Tribal police shut down a group of climate change activists who blockaded the sole route in and out of the Burning Man Festival in Nevada on Sunday after they say someone erroneously reported they were armed.

A coalition of individual activists under the name Seven Circles Alliance set up the blockade to protest the festival’s consumerism, which they said is antithetical to Burning Man’s counterculture origins. Members of the group chained themselves to a trailer in the road and had signs that read “Abolish capitalism” and “Mother Earth needs our help.”

In a statement Tuesday, the group alleged a responding Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribal Ranger told them, “I’m going to take you all out,” while pointing a gun.

“The excessive response is a snapshot of the institutional violence and police brutality that is being shown to anyone who is actively working to bring about systemic change within the United States, including the climate movement,” the statement said.

Seven Circles Alliance also said that a civilian falsely reported to the Rangers that the activists had a firearm.

Michelle Lhooq, a journalist embedded with the group, posted a video on X Sunday of a pickup belonging to a Pyramid Lake Rangers Station driving through the displays. In Hooq’s article for the Guardian, she reports that the blockade lasted for about 36 minutes before police intervened.

A longer, edited, video posted to YouTube by FreedomNews TV showed angry drivers attempting to move the blockade themselves in expletive-laden exchanges with protesters. It also shows rangers handcuffing the protesters, asking them about weapons.

“We’re nonviolent, please… we have no weapons at all,” one protestor yelled in the video, seemingly crying as a friend was held to the ground by two rangers. “We’re environmental protesters.”

The rangers were alerted to a group blocking the highway, the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe said in a statement Monday. Five activists were cited and released.

“One Ranger used his patrol vehicle to move the blockade debris out of the roadway to allow Burning Man traffic to proceed,” the tribe statement said. “The involved Ranger’s conduct is under review.”

Tribe Chairman James Phoenix didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Burning Man is a six-day festival of self-expression that culminates in the torching of a 40-foot effigy. The practice originated with the burning of an 8-foot wooden “man” in 1986 on San Fransisco’s Baker Beach that evolved into an annual event in Black Rock Desert.

The festival has its share of critics, including those who believe attendees have negative impacts on the land. According to NPR, the Bureau of Land Management capped the festival’s attendance in 2019 to 80,000 because of concerns regarding excess trash left behind and safety issues.

That same year the festival reportedly contributed 100,000 tons of carbon dioxide, the Guardian reported.

Burning Man organizers announced a commitment in 2019 to go carbon negative by 2030, not only promising to take on a “Leave No Trace” approach but to also become a “regenerative force for the planet.”

In a news release prior to the blockade, Seven Circles Alliance accused the festival organizers of “greenwashing” its event. The activists called on organizers to lose its “apolitical” stance by calling on attendees to commit to direct actions that would push climate change policy.

“The blockade is also in protest against the popularization of Burning Man among affluent people who do not live the stated values of Burning Man, resulting in the commodification of the event,” the release said. “The group emphasizes the current existential crisis and importance of honesty when social collapse is at risk.”

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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