Tracker Pixel for Entry

North Dakota Nasty

Editorial | December 7th, 2016

Dapper by Allison Buecksler

We have a huge public relations problem here in the Peace Garden State. While the world was watching the DAPL pipeline controversy, ND failed abysmally in influencing the narrative telling people about us. What they see casts us in anything but a positive light. We need to acknowledge this.

The movie Fargo gave us an example of how far good PR and branding can go. The film – and subsequently the TV series – put Fargo on the map. Who’d have ever thought that DAPL, NoDAPL, and Standing Rock would become common vernacular to others, not only here in the United States but around the world.

We failed. And it will cost us big-time.

Social media is the tail wagging the dog these days. As much as we’d say that social media tells only a fraction of the story, it’s hard to argue with what’s gotten out there about us. They see us as oppressors and in a militaristic fashion aggressors against Native Americans. Again.

They see us as heartless and willing to pepper spray, tear gas, shoot rubber bullets and even soak people down with water hoses in freezing temperatures. They see North Dakota all cozied up to a Texas oil company. They see us digging our heels in and not even giving legitimate attempts to mediate, negotiate or talk with folks protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline crossing beneath the Missouri River through sacred Indian ground.

They see us as a people who disregard the voice of Native American spirituality and culture and instead deploy a militarized response to help Energy Transfer Partners move closer and closer to the Missouri despite a federal demand that stops 20 miles away until these complex issues are addressed.

We can’t buy this kind of publicity. And, frankly, we cannot buy good will around the planet when they’ve seen what they’ve seen.

That the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced Sunday that no easement will be allowed for the pipeline to cross the Missouri until an Environmental Impact Study is completed and until all outstanding grievances have been addressed gives some hope to water protectors.

Meantime, the world sees state and DAPL leadership thumbing their noses at the federal edict.

When they see thousands of veterans of war join the 400-plus tribes represented at camp, so as to create a human shield between law enforcement and protesters, they see courage. When they see an absence of leadership in ND’s governor’s office they see a vacuum and a lack of courage. To date, neither the Governor nor the Lt. Governor have set foot on the Sacred Stone Camp. Sad to say the least.

Meanwhile, hope springs eternal. We have a new governor taking office December 15. That vacuum we’ve come to know will be filled sooner than not. And we are optimistic Governor-elect Burgum will show true leadership, faith in his home state, and respect for all of her sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, moms and dads, all peoples. Native relations in the Peace Garden State are in need of urgent attention.

As for water protectors protesting, please go home as per the request of Standing Rock Chairman David Archambault. You’ve accomplished more than anyone could have predicted. Your work now will be done through diplomatic and legal avenues. North Dakota winters can be brutal. Do not risk your lives by staying. Please do what’s right here and now.

No one can turn back the past, whether it be recent months or what’s taken place for generations. But we can create a better tomorrow. And we need to.

That alone will help redefine North Dakota in the eyes of the world. Our futures rest on our good will, our good works, our good work for the greater good of all.

History continues. The next chapters are ours to write. Let’s all think about how we’d like this story to go from this point in time. Otherwise, others will define us. And it won’t be pretty, especially with no change of heart, no change in Native relations here, no change in the us-versus-them paradigm that’s recently become the case.

We can do better than that. Legendary North Dakota we shall again be. Failure is not an option.

RECENTLY IN

Editorial

Tracker Pixel for Entry Blackbird Tracker Pixel for Entry Blackbird Tracker Pixel for Entry TheatreB Tracker Pixel for Entry Nicholes Tracker Pixel for Entry Farrms Tracker Pixel for Entry Bismarck1

Recently in:

Alicia Underlee Nelsonalicia@hpr1.com A midnight wedding ceremony at the Clay County Courthouse in Moorhead on August 1, 2013 was more than a romantic gesture. Eighteen couples made history on that day by exchanging vows in the…

By Michael M. Millermichael.miller@ndsu.edu On March 11, 2024, we celebrated the 121st birthday of bandleader Lawrence Welk. He was born March 11, 1903 in a sod house near Strasburg, North Dakota, and died on May 17,1992. The…

Saturday, May 117 p.m., gates at 5 p.m.Outdoors at Fargo Brewing Company610 University Dr. N, FargoWisconsin’s finest export, The Violent Femmes, started out in Milwaukee in 1981 as an acoustic punk band, and they’ve been…

Is this a repeating pattern?By Sabrina Hornungsabrina@hpr1.comThere’s a quote circulating around the world wide web, misattributed to Sinclair Lewis: "When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a…

by Ed Raymondfargogadfly@gmail.comAccording to my great-grandfather many years ago, my French ancestors migrated from Normandy to Quebec to Manitoba to Wisconsin to Minnesota over the spread of more than two centuries, finally…

By Rick Gionrickgion@gmail.com Holiday wine shopping shouldn’t have to be complicated. But unfortunately it can cause unneeded anxiety due to an overabundance of choices. Don’t fret my friends, we once again have you covered…

By Rick Gionrickgion@gmail.com In this land of hotdish and ham, the knoephla soup of German-Russian heritage seems to reign supreme. In my opinion though, the French have the superior soup. With a cheesy top layer, toasted baguette…

By John Showalterjohn.d.showalter@gmail.com It is not unheard of for bands to go on hiatus. However, as the old saying goes, “Absence makes the heart grow fonder.” That is why when a local group like STILL comes back to…

Now playing at the Fargo Theatre.By Greg Carlson gregcarlson1@gmail.comPalme d’Or recipient “Anatomy of a Fall” is now enjoying an award-season victory tour, recently picking up Golden Globe wins for both screenplay and…

By Sabrina Hornungsabrina@hpr1.com There’s no exaggeration when we say that this year’s Plains Art Gala is going to be out of this world, with a sci-fi theme inspired by a painting housed in the Plains Art Museum’s permanent…

By John Showalterjohn.d.showalter@gmail.comHigh Plains Reader had the opportunity to interview two mysterious new game show hosts named Milt and Bradley Barker about an upcoming event they will be putting on at Brewhalla. What…

By Annie Prafckeannieprafcke@gmail.com AUSTIN, Texas – As a Chinese-American, connecting to my culture through food is essential, and no dish brings me back to my mother’s kitchen quite like hotdish. Yes, you heard me right –…

By Sabrina Hornungsabrina@hpr1.comNew Jamestown Brewery Serves up Local FlavorThere’s something delicious brewing out here on the prairie and it just so happens to be the newest brewery west of the Red River and east of the…

By John Showalter  john.d.showalter@gmail.comThey sell fentanyl test strips and kits to harm-reduction organizations and…

JANUARY 19, 1967– MARCH 8, 2023 Brittney Leigh Goodman, 56, of Fargo, N.D., passed away unexpectedly at her home on March 8, 2023. Brittney was born January 19, 1967, to Ruth Wilson Pollock and Donald Ray Goodman, in Hardinsburg,…

Dismissing the value of small towns for the future of our nation is a mistakeBy Bill Oberlanderarcandburn@gmail.comAccording to U.S. Census projections, by the middle of this century, roughly 90% of the total population will live…