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Olde Tyme Religion |
Apache tribe takes fight with feds over sacred land to Supreme Court |
2024-09-17 |
[FoxNews] Apache Stronghold argues that the federal government is violating its religious freedom. The Apache tribe in Arizona is taking a fight with the federal government and copper producers to the Supreme Court, which they hope will protect what they say is their religious rights to sacred ground. Apache Stronghold, a nonprofit group representing the tribe's interests, is fighting to preserve Oak Flat — what the Apaches say is their "direct corridor to the Creator and the locus of sacred ceremonies that cannot take place elsewhere." According to the petition filed at the high court, the government "has long protected Apache rituals there." "But because copper was discovered beneath Oak Flat, the government decided to transfer the site to Respondent Resolution Copper for a mine that will undisputedly destroy Oak Flat — swallowing it in a massive crater and ending sacred Apache rituals forever." Apache Stronghold argues that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) and the Free Exercise Clause forbids the government to do so and are asking it to reverse a lower court decision. "In a fractured en banc ruling cobbled together from two separate 6-5 majorities, the Ninth Circuit rejected both claims. Although the court acknowledged that destroying Oak Flat would 'literally prevent' the Apaches from engaging in religious exercise, it nevertheless concluded that doing so would not ‘substantially burden’ their religious exercise under RFRA, relying on this Court’s pre-RFRA decision in Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association," the petition states. "And while the majority acknowledged that singling out Oak Flat for destruction is "plainly not ‘generally applicable,’ it rejected the free-exercise claim ‘for the same reasons’ — no substantial burden," it continues. |
Posted by:Skidmark |
#6 Either the Apaches have too much $, or the mining companies didn't offer up enough. |
Posted by: Anomalous Sources 2024-09-17 22:17 |
#5 Bobby, As I understand it, they got it from the reservation. However they were told the land above would be unharmed. Just like they did in Brazil. |
Posted by: 49 Pan 2024-09-17 11:19 |
#4 Sounds like an episode of Longmire |
Posted by: Frank G 2024-09-17 11:02 |
#3 Apache Stronghold, a nonprofit group representing the tribe's interests But does it represent the sovereign Apache government's interest? Or is this another self appointed organization? |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2024-09-17 10:18 |
#2 From whom did they get permits on Indian land? The Indians' who they changed their mind? Or the Feds, who thought it better to despoil Apache land? |
Posted by: Bobby 2024-09-17 08:00 |
#1 This is a mess for so many reasons. They are digging 7,000 foot shafts. Then they will lower the equipment and start blasting and removing material remotely. The giant rooms, they plan on removing 4,000 vertical feet of material, IE from 7,000 down to 3,000 down. Building up the floor with the slag. At first blush it sounds cool and they have done this before in Brazile. The problem is the ground above will become unstable from the blasting and will settle. Mostly minor earthquakes and slow dropping in elevation. The land will become uninhabitable at any level for about a 20 mile radius. Indian land was the only place they could get permits, as the USG wont allow it on fed land. |
Posted by: 49 Pan 2024-09-17 03:28 |