#south dakota

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Rapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at DRapid City, SD and the surrounding areas- On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at D

Rapid City, SD and the surrounding areas-

On my way into Rapid City, I stopped for a quick look at Devil’s Tower (1), which is certainly a sight to see. But got in on the first night to Leah and her family, who took me out to see Mt. Rushmore (2). Leah’s dad tried to take a few proportion shots of us that weren’t working out as well as we would have liked compositionally, but we had a ball anyways. Saw George by looking through a rock (3) and a billy goat enjoying the sights and grass (4).

We climbed Harney Peak (5) and soaked in the view over lunch and a cliff.

Tried to go through a 8.5 by 24 in cement block testing ability to go though a spelunking cave. You can see by the veins in my hand (6) I was trying really hard to get unstuck. We did go on a lantern tour of a cave however (7), which greatly amused my inner child.

We drove through Custer State Park (8) and saw some buffalo (ie driving through two herds) and had a little run-in with a young bull. Entered and left by way of the Needles Highway (9). Unfortunately, I didn’t get to see Iron Mountain, but I’ll just save that for next time.

And from there, I took off from SD and headed north to Bismark and North Dakota’s plains.


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Dinosaur Park in South Dakota(Alfred Eisenstaedt. 1940)

Dinosaur Park in South Dakota

(Alfred Eisenstaedt. 1940)


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South Dakota(Alfred Eisenstaedt. 1940)

South Dakota

(Alfred Eisenstaedt. 1940)


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 Steven Garcia with his daughter Cheyenne during the Oglala College powwow on the Pine Ridge Reserva

Steven Garcia with his daughter Cheyenne during the Oglala College powwow on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota (date unknown).


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nationalatheistparty:

byJessica Mokrzycki,@AscendtheHills

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Unrest is brewing once more at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, the infamous site of the last Indian Massacre in our nation’s history – a massacre that claimed the lives of approximately one hundred fifty Lakota men, women and children. This land is now up for sale and bids are already on the table from investors eager to make a profit while the Oglala Sioux Tribe, in a recent and unexpected course of action, has moved to seize the land using eminent domain (the power to take private property for public use by the state).

Unfortunately, many legal experts have doubts as to whether or not the Oglala Sioux Tribe will have grounds to use eminent domain in what has become a desperate and last-ditch attempt to save land that they, and many American Indians across the country, consider sacred.

According to an article in the Buffalo Post, speaking under the condition of anonymity, one top federal Indian law attorney in Washington D.C. expressed his grave doubts as to the projected outcome of such an endeavor.

“It would be very hard for me to see the tribe pull this off,” said the source. “If this was truly a viable option for tribes than it would be extremely easy for tribes to consolidate their land bases. They could simply seize whatever they wanted from non-members within the confines of the reservation, provided they pay just compensation. Who determines what just compensation is?”

The land’s owner, James Czywczynski, has invited Native residents to cast their own bids along with those of external investors. Such an offer seems hollow and callous, a gesture empty of any intentions to help Natives preserve the historic land that is within the confines of their reservation. Why so hollow a gesture? Because Czwczynski knows full well that the Tribe would never be able to afford to compete with the bids currently being considered. In 2010, the Oglala Sioux Pine Ridge Reservation was reported to have the lowest per capita income in the country with unemployment estimated at seventy percent.

Czywczynski has expressed hopes that the Tribe would be able to acquire the land, but certainly profit is his main motivation as he is not willing to accept a price lower than the bids already presented and still rolling in. Cash is trumping any cultural investments for those with historical ties to the land.

Though the land has been appraised at $7,000, current Supreme Court case law has determined fair market value to be whatever a buyer would voluntarily pay for a designated property. Czywczynski currently has multiple buyers prepared to pay the $4.9 million asking price for the land.  

Czywczynski recently remarked that he is waiting for a specific buyer to purchase the land for the benefit of the tribe. “There are others that are waiting to buy this property, but I am waiting for this person who is buying it for the benefit of the tribe. I want the tribe to have this property,” he stated

In a recent interview, Czywczynski explained how he had acquired Wounded Knee in the first place:

“The land was put up for sale in the 1930s as an allotment so the Native people could sell their land. The Oglala Sioux Pine Ridge Reservation was sold off, and there are many non-Indian ranchers, farmers, businessmen, cowboys and casinos that are owned and within the confines of that reservation.

“Our property was bought in the 1930s by Woodrow Wilson, who signed the deed. Clive Gildersleeve’s father bought the land and store in 1935, which included 40 acres of the national historical site of Wounded Knee. In 1968, I bought the property from the Gildersleeves, which included the Trading Post Museum, a home, four cabins and museum artifacts. The 40 acres we bought included the ravine and the area where the massacre took place in 1890.”

What Czywczynski is not mentioning is what really made the purchasing of the land possible and so inexpensive in the first place was the Dawes Act of 1887. The Dawes Act systematically reduced the land held by Natives in the West with an attempt to assimilate Indians into American society by undoing any notion of collective ownership and “giving” 160 acres to each head of household. The Dawes Act, however, exempted any “troublesome” tribes…one such tribe being the Lakotas. The Dawes Act left approximately 900,000 American Indians without any land to call their own.

Anger is surging throughout the Native population of the reservation. Many members fear that the land, if purchased by outsiders, will be turned into a tourist attraction and feel that the land inherently belongs to them.

“This is our backyard; this is our homeland,” said Garfield Steele, a tribal representative. “This has historical value for our people, not to any non-Indian. We will fight to keep it, as is, by all means.”

The outcome remains uncertain, but one can only hope that some measure will be taken to allow the Oglala Sioux Tribe to preserve a land holding so much significance to their heritage; a land that, for them, is simply priceless.

Read more about this story at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/05/30/eminent-domain-and-horse-slaughterhouse-wounded-knee-149612

From the US Presidents in South Dakota.

From the US Presidents in South Dakota.


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a giant sleeping dragon or just a rock formation in Badlands

a giant sleeping dragon or just a rock formation in Badlands


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“The Badlands erode at the rapid rate of about one inch per year. Evidence suggests that they will e

“The Badlands erode at the rapid rate of about one inch per year. Evidence suggests that they will erode completely away in another 500,000 years, giving them a life span of just one million years” (nps.gov)


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“Sole, that does its walkingjust with feelings. That holds itself face upand, as in a mirror,receive

“Sole, that does its walking
just with feelings. That holds itself face up
and, as in a mirror,
receives from heaven its own meandering pathways.”

Rilke


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A step back in time. 30-60 million years ago

A step back in time. 30-60 million years ago


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the monsters of Black Hills (the rock and deadwood formation in Black Hills, SD)

the monsters of Black Hills (the rock and deadwood formation in Black Hills, SD)


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The Black Hills, South Dakota.The beating heart of Turtle Island.

The Black Hills, South Dakota.
The beating heart of Turtle Island.


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The Black Hills.Sacred, powerful lands. The heart of Turtle Island.

The Black Hills.


Sacred, powerful lands. The heart of Turtle Island.


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MN State Fair Time! Today would have been opening day of the Great Minnesota Get-Together, but not aMN State Fair Time! Today would have been opening day of the Great Minnesota Get-Together, but not a

MN State Fair Time!

Today would have been opening day of the Great Minnesota Get-Together, but not all is lost.  There are several competitions still happening, and one of them is the Fine Arts Competition.  While I did not make it in this year, I will be going to check out the great works by over 300 talented artists, and you can too, as there are still some tickets available on certain dates to view the works at the fairgrounds.  They are also on display virtually for all to see too.  Just go to https://www.mnstatefair.org/competitions/fine-arts/

From today through Labor Day, you can also get a one of the limited edition, archival quality giclee prints of my past 2 entries that made it into the competition at 10% off and I’ll be donating 10% to the Friends of the BWCA too!

https://www.etsy.com/shop/afsonnek


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Reblog and add a photo of your sweet smoke spot and on the 25th I will pick a winner. 

-Follow@smokinjsllc
-Reblog with your photo
-Tag JsSmokeSpot

Transgender murders: 2017 off to a horrific start

018-transgender-deaths
LEXIE CANNES STATE OF TRANS — Although I no longer actively track transgender murders, a visit to the Transgender Violence group page on Facebook indicates that the rate of trans murders since the start of the year appears to be as horrific as it ever was. With the current state of presidential politics dominating our news feeds, it is all too easy for the killings of our transgender brothers and…

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badlands cloud porn

©cpleblow (2022)

come on dude! can’t you see I am eating?

©cpleblow (2022)

general, you go down there.

©cpleblow (2022)

bad bad bad lands…

©cpleblow (2022)

Corn Palace, exterior, Mitchell, S. D. [South Dakota] (LOC)

Corn Palace, exterior, Mitchell, S. D. [South Dakota] (LOC) by The Library of Congress
Via Flickr:
Bain News Service,, publisher. Corn Palace, exterior, Mitchell, S. D. [South Dakota] 1908 (date created or published later by Bain) 1 negative : glass ; 5 x 7 in. or smaller. Notes: Forms part of: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress). Title from data provided by the Bain News Service on the negative. Subjects: Mitchell, South Dakota Format: Glass negatives. Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see George Grantham Bain Collection - Rights and Restrictions Information www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/274_bain.htmlRepository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.printPart Of: Bain News Service photograph collection (DLC) 2005682517 General information about the George Grantham Bain Collection is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.ggbainHigher resolution image is available (Persistent URL):hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ggbain.02201Call Number: LC-B2- 473-3


–I was surprised to find out this was in South Dakota.  When I first scrolled upon the photo I was expecting it to be somewhere in Russia.

Burial service of High Lee in South Dakota. Chinese mourners with spectators in background. Photogra

Burial service of High Lee in South Dakota. Chinese mourners with spectators in background. Photographed in 1891 by John C. H. Grabill.


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