Nov 16, 2023 | Actions
Private property owners are fighting for their constitutional rights in the Hoosier State — and could be fighting for their lives — over carbon-capture pipeline and injection site proposals. World government plotters have already broken ground on a World Economic Forum-inspired 15-minute city near Lebanon, Indiana, as well.
Jon Schrock, regional field coordinator for The John Birch Society, is leading the defensive charge through a series of meetings in each of the affected counties. During a drive between locations, he discussed the issue and his progress in rallying landowners to defend their property against these tactics, which are all a part of the UN’s Agenda 2030.
Schrock: The battlefront has come to the western portion of Indiana. We have multiple counties that are being looked at by several different companies, ranging from Gary, Indiana, all the way down to Terre Haute, Indiana. We have companies such as Valero, BP, Tenaska, and Wabash Valley Resources looking to install carbon-capture pipelines.
Seismic testing is occurring in White County currently. They have finished Jasper County, Benton County, and are looking at doing other seismic testing. They are beginning the land-acquisition process.
So getting people together means we have community individuals who are taking the bull by the horns and getting involved. Tuesday night, an owner of a local company in Jasper County rented out a local fairground to host a meeting about Agenda 2030. They’re not only dealing with thousands of acres of solar farms and miles of carbon-capture pipelines, but also with carbon-sequestration injection wells.
We know that those are interconnected in Agenda 2030. What we’re doing is explaining this to people by holding local meetings in each county.
A lot of people had never heard of Agenda 2030. I did a show of hands Tuesday evening. Only a handful were familiar.
If our citizenry does not know about Agenda 2030, they will not go and spur their state officials to become involved with nullification to stop Agenda 2030 when it comes to their respective states.
We had county elected officials there. They are going to be able to stop this at the county level once they understand the conspiracy behind this — the workings, the framework that is coming to their local areas
Nov 3, 2023 | Actions
Brian Jorde said most people didn’t think he or his clients had much of a chance to stop a pair of carbon dioxide pipelines after the plans were announced two years ago.
“‘You all are a nuisance. We all know this is getting permitted.’ That has been the attitude of these pipelines since day one, and here we are,” Jorde said.
In September, with Jorde representing more than 1,000 affected landowners, the Public Utilities Commission rejected permit applications from both of the companies proposing carbon pipelines in the state.
Both projects carried multi-billion-dollar price tags. Project backers sought to capture carbon dioxide emissions from ethanol plants in multiple states and transport it in liquefied form to be “sequestered” at an underground storage site. Tax credits are available from the federal government for every metric ton of sequestered carbon dioxide, as an incentive to prevent emissions of the heat-trapping greenhouse gas.
Nov 1, 2023 | Actions
Senator Schoenbeck sent a series of text messages on Sept. 14, berating South Dakota Treasurer Josh Haeder after Haeder voted to deny the request of Summit Carbon Solutions for a CO2 pipeline.
Clearly an attempt to intimidate, the text messages are completely unacceptable behavior from one of South Dakota’s highest ranking senators. His actions are an abuse of power and a blatant disregard for the principles of fair and ethical conduct expected from a public servant. He should resign now!
Email your senator today and call for his resignation!
Oct 26, 2023 | Actions
Sen. Schoenbeck sent texts to Treasurer Josh Haeder criticizing his vote on the Summit pipeline
South Dakota’s highest-ranking state Senator is not happy about a decision by the state’s Public Utilities Commission to deny a permit to Summit Carbon Solutions, and he let at least one of the state officials who stood in the way of the project hear about it.
Disclosures by the Public Utilities Commission made Thursday relating to the carbon sequestration pipeline company’s hearing last month before the PUC revealed correspondence between Senate President Pro Tempore Lee Schoenbeck and South Dakota Treasurer Josh Haeder that took a heated turn.
In a series of text messages between the two on Sept. 14, three days after Summit’s route permit was unanimously rejected by the PUC, the Watertown Republican accused Haeder of being anti-ethanol and said that he was no longer a friend.
“U anti ethanol (SIC) people need to be out of public office. Bad for South Dakota,” Schoenbeck wrote before adding in a follow-up message, “Don’t call me friend. My friends have spines.”
Oct 26, 2023 | Actions, Legislators
SOUTH DAKOTA(HubCityRadio)- South Dakota Landowners Thursday have called on Senator Lee Schoenbeck to resign following a series of inappropriate texts he sent to South Dakota Treasurer Josh Haeder. Haeder was serving on the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission filling in for Commissioner Kristie Fiegen in the Summit Carbon Solutions request for the CO2 pipeline. Fiegen had a conflict of interest which prevented her from participating in this hearing. The commission voted unanimously(3-0) to deny the request to Summit.
Following the hearing, Secretary Haeder received text messages from Senate Pro Temp Lee Schoenbeck from Watertown.