I know lots of people (and many here) don't think there's much of a point to protesting and rallying, but in case you haven't heard, check this link:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/1 ... 93661.html
The whole story:
TransCanada, a huge multinational energy corporation based in Alberta, wanted to build a 36-inch pipeline that would carry DilBit, a particularly nasty type of corrosive sludge, at high temperature and high pressure, produced at the environmental slaughterhouse of the Alberta Tar Sands. This pipeline was slated to cut across America, right through the middle, to Gulf Coast refineries - where the refined fuel would then be sold on the open market.
Since the pipe would cross an international border, the Federal Gov't has jurisdiction, and without a Presidential Permit the pipe may not be built. Enter Nebraska. Farmers and ranchers in the northwest part of the state started talking to each other, and they found out that they were all upset with the way TransCanada had treated them - threatening eminent domain to bully them into signing easements, etc. They were also quite wary of burying such a huge pipeline full of such nasty shit just six feet under the surface, especially when the presence of the Ogallala Aquifer means the groundwater table is sometimes as shallow as four feet - in fact, the permeability of the Nebraska Sandhills means that sometimes low-lying grasslands become marshes because the water table rises above the surface!
Nebraskans got all riled up at the idea of a big faceless corporation pumping poison through the largest freshwater source on the continent (as well as the main source of water for our $20B/yr agricultural economy), and we made some noise. Then we found out our state laws do nothing to regulate oil pipelines or protect landowners from them, so we got louder. We marched, we demonstrated, we surrounded the governor's mansion with flashlights, we wrote letters to our newspapers, governor, representatives, and senators. We were joined by environmentalists everywhere. 1600 people voluntarily got arrested picketing the White House, including a close friend's 74-year-old grandmother, a retired elementary teacher.
We kept leaning on our state government to call a special legislative session and put laws on the books, until finally our opportunistic governor realized this populist cry was not getting quieter and called the special session. Our state senators scrambled to put a bill together. Meanwhile, on Nov. 6, a delegation of 12,000+ from nearly every state surrounded the entire White House three people deep, holding up signs which quoted Obama's 2008 campaign speeches that promised to "end the tyranny of oil" etc.
Meanwhile, other groups were calling bullshit on the State Department - evidence of serious conflicts of interest between TransCanada and the State Dept kept surfacing, and it was also pointed out that TC and the firm who performed the required Environmental Impact Statement had deep financial ties. In response to that, the State Dept's Inspector General began an investigation, and the President announced he would be making the decision himself, rather than farming it out to the allegedly conflicted/corrupt State Dept.
Finally, on Nov 10, the President announced that the final decision on the permit will be delayed until early 2013, and ordered TC to use that time to explore alternate routes that avoid the Sandhills. Some believe such a delay will eventually cause TC's investors to pull out, effectively collapsing the entire project. Others believe it's simply a political move, since a no-decision effectively avoids angering both the enviros on one side and labor unions on the other, and by putting it off until 2013 he can still receive support from both sides. Either way, a delay only lets our voices grow louder and continues to cost TC about $1M/day.
Yesterday, the Nebraska unicameral passed the bills regulating oil pipelines and marched them straight to the Gov's office for signing. I was there:
It was pretty cool. Our motherfucking Sandhills are motherfucking safe, thanks to the power of protest.
EDIT: whoa, huge photo. resized lol