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Cliven Bundy’s anti-government militia members are “locked and loaded” in response to President Obama’s designation on Wednesday that 300,000 acres of land around Gold Butte will be deemed a national monument.
“Saddle Up!!!!! President Obama just designated the Bundy Ranch a national monument today! Get your gear ready,” read a Facebook post by Jon Ritzheimer, one of the men who captured Oregon’s Malheur National Wildlife Refuge for nearly six weeks in 2015. Posters on the Cliven Bundy’s Army! Facebook group responded to the news with ominous comments. “This
makes me sick. The government does not know their place. Nothing can
keep them in line anymore. Have we lost our republic?” whined Joshua
Martinez. “Locked and loaded ready to go. Tired of this crap and time to do something.” threatened Chris Border. When
a poster named Neil Wampler wrote, “HA ! More fun and excitement !
We’ll just un-designate em,” Bill Goode (who originally posted the news
to the group) responded, “Neil, I sincerely hope it will be that simple.
It may take another Malheur.” After Wampler asked how the locals are
responding to the news, Goode informed him that “Locals want to wait
& see what Trump will do. However, I fear the BLM [Bureau of Land
Management] may round up Bundy cattle again before Trump takes office.
The Gold Butte monument covers about 1/3 of the former grazing allotment
used by the Bundys. Bundy herd is not as big as it was, so perhaps they
can get by until 20 Jan, if BLM doesn’t round up the cattle.” “So far it’s just been a lot of posturing,” said JJ MacNab, an expert on American anti-government extremism, in an interview with Vocativ. “But members of these groups are looking for something to happen. They don’t really care what it is.” The designation of the Gold Butte National Monument was part of a larger conservationist plan
implemented by President Obama on Wednesday. In addition to the 300,000
acres outside of Las Vegas, Obama also designated 1.35 million acres in
the Four Corners region of Utah as the Bears Ears National Monument.
The purpose of both these designations is to protect the lands from
energy development and other exploitative practices, while respecting
the interests of both Native American tribes and environmentalists...more
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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