginia, a protest that led to the death of a counter-protester mowed down by a neo-Nazi.

In video footage of the event, white supremacists chanted “You will not replace us!” — a direct reference to the white supremacist “great replacement” conspiracy theory, which falsely asserts that white Christians are being “replaced” by people of other races, ethnicities and religions.

Masked members of the neo-Nazi group “Blood Tribe” perform the “Hitler salute” during a March 11 drag story time event in Wadsworth, Ohio. (Image by Ford Fischer / News2Share)

White supremacists subscribe to fringe social and political ideologies rooted in the total superiority of white people, Western culture and Christianity. White nationalist groups like Patriot Front and the Proud Boys, along with Ohio-based hate groups Active Club and the National Justice Party, openly pursue a white ethnostate, where citizenship is granted exclusively to white people.

Previously, Pohlhaus purchased hundreds of acres of property in rural Maine, sharing plans to create a white ethnostate before locals drove him to sell the land.

While neo-Nazis are typically white nationalists, groups like Blood Tribe also espouse a particular “hatred for Jews and a love for Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany,” according to experts at the Southern Poverty Law Center — a legal advocacy group that specializes in civil rights and tracks hate group activity across the country.

“One of the things that I think the media often misses is that all of these things are connected,” Newsome said. “It’s not that these neo-Nazis and right-wing groups are taking these actions in sequential order of who or what they hate the most. It’s happening all at the same time — and it’s all related.”

Why target LGBTQ+ Ohioans?

On the morning of March 26, Reverend Jess Peacock, who uses they/them pronouns, felt broken glass crunch beneath their boots on the way to unlock the doors of the Community Church of Chesterland in Northeast Ohio.

The night before, white supremacist and documented White Lives Matter Ohio member 20-year-old Aimenn Penny firebombed the church with a Molotov cocktail, hoping to torch the building ahead of a scheduled drag storytime event for children and families.

Two weeks earlier, Penny had appeared alongside members of Blood Tribe, Patriot Front and the Proud Boys during the drag storytime event in Wadsworth, where other White Lives Matter members held signs bearing anti-LGBTQ+ slurs and phrases, including “All f—— groom kids,” and “Children and f—— don’t mix.”

Penny was arrested on March 31 and confessed directly to the attack. Penny told police he regretted that the bomb had not caused more damage and that he was “trying to protect children and stop the drag show event,” according to an affidavit.

Penny was charged with one count of malicious use of explosive materials and one count of possessing a destructive device, and later indicted on a federal hate crime charge. Set to be sentenced in 2024, Penny faces up to 20 years in prison in addition to a mandatory 10-year sentence for his crimes.

But Peacock said the fear and uncertainty anti-LGBTQ+ attacks create over time are far more insidious than any single incident.

“White supremacists are opportunists,” Peacock said. “At times, people of color are more focused-on. [White supremacists] will go to Black Lives Matter rallies. They’ll go to drag shows. It doesn’t matter what the event is. It’s not about the events, it’s about the fear they can create if they keep showing up.”

“For these hate groups, the bigger issue is domination. It’s about controlling anyone who doesn’t match up to the cultural standard — which is white, Christian, male,” Peacock added. “Anything that doesn’t fall under that category is meant to be dominated or eliminated.”

Peacock joined the Chesterland church in 2022, after several years of clergy work in the sparse, rural counties of eastern Washington. There, they encountered a rise in white supremacist activity that redirected their path.

“I saw a disturbing push for Christian nationalism on a national level,” they said. “Politicians saying very disturbing things and how that was trickling down through the rank-and-file Republican, conservative voters parroting these trends.”

Now, publicly negating that rhetoric has become a major part of Peacock’s work as clergy: “If folks begin to feel too scared to go to Prides or drag events, that’s going to separate us. We need to stand up and show up for one another in those times because it sends a message that we aren’t easy targets.”

Ultimately, Peacock and other church and community leaders opted to move forward with Chesterland’s drag storytime event after raising enough funds to implement extra security measures. The event took place without incident, drawing just a handful of protestors.

Pohlhaus, however, only gained momentum, appearing strategically at LGBTQ+ events across the state.

For these hate groups, the bigger issue is domination. It’s about controlling anyone who doesn’t match up to the cultural standard, which is white, Christian, male.

Rev. Jess Peacock, Community Church of Chesterland

On April 29, he led a group of masked Blood Tribe members outside an adult drag brunch event hosted by Land Grant Brewing in Columbus, marking the first time Blood Tribe members appeared at an LGBTQ+ event marketed exclusively for adults.

Video footage captured by bystanders and shared via Youtube shows Blood Tribe members lining the sidewalk outside the business, engaging in violent call-and-response chants and performing the “Hitler salute” in unison.

After the event, Pohlhaus returned to Maine where he appeared as a guest on a white supremacist podcast, according to a report by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

“What we want to do is maximize aggression, the noise, the volume, while also maximizing safety,” Pohlhaus reportedly said. “[…] We go to the enemy, scream at them, give them PTSD and leave.”

In July, Pohlhaus and Blood Tribe members closed out the summer with a public appearance outside an LGBTQ+ Pride event in Toledo. In a statement published by Cleveland Jewish News, officials said the group also appeared outside the Jewish Federation of Greater Toledo campus in Sylvania the same day.

By September, The Columbus Dispatch reported that Pohlhaus had officially launched an Ohio-based chapter of Blood Tribe — the result of a strategic, anti-LGBTQ+ recruitment campaign rooted in public intimidation.

‘Democracy creates more queer people.’

Following World War I, LGBTQ+ people experienced an unexpected level of social tolerance under Germany’s new democracy, the Weimar Republic.

In bigger cities, police stopped enforcing anti-LGBTQ+ laws almost entirely.

“All across Germany there [was] publicly visible queer culture. There were queer nightclubs and bars, of course, but there were also organizations, social clubs, newspapers and shops all over the place,” Newsome said. “On one hand, that was a lot of great progress. On the other hand, it sparked a backlash by political and religious parties in Germany to ‘clean up’ moral decay.”

Of the more than 40 political parties active in Weimar, none utilized anti-LGBTQ+ moral panic more efficiently than the Nazis — still a small, right-wing fringe party in 1920.

“The idea is that under democracy — with its emphasis on personal liberty and personal fulfillment — people became weak and wanted to fulfill their own personal desires, which led to more homosexuality,” Newsome said: “In short, democracy creates more queer people.”

At the same time, German Nazis created a political narrative that framed LGBTQ+ people as dangerous predators, both personally and politically.

“Part of the Nazi’s tactics and rhetoric is that they lumped everything we would call ‘queer’ or ‘trans’ under ‘the homosexual lifestyle,’” Newsome said. “Not as a religious sin, but as a political threat to the security of the government and a threat to Germany’s children.”

Magnus Hirschfeld (to the right with glasses holding the hand of his lover, Karl Giese) at a costume party at the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft (Institute of Sexual Research) 1920. (via the Magnus Hirschfeld Gesellschaft Archive, Berlin.)

Like recent far-right rhetoric popularized by Christian nationalists, German Nazis leaned heavily on the accusation of pedophilia to subjugate and criminalize LGBTQ+ people.

“They constantly used those tropes that ‘homosexuals are pedophiles’ and ‘they’ll recruit your children to their lifestyle,’” Newsome said. “But there was also this idea that if German children grew up to be queer or trans, there would not be any ‘real men’ to run the country.”

“They were saying, ‘You don’t have to believe what we believe, you just have to want to protect your children,’” he added. “That’s a message that goes beyond the radical base, and a message similar to what we’re seeing now.”

‘This is what happens when you erase history’

On January 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany.

Three months later, Nazis raided the Hirschfeld Institute and its accompanying library and archives — methodically destroying the largest and most important collection of LGBTQ+ related research and material to ever exist.

“This was a direct and intentional strategy by conservatives and Nazis, that the first thing you do is control access to information. You ban books,” Newsome said. “In this case, they burned them.”

“That is a tried-and-true political fascist strategy,” he added. “The Nazis didn’t invent it, and people on the right today are picking up that same playbook.”

Historians estimate between 12,000 and 25,000 books, journals and images were destroyed when Nazis set fire to the Hirschfeld archives. Today, anti-LGBTQ+ groups commonly claim that little research exists concerning transgender people, often in an effort to ban or limit their access to healthcare.

More than 100 years later, Newsome said the destruction of the Hirschfeld Institute was part of a strategic campaign of cultural genocide still felt by LGBTQ+ people, particularly in the United States

“People are making policy decisions today based on the belief that [LGBTQ+ identities] are brand-new,” Newsome said. “This is what happens when you erase history.”

‘We need to heed that warning’

Just weeks from the close of 2023, the Trans Legislation Tracker reported 589 pieces of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation in 49 states.

In Ohio, lawmakers passed House Bill 68, which will criminalize healthcare for transgender people under the age of 18 and ban transgender girls from competing in sports from kindergarten through college.

In 2024, other anti-LGBTQ+ bills could ban drag and gender performance at public venues, ban transgender people from using public restrooms and require school staff to out LGBTQ+ students to their guardians — regardless of suspected anti-LGBTQ+ abuse in the home.

Books and writings deemed ‘un-German’ are burned at the Opernplatz. Berlin, Germany, May 10, 1933. (via the National Archives and Records Administration)

R.G. Cravens is a lead senior research analyst with the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center. In a written statement, Cravens told The Buckeye Flame that the link between anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric and legislation is undeniable.

“We can say that rhetoric and legislation reinforce each other,” Cravens said. “Inflammatory rhetoric against transgender people, specifically, have been used to justify laws that restrict free expression and association and legislate harmful medical practices that jeopardize the well-being of LGBTQ people.”

Craven also said anti-LGBTQ+ politicians have recreated a familiar and effective political strategy:

“In Ohio, we’ve seen anti-LGBTQ groups manufacture moral panic over LGBTQ people, and legislators use that manufactured panic to justify bills to ban gender-affirming care and police LGBTQ identity through draconian invasions of privacy like genital inspections to enforce anti-trans sports bans.”

For Newsome, the cultural, historical and political similarities between Nazi anti-LGBTQ+ laws and new anti-LGBTQ+ legislation are chilling:

Around 100,000 gay men living in Germany and Austria were imprisoned during Hitler’s 12-year rule. By the time the war ended in 1945, around 10,000 of them had been murdered in Nazi death camps.

When Allied forces arrived, LGBTQ+ people were not liberated from the camps alongside other prisoners. Instead, LGBTQ+ prisoners were transferred to state prisons, many living the remainder of their lives as convicted criminals and inmates.

Over the next 20 years, the West German government kept Nazi anti-LGBTQ+ laws in place, criminalizing and imprisoning an additional 100,000 LGBTQ+ people.

“The queer people in Berlin in the 1920s, life was good for them,” Newsome said. “They had no idea how bad things would get. We need to heed that warning.”

“History has already shown us how far it can go,” he added. “It’s up to us how far we allow it to go this time.” 🔥


IGNITE ACTION

  • To register to vote or to check your voter eligibility status in the state of Ohio, click here.
  • To find contact information for your Ohio state representative, click here.
  • To find contact information for your Ohio senator, click here.
  • To access the full Trans Legislation Tracker, click here.
  • For more information on active designated hate groups across Ohio, click here.
  • If you are a young person struggling, contact the Trevor Project: 866-4-U-Trevor.
  • If you are an adult in need of immediate help, contact the National Trans Lifeline: 877-565-8860
  • To access a webform created by the ACLU of Ohio urging Governor DeWine to veto HB 68, click here.

The Buckeye Flame is an online platform dedicated to amplifying the voices of LGBTQ+ Ohioans to support community and civic empowerment through the creation of engaging content that chronicles their triumphs, struggles, and lived experiences.

Previously Published on thebuckeyeflame



Eritrean protesters attack riot cops with sticks in south London

Tom Sanders
Published Dec 30, 2023
A protest involving approximately 50 individuals has broken out outside The Lighthouse Theatre on Camberwell, South London (Picture: UKNIP)

Protesters have clashed with police in south London after a demonstration related to ‘tensions in the Eritrean community’, Scotland Yard said.

Social media footage of the incident in Camberwell appeared to show protesters wielding sticks clashing with Met Police officers, bringing traffic to a standstill.

Eight people were arrested for offences including violent disorder, criminal damage, possession of an offensive weapon and assault on an emergency worker, the Met said.

Four officers were injured, one of whom was taken to hospital and has now been discharged.

Eight people have been arrested and four officers injured in the skirmish (Picture: UKNIP)
Witnesses at the scene have reported that a clash occurred between two groups within the Lighthouse church building on Camberwell Road (Picture: UKNIP)

There is still a heavy police presence on the scene in Camberwell Road, where a demonstration saw approximately 50 people gathering outside a private venue before violence broke out.

The incident is said to have taken place near The Lighthouse Theatre, with violence breaking out following a dispute between two different groups at the Eritrean embassy, which is located nearby.

Additional officers were called in to provide back-up, Scotland Yard said.

A dispersal order has been put in place in the area until 7am tomorrow, giving police the power to exclude a person from the area.



John Lubbock, who was present at the scene, told reporters: ‘I’ve gone down to the scene, and there seems to have been a clash between two groups in the Lighthouse church building on Camberwell Rd. A group of protesters are being kettled outside.’

He further explained that individuals he spoke to claimed the protest was related to the Eritrean embassy meeting and the ensuing confrontation.

The Metropolitan Police’s Southwark Police account on X posted an update about the situation, stating, ‘Officers are on scene in Camberwell Road, SE5, where there is a protest with approximately 50 people gathered outside a private venue.

‘Additional officers are on their way to the location to assist with the demonstration.’


Eight arrests as four police officers injured in dramatic scenes at Camberwell protest

Eight people were arrested for offences including violent disorder and criminal damage at the protest in Camberwell Road in Southwark

Alex Ross

A barrier appears to be thrown at police officers by members of the public involved in the protest

Eight people were arrested during a protest near a theatre in south London that turned violent with police officers coming under attack.

Four Met Police officers were injured in chaotic scenes while responding to a demonstration involving around 50 people in Camberwell Road in Southwark on Saturday afternoon.

A spokesperson said the protest, close to The Lighthouse Theatre, was related to “tensions amongst the Eritrean community”.

Footage shared online showed members of the public wavings sticks and throwing barriers at riot police, while traffic was brought to a standstil. The Met confirmed eight people had been arrested for offences including violent disorder, criminal damage, possession of an offensive weapon and assault on an emergency worker.

Four officers were injured, one of whom was taken to hospital and has now been discharged.

A statement shared by the Met’s Southwark police team on X at the time of the protest said: “Officers are on scene in Camberwell Road, SE5 where there is a protest with approximately 50 people gathered outside a private venue.

“Additional officers are on their way to the location to assist with the demonstration.”

<p>Additional police officers were called to deal with the disturbance close to The Lighthouse Theatre</p>

Additional police officers were called to deal with the disturbance close to The Lighthouse Theatre

<p>A dispersal order was put in place to move people away from the area</p>

A dispersal order was put in place to move people away from the area

A dispersal order was brought in for an area around the protest by the local police team just before 2.30pm, and lasts until 7am on Sunday. Under the order, officers have the power to remove people from the area.

However, footage from around 4pm showed an apparent “stand off” with officers.

Videos shared online also showed police line the road with several riot vans in the area. A man could be heard using a mega phone to speak to a gathered crowd in another video.

It’s been suggested on social media that the protest centred on a meeting being held by the Eritrean embassy, and there was an initial confrontation between two groups.

The spokesperson for the Met Police told The Independent: “The protest is related to tensions amongst the Eritrean community.”

Eritrea is one of the poorest countries in Africa, located on the Red Sea coast between Ethiopia and Sudan. The one-party state won its independence from Ethioipa after a 30-year war in 1993, but has since been impacted by prolonged periods of conflict.

Thousands have fled the country in recent years, with some arriving in the UK.

In September last year, a demonstration was held outside the Eritrean Embassy in Islington against the country’s occupation of the Tigray region. The Met Police made 15 arrests for offences including public order.

And in August of this year, anti-Eritrean government protesters held a protest during a cultural festival in Sweden.


Last US lighthouse keeper, bids adieu to history's beacon

By Tuhin Das Mahapatra
Dec 31, 2023

Sally Snowman, the last US lighthouse keeper, bids farewell to Boston Light Beacon.

This weekend marks the end of an era for Sally Snowman, the last official lighthouse keeper in the US. She is retiring from her duty of caring for the oldest lighthouse in North America, located on a small island in Boston Harbour, where the US history began.

Sally Snowman's farewell marks era's end for US lighthouse keeping(Wikipedia)

For 20 years, Snowman, 72, has been the guardian of Boston Light Beacon on Little Brewster Island, which will soon be sold to a private owner. The new owner will have to preserve the historic lighthouse, which was declared a national landmark and received government funding to keep it manned in 1964, making it the last lighthouse in the country with a staff.

‘It’s a fairy tale come true’

Snowman, who likes to wear 18th-century clothing to welcome visitors to her island home, said in an interview with US public radio that she had a lifelong dream of becoming a lighthouse keeper since she was 10 years old and visited the lighthouse for the first time.

“It’s sort of a metaphysical type of thing that – I felt something so deeply in my heart and in my cells and the space between the cells that it came into fruition. It’s a fairy tale come true,” she told NPR.

The lighthouse was built in 1716, nearly 100 years after the first European settlers arrived. It was destroyed by the British in 1776, three years after the Boston Tea Party sparked the revolution against their rule. It was rebuilt the following year.

Snowman became the 70th keeper of Boston Light in 2003, and the first woman to hold the position. She is also the last one, as the lighthouse is now fully automated and operates as a navigational aid, along with a foghorn.
‘What a way to go’

Snowman had worked at the lighthouse for 10 years before becoming its keeper and has authored three books about it. She said her favourite spot to meditate was on a deck that surrounds the top of the tower.

“Seeing the far expanse of the universe, the sunrises, the sunsets – they are phenomenal,” she said.

“To me, they were never the same twice. The sea was never the same twice. The cloud cover was never the same. It was like dying and go[ing] to heaven.”

She said she also enjoyed the thrill of living through storms and blizzards, “with snow and the sea just pounding on the back of the house and every window”, and added philosophically, “If the house got washed off the island during the storm when I was asleep, what a way to go.”

She also said she expected that the new owners and their staff would continue the traditions of the lighthouse keeper, as she had done, even though the job itself is no longer relevant.

“Many of them will dress up in costume to tell that story. So what we’re doing is just turning a new page,” Snowman told the station.

“What I see now is, how do we preserve the history? And the way to do this is to do what we’re doing right now, talking about keeping these places alive.”