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mahatmakanejeeves

(66,406 posts)
Sun Aug 17, 2025, 08:39 AM Aug 17

Another gold rush could bring open pit mines to South Dakota's Black Hills

U.S. NEWS
Another gold rush could bring open pit mines to South Dakota’s Black Hills

BY SARAH RAZA
Updated 11:53 PM EDT, August 16, 2025

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — A gold rush brought settlers to South Dakota’s Black Hills roughly 150 years ago, chasing the dream of wealth and displacing Native Americans in the process.

Now, a new crop of miners driven by gold prices at more than $3,000 an ounce are seeking to return to the treasured landscape, promising an economic boost while raising fears of how modern gold extraction could forever change the region.

“These impacts can be long term and make it so that tourism and outdoor recreation is negatively impacted,” said Lilias Jarding, executive director of the Black Hills Clean Water Alliance. “Our enjoyment of the Black Hills as a peaceful place, a sacred place, is disturbed.”

The Black Hills encompass over 1.2 million acres (485,622 hectares), rising up from the Great Plains in southwest South Dakota and extending into Wyoming. The jagged peaks are smaller than those of the Rocky Mountains, but the lush pine-covered hills are sacred to the Lakota Sioux people and serve as a destination for millions of tourists who visit Mount Rushmore and state parks.

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Another gold rush could bring open pit mines to South Dakota's Black Hills (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Aug 17 OP
I believe the Black Hills are rightfully moniss Aug 17 #1

moniss

(7,928 posts)
1. I believe the Black Hills are rightfully
Sun Aug 17, 2025, 12:19 PM
Aug 17

the sacred lands for the Lakota and should be returned. The Supreme Court decision said the territory was wrongfully taken but in a typical Wasi'chu way they showed no understanding of anything sacred and simply claimed that the sacred lands could be equated to money and then the Wasi'chu tried to buy off their guilt.

How would the descendants of the colonizer squatters react if the Lakota and others went to the West Bank and purchased Bethlehem and then bulldozed it flat but offered some money to soothe the upset?

The Wasi'chu use their courts to demand things for themselves that they deny to others. They break the promises, like the 1852 Santa Fe Treaty with the Apaches, because they see only dollar signs for themselves and proclaim and demand protections for their religions and sacred places while denying it to others whenever they can gain dollars.

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