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ASEAN United FC
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Thursday 26 September 2024 09:55:00 GMT
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football.edit3300
Visca Barca ❤️💙 :
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2024-09-26 09:57:50
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liubei107
Liu Bei Sanzo :
uh uh aaaah
2024-09-26 10:08:35
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galau_brutal💔 :
two🙏😁
2024-09-26 09:58:08
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2024-09-26 10:11:47
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Yesterday, Western Watersheds Project staff joined forces with IWCN, the Wolf Education Center, Guardians of the Wolves, ESC, and tribal representatives for a series of critical meetings on Capitol Hill.  We gathered to discuss the newly introduced Tribal Heritage Grizzly Bear American Bison Wolf Restoration and Coexistence Act (S5111).  These weren’t just meetings, they were moments of reckoning, led by Indigenous voices that cut through the usual political noise with sharp clarity, reminding us all of the profound stakes at hand. The heart of these discussions belonged to tribal members, whose words, full of grace and righteous anger, carried the weight of centuries of displacement and destruction.  These animals—bison, grizzlies, wolves—are not merely species on some scientific ledger; they are relatives in the most intimate sense. The eradication of these creatures is not just the death of wildlife. It represents the eradication of a people, of culture, of a spiritual connection to the land that colonialism has tried, and continues to try, to sever. In this video, you’ll hear from Devin Oldman, or Noo'oo'keet (Walks Out of Water), an enrolled member of the Northern Arapaho Tribe from the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming. Devin has devoted years to the fight for bison reintroduction on his homeland. He serves as a treaty consultant, working to bring back the bison, a keystone species for his people and for the plains ecosystem, to heal the land and restore what has been taken. Here, Devin speaks directly to the leadership of the White House Council on Environmental Quality. His message is impassioned, urgent, and unwavering. This is more than an environmental issue—it’s a fight for survival, for identity, for the future of people and animals who have been here far longer than the systems that seek to erase them.
Yesterday, Western Watersheds Project staff joined forces with IWCN, the Wolf Education Center, Guardians of the Wolves, ESC, and tribal representatives for a series of critical meetings on Capitol Hill. We gathered to discuss the newly introduced Tribal Heritage Grizzly Bear American Bison Wolf Restoration and Coexistence Act (S5111). These weren’t just meetings, they were moments of reckoning, led by Indigenous voices that cut through the usual political noise with sharp clarity, reminding us all of the profound stakes at hand. The heart of these discussions belonged to tribal members, whose words, full of grace and righteous anger, carried the weight of centuries of displacement and destruction. These animals—bison, grizzlies, wolves—are not merely species on some scientific ledger; they are relatives in the most intimate sense. The eradication of these creatures is not just the death of wildlife. It represents the eradication of a people, of culture, of a spiritual connection to the land that colonialism has tried, and continues to try, to sever. In this video, you’ll hear from Devin Oldman, or Noo'oo'keet (Walks Out of Water), an enrolled member of the Northern Arapaho Tribe from the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming. Devin has devoted years to the fight for bison reintroduction on his homeland. He serves as a treaty consultant, working to bring back the bison, a keystone species for his people and for the plains ecosystem, to heal the land and restore what has been taken. Here, Devin speaks directly to the leadership of the White House Council on Environmental Quality. His message is impassioned, urgent, and unwavering. This is more than an environmental issue—it’s a fight for survival, for identity, for the future of people and animals who have been here far longer than the systems that seek to erase them.

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