

The mainstream side of the story:
http://globalnews.ca/news/907817/40-arrested-police-vehicles-burned-as-rcmp-clash-with-nb-shale-gas-protesters/
Since that initial coverage, global news has taken a more balanced approach, but almost all the articles since have still had the classic picture of burning cars.
Here is the native side of the story:
Here is the hippy side of the story:
http://earthfirstjournal.org/newswire/2013/10/17/update-full-invasion-force-arrives-at-mikmaq-blockade/
Unfortunately, if you want the other side of media coverage, one needs to travel to England (discounting the Amateur Photographers Try News channel).
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/oct/21/new-brunswick-fracking-protests
The image of burning police cars played endlessly on the evening news. Television and talk radio blared out reports of "clashes" between police and indigenous protestors. Last Thursday in New Brunswick near the Elsipogtog First Nation, we were told the government had enforced an injunction against a blockade of a US shale gas company. There was nothing about the roots of a conflict years in the making. An appeal to the stereotype of indigenous violence was enough: once again, the natives were breaking the law; the police had to be sent in. Catching the headlines, Canadian could shake their heads and turn away their gaze.
But smoke and flames from police cars can only hide the truth for so long. The exact chronology is not yet settled, but this much is clear: on Thursday morning someone in government sanctioned the Canadian police to invade a peaceful protest site like an army. In a dawn raid, snipers crawled through the forest, putting children and elders in their cross-hairs. Police carried assault rifles and snarling dogs, and sprayed tear gas and shot rubber-type bullets. The result was predictable: shocked and enraged people, a day ending in chaos.
Of course, the truth is:

In a small community, where everyone knows everyone, did they really think something like this wouldn`t be reported?
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and just because everyone loves these kinds of images:

To finish off, if you like petitions:
http://you.leadnow.ca/petitions/tell-the-rcmp-don-t-violently-intervene-in-peaceful-first-nations-protests?source=facebook-share-button&time=1382096785
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I am not anti-fracking. I don`t even care that much about treaty rights, although they are a major complex in this country, that I should know more about.
This is about Crown land, which is jointly shared by the Queen and the Canadian people, being handed over to Texan millionaires. f*ck Texan millionaires. That land is better used for camping. Only 97% of the land in Canada is allowed for camping. Let`s make it 100.