 Mine is a whole new ballgame. The rocks don't grow back like the trees do. It's displacement and dislocation from your area. It's displacement of our communities, destruction of our sacred lands, and insufficient food supply, as well as water. There are also psychological stress, especially in indigenous women. Whatever your project is, if it's a mine or forestry, is it going to help us become a stronger nation? If a mine was going to come into our area, to be able to look at where we were as a community and a nation, when our language was intact and our culture connected to the land, to where we are now after colonization, and then ask the question of where we want to be in the future. Is this project going to help you get there? These women are really living the principles of the rights that are enshrined in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. They are living free, prior and informed consent by working with their communities to help them understand the implications of resource extraction and to make informed decisions. And they're trying to have those decisions heard and they're trying to have those decisions heard and they're trying to have those decisions heard and they're trying to have those decisions heard and respected as they should given the UN Declaration commitments. And so women are at the forefront of those struggles. They are standing up for life and for their communities and for a sustainable future. We as Indigenous Peoples of the world hold the key to the continuation of life on this planet. I just feel empowered. I feel that when women join their hands together for our beloved mother, the Earth, that she will be our greatest ally.