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Inside the Growing Appalachian Anti-Pipeline Movement

In this episode of the It’s Going Down podcast, we spoke with several people involved at the Three Sisters encampment in Virginia fighting the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, the tree-sit at the Little Teel Crossing in Virginia fighting the Mountain Valley Pipeline, and someone that has been an on the ground supporter of the various encampments and tree-sits in both Virginia and West Virginia.

Wanting to know more about how the movement has grown to feature now up to 7 people in the trees, including various home and landowners that are threatened with eminent domain, we discuss how various relationships were made and certain tactics popularized.

In our discussions, we talk about everything from ongoing police repression, to how people go to the bathroom while up in a tree, but also political education, and also not putting radical politics, messaging, and ideas on the back burner.

Lastly, we also touch on the role of connecting and learning from past political struggles in the area, be they the West Virginia teacher’s strike, to the antifascist mobilizations in Charlottesville, Virginia.

The growing anti-pipeline movement across Appalachia is inspiring, as it brings together a wide variety of people, many taking radical direct action for the first time. It shows that support for a broad-based campaign, even in the most rural of places is possible and that by building strong networks of support, we can fight to win.

Listen to the podcast here https://ia801504.us.archive.org/9/items/onemoreredneckwar/onemoreredneckwar.mp3

 

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