The recent call to war against the pipeline included a link [tinyurl.com/mvprfuckers] to a map of the mountain valley pipeline under construction including currently under construction and completed sections.
Acessing this in any other way than through the TOR network would be dangerous.
Using a Tails USB would be recommended over a tor browser installed on your daily machine, as state and other adversarial surveillance techniques have become increasingly adept at fingerprinting identities using solely the browser.
However, the map is an ArcGIS web application which blocks traffic from known TOR relays and bridges. Meaning if you attempt to simply use TOR to access it you will find that you can’t.
Many other websites also have these restrictions, sometimes you can click the button that says “new tor circuit for this site” continually until the website allows you to continue, but more often than not you will find that it will never let you through no matter how many times you refresh, build new circuits, or curse.
This is where TOR bridges become useful. TOR bridges are not publicly listed and are built specifically to allow people with otherwise censored internet access to bypass censorship and to hide that they are using TOR/onion services from people monitoring their internet.
You can configure bridges by using a built-in bridge, which is unlikely to bypass censorship or obsfuscate traffic well enough to hide your access to the tor network.
You can also, request a private bridge from the tor project which should bypass most efforts of problematic censorship and help resist government surveillance.
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