"I'm a sovereign human being, I stand under common law only" - Thread of Freemen

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My spy source on the right told me that these people's beef with Washington is also racist. They view Washington as serving urbanites esp. black people. This sovereignty shut is just wire men's entitlement. Patriotism entails subduing everything non-white. I say this because media often portray them as not racist in their concerns or motivations.

Fake Sam's Club (I M Losted), Monday, 4 January 2016 15:32 (ten years ago)

Sorry, New tablet. "White men's entitlement."

Fake Sam's Club (I M Losted), Monday, 4 January 2016 15:34 (ten years ago)

https://actionfast.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/bunk-mcnulty2.jpg

how's life, Monday, 4 January 2016 15:41 (ten years ago)

i've been seeing a lot of "if they were black or muslim they'd be dead" point scoring on social media today. feel like such commenters shouldn't give up hope yet - there's still a good chance for a federal massacre.

Mordy, Monday, 4 January 2016 16:39 (ten years ago)

i'm confused as to why this is being called a "standoff" since it doesn't sound like there's any law enforcement there for them to stand off with?

call all destroyer, Monday, 4 January 2016 16:45 (ten years ago)

maybe they've set up some cardboard cutouts that they can shout and shoot at

you're breaking the NAP (DJP), Monday, 4 January 2016 16:47 (ten years ago)

lol, that would be the best.

how's life, Monday, 4 January 2016 16:50 (ten years ago)

xxp from what i was reading before i think the matter is being handled by the fbi as of today, but this was referred to as a standoff prior to this involvement and it doesn't sound like anyone is really challenging these guys. i kind of wonder what would happen if they just ignore these fools and let them gesticulate until the media tires of the story and they militia eventually disbands.

INTOXICATING LIQUORS (art), Monday, 4 January 2016 17:30 (ten years ago)

yeah it got me thinking that ignoring them seems like a great idea.

call all destroyer, Monday, 4 January 2016 17:32 (ten years ago)

i guess this could force them to escalate but also it still isn't clear to me what specific demands could be satisfied (short of dissolution of the govt) to resolve this. given the relatively general form of their complaints i wonder how dedicated they are to sacrificing their bodies to the cause (such as it is)

INTOXICATING LIQUORS (art), Monday, 4 January 2016 17:38 (ten years ago)

people said the same thing about Occupy iirc

pizza rolls are a food that exists (silby), Monday, 4 January 2016 17:41 (ten years ago)

Pretty sure they're just trying to manufacture a crisis, hoping the Feds show up so they can start shooting then up the gadsten (sp?) flag bat signal for the other lunatics to come on down and exercise their second amendment rights

carthago delenda est (mayor jingleberries), Monday, 4 January 2016 17:41 (ten years ago)

some good background on their Mormom roots (even for a Buzzfeed article):

http://www.buzzfeed.com/jimdalrympleii/heres-what-you-need-to-understand-about-mormon-history-if-yo#.apGyjrexJ

sleeve, Monday, 4 January 2016 17:45 (ten years ago)

There's an interesting twitter feed that defined what these guys are doing as "enclosure" -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enclosure

Ie taking common land and turning it into private land, with its benefits going only to the now-owner instead of the society.

If authoritarianism is Romania's ironing board, then (in orbit), Monday, 4 January 2016 17:48 (ten years ago)

Exactly. It is OUR effete, urban, minority-loving government they are provoking. They are a bunch of conquistadores.That is the sort of nation they want to be patriotic about. That's why they will "never forget" September 11 th, but don't mourn the victims of the OKC bombing,nor do they care about federal personnel hurt by white extremists. War on Islam =OK, war on domestic threats not similarly patriotic. Then they get out their flag whenever a defenseless black person is shot by police,implying that Black Lives Matter are traitors.

Fake Sam's Club (I M Losted), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:01 (ten years ago)

people said the same thing about Occupy iirc

despite a lack of parallels elsewhere, occupy was a similarly unfocused protest that had goals too nebulous to distill into a series of explicit demands and was likewise pointed at the wrong targets and accomplished little/nothing

INTOXICATING LIQUORS (art), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:22 (ten years ago)

Calling it a protest, IMO, is playing into their hands. It's an armed confrontation. They are a terrorist group by any definition.

Fake Sam's Club (I M Losted), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:46 (ten years ago)

I mean, they think like fascist terrorists, they don't need to articulate goals. They have been looking for the opportunity to confront the government.

Fake Sam's Club (I M Losted), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:48 (ten years ago)

I'd call it more of a violent tantrum.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:50 (ten years ago)

Whoa - this is what the SPLC said:

"The sheriff reportedly received death threats for
not being a “constitutional sheriff,” standing up
what the antigovernment extremists brand as
the “tyranny of the U.S. Government,” and
offering sanctuary to the Hammonds –
something they didn’t request."

These people piss me off.

Fake Sam's Club (I M Losted), Monday, 4 January 2016 18:58 (ten years ago)

is the presence of guns the main objection? bc i could imagine worthy left wing causes occupying a space in order to create political change that would be championed here not derided and it seems like opposition to this is centered on it tactically (eg i have seen v few ppl discussing whether they have legitimate reasons to be upset about imminent domain and grazing laws, but lots of talk about how this is terroristic criminal behavior). i don't even need to imagine bc obv there have been tons of left wing activism movements that /have/ occupied spaces (and have even employed some level of violence in doing so). i bet some of them even protested imminent domain laws.

Mordy, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:00 (ten years ago)

like if the problem is that their goals seem inchoate i remember that was the right's v critique of occupy

Mordy, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:00 (ten years ago)

Sheriff David Ward said protesters came to Harney County, in southeastern Oregon, "claiming to be part of militia groups supporting local ranchers." In reality, he said, "these men had alternative motives to attempt to overthrow the county and federal government in hopes to spark a movement across the United States.”

In an interview with reporters late Saturday night posted on Facebook, Bundy said he and others occupied the building because "the people have been abused long enough."

"I feel we are in a situation where if we do not do something, if we do not take a hard stand, we'll be in a position where we'll be no longer able to do so," he said.

Bundy said of the park headquarters: "It is the people's facility, owned by the people, and it has been provided for us to be able to come together and unite in making a hard stand against this overreach, this taking of the people's land and resources."

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2016/01/03/militia-members-occupy-us-building-in-oregon-after-protest/78226600/

Bundy seems confused about the difference between a wildlife sanctuary and a community center, social hall, town square, or church basement, at the very least.

If authoritarianism is Romania's ironing board, then (in orbit), Monday, 4 January 2016 19:04 (ten years ago)

xxp EMINENT domain dude

I think the local outrage is primarily due to:

1. they are from out of state and not very welcome
2. past history of dumbass behavior by the Bundys
3. blatant kid-glove handling of the situation due to their race & privilege
4. it's a goddamn bird sanctuary
5. "ready to die" nonsense posturing

not all of these are believed by the same demographics imo

I could give a shit about the guns, everybody in Harney County has guns.

sleeve, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:06 (ten years ago)

thx for the correction. re "blatant kid-glove handling" like the federal gov did invade an armed compound when i was 9yo and killed a ton of ppl and it was a huge deal. WACO's whiteness didn't protect them in 94.

Mordy, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:08 (ten years ago)

93?

Mordy, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:09 (ten years ago)

I thought maybe you'd confused it with Ruby Ridge, but apparently that was 92. Didn't ANY of these hillbillies get ko'd in 1994?

how's life, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:11 (ten years ago)

xps

Grazing rights on Bureau of Land Management federal lands are extremely cheap and act as a subsidy to ranchers in the interest of cheaper meat for urban areas. If the ranchers were required to graze only on the land they owned or leased from a private owner, their costs would be enormously higher.

Nor are these people protesting eminent domain, in that the federal lands in question were never under private ownership, but were always public domain. The difference is that they have become more actively regulated by acts of Congress since 1910.

Finally, even if one accepted that there is some injustice being protested here, the solution being offered is to decentralize the state's monopoly on force so radically that local government would immediately regress to vigilantism and hooliganism.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 19:14 (ten years ago)

i'm of several minds about this

the Bundys are racist goons and their cause is one of the worst in american life. they've turned themselves into freelance antifederal celebrity protesters. Wesley Lowery's reporting has been great

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-nation/wp/2016/01/03/what-spurred-the-armed-occupation-of-a-federal-wildlife-refuge-in-southeast-oregon/

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/armed-activists-in-oregon-touch-off-unpredictable-chapter-in-land-use-feud/2016/01/03/17a45e5c-b272-11e5-a76a-0b5145e8679a_story.html

the Hammonds did their time for the crime committed -- arson in a federally owned forest (i'm a little unclear if it was a "national forest" or if than even matters tbh -- and, per Lowery, the community is largely hostile to the Bundy showboating

i really don't like this idea of mandatory minimums, so objecting to the Hammonds being brought back to jail for an extended sentence seems totally fair to me

there's a lot about federal land use out west that i'm not familiar with. i've seen lots of contradictory anecdotal stuff that the feds run those lands a) as a "welfare" program for the rural communities out there and b) for the benefit of the well-connected.

there's really more than enough hypocrisy to go around. tons of liberals saying these men would have been lit up if they were muslim or black while crowing for the gov't to do just that, which is just nauseating

again, the Hammonds are acquiescing to their punishment. the Bundys, whatever crimes they've committed here -- trespassing? weapons violations? -- don't really amount to sedition, no matter their self-regarding proclamations. this isn't captial crime territory.

it's worth mentioning that Cliven Bundy got his way in 2014. the federal BLM let him do whatever with his fucking cows. a bad precedent, it seems.

my memories of Waco are fuzzy but there were several dead FBI agents in the course of that thing, too...

goole, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:24 (ten years ago)

good summary, thx

sleeve, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:31 (ten years ago)

it's worth mentioning that Cliven Bundy got his way in 2014.the federal BLM let him do whatever with his fucking cows. a bad precedent, it seems.

i was wondering what had come of that. ugh.

big fat rascal (will), Monday, 4 January 2016 19:35 (ten years ago)

The [Hammonds] had been sentenced and served time previously, but on appeal a federal judge ruled that their initial sentences had been too short.

When you appeal to a higher court, you are seeking to overturn the outcome of your previous trial. That's what happened here, except it was overturned in order to extend the sentences for the arson they committed. The Hammonds took their chances on appeal and they are accepting the result. It is the 'militia' who are portraying this as tyranny, not the arsonists.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 19:39 (ten years ago)

i take that sentence to mean that it was prosecutors who had appealed the sentence, not the Hammonds

goole, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:41 (ten years ago)

The history of animosity between the BLM and Hammonds on the Bundy Ranch blog makes for an interesting read. Was pointed in that direction via a fb friend's comments string. I won't link to it, but google bundy ranch blog hammonds and that should get you there. Obviously slanted and desperately needs a fact-checker, apply salt to taste, etc.

xp: the re-sentencing came from a federal appeals panel.

The Oregonian (Portland Oregon)

February 8, 2014 Saturday
1M EDITION

Arsonists who did time face more

BYLINE: Helen Jung hj✧✧✧@oregon✧✧✧.c✧✧

SECTION: A; Pg. 07

LENGTH: 494 words

Two eastern Oregon men got off too lightly for setting fires on their ranch that spread to government lands and should be re-sentenced, a federal appeals panel said in an opinion issued Friday.

A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals determined that retired U.S. District Judge Michael Hogan illegally sentenced the father and son of the prominent Hammond ranching family in Harney County to terms below the five-year minimum.

“A minimum sentence mandated by statute is not a suggestion that courts have discretion to disregard,” Judge Stephen J. Murphy III wrote in the opinion. The panel found that the case should be sent back to the district court for another sentence.

Both Dwight Hammond Jr., 72, and his son, Steven D. Hammond, 44, were found guilty in 2012 of intentionally and maliciously setting fires in September 2001 near Steens Mountain, where they leased public land for livestock grazing. The fire consumed 139 acres of public land, taking it out of production for two growing seasons, the court said in its decision.

In addition, Steven Hammond was found guilty of setting fires on Krumbo Butte in August 2006 on the boundary of the Hammonds’ land. Despite a burn ban, the court noted, he said he set them to counteract fires sparked by lightning nearby. The fire consumed one acre of public land, according to the decision.

Prosecutors sought the five-year mandatory minimum prison term for both men, but Hogan sentenced the father to three months in prison and the son to one year and a day. Both have completed their terms, a lawyer for the family said.

According to a transcript from the October 2012 hearing, Hogan said imposing the five-year term would violate Eighth Amendment protections.

The Hammond sentencings were Hogan’s last before his retirement the following day after 39 years as a federal judge. “I will impose a sentence that I believe is defensible under the law, but also one that is defensible to my conscience,” he said at the hearing.

He said he didn’t believe Congress intended for the five-year minimum to apply to fires set in the wilderness. “It just would not be — would not meet any idea I have of justice, proportionality,” he said according to the transcript.

But the appeals panel disagreed.

“Even a fire in a remote area has the potential to spread to more populated areas, threaten local property and residents or endanger the firefighters called to battle the blaze,” Murphy wrote in the opinion. He noted that a teenage relative of the Hammonds was nearly burned by the fire and pointed out the damage to grazing land as well.

“Given the seriousness of arson, a five-year sentence is not grossly disproportionate to the offense,” the opinion states, in sending their cases back to the district court.

Larry Matasar, one of the attorneys for the family, said he is “very disappointed” by the opinion. He said he expects the Hammonds will ask the full 9th Circuit bench to reconsider the panel’s decision.

I mean, fuck the Bundy's anyway I hope they feel the tyrant's bootheel.

how's life, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:51 (ten years ago)

i'm totally cool w/ anyone who's like fuck the bundys and whatever they believe in. just annoyed w/ all the stupid arguments that are getting thrown around today about tactics and whether this should be called terrorism etc.

Mordy, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:54 (ten years ago)

xp oh it was Michael Hogan, what a surprise that he lowballed their sentences. glad he's gone, he was the worst.

sleeve, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:55 (ten years ago)

makes for an interesting read

I mean, in terms of a timeline of the history of the conflict and a litany of perceived aggressions.

how's life, Monday, 4 January 2016 19:56 (ten years ago)

The thing that makes this completely inscrutable to anyone who lives in a mostly-urbanized area is what these guys really think they have the right to do -- use publicly-owned resources for their own private profit, without compensating for use of the land.

I live in a part of the country that has a large agriculture economy and has virtually no government-owned or -managed land, outside of a handful of parks that are mostly recreation areas. The idea of having cattle just wandering around on land you don't own would be a crazy proposition -- even farms that raise animals in the free range fashion are doing so on land they own.

These guys are really arguing for the inverse of eminent domain, which is when the government takes over privately-owned property for an arguable public good. They want to have their property (animals) wandering around on land they don't own, feeding off of public land, and pay nothing for it. Or in the case of poaching, to just grab animals off public land.

If they want to argue the land belongs to "the people" then yeah, you're right, I'm one of those people as a US citizen. Pay for your damn resources.

μpright mammal (mh), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:03 (ten years ago)

they want to argue the land belongs to "the people" then yeah, you're right

But the bundys get to decide who are people and who aren't. Given their own words on the subject, blacks certainly don't qualify. Seems likely no one on ilx would meet their qualifications either.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:13 (ten years ago)

perhaps their movement can address that

in the meantime, the idea that there's public land that's not owned by anyone is an intriguing wild west idea that hasn't been the case for a long time.

μpright mammal (mh), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:19 (ten years ago)

give them the max. setting fire to public property seems like a GIANT WARNING SIGN that this person is a very real danger to civilized society. they even almost burned their teenage relative. idiots.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:20 (ten years ago)

relevant federal maps, for anyone who is interested:
http://nationalmap.gov/small_scale/printable/fedlands.html

μpright mammal (mh), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:22 (ten years ago)

http://nationalmap.gov/small_scale/printable/images/preview/fedlands/BLM_2.gif

μpright mammal (mh), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:23 (ten years ago)

hopefully most of that land is inhabited by people that don't lack the self-control of Beavis & Butthead

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:23 (ten years ago)

i.e. you, based on how much you appear to know about what's going on

flag post please (mattresslessness), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:25 (ten years ago)

Generally speaking federal lands are uninhabited. Some of it is leased on long term leases where there are inhabited dwellings, but this amounts to a tiny fraction of the whole.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:28 (ten years ago)

lots of links and history of this movement for your reading pleasure

http://www.hcn.org/articles/sagebrush-rebellion/

sleeve, Monday, 4 January 2016 20:31 (ten years ago)

there are a lot of legitimate reasons to set (controllable) fires in areas that you are using, whether as a break against wildfires or to clear dead areas for renewal, but again, it goes back to whether you have the legal right to that land and the authority to do whatever you want on it

μpright mammal (mh), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:33 (ten years ago)

there's an undeniable secessionist bent to the take-the-land-backers imo but it's sort of weird because they left behind the free labor supply.

worth noting that the BLM gets a lot of hate from the environmental left too, is accused of selling out especially to energy interests.

flag post please (mattresslessness), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:38 (ten years ago)

WACO's whiteness didn't protect them in 94.

― Mordy, Monday, January 4, 2016 2:08 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

The branch davidians were a multiracial group. 45 of the ~130 living in the waco compound were black.

big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Monday, 4 January 2016 20:38 (ten years ago)


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