Campfires and Candelabras
Antiquities Act Reversal Policy
Point of Light
By Stephen L. Wilmeth
We sat
through a video auction Thursday.
The results
were certainly not indicative of any Bell Ringer even though that was the name
ostensibly applied to the sale. We sold part of our calves and now face the
music of concluding the conditions of the transaction. We will do that and
another crop of our red calves will travel deeper into the inner workings of
the cow business to eventually be harvested and or contribute to the bounty of
the American table.
These are
bitter sweet moments.
That
evening, I chose to sit in front of the fire and was drawn into its warmth and
serenity. The TV was turned off and only quiet prevailed. For a few moments, it
was a retreat from the world, and, in that, I found comfort.
Campfires and Candelabras
So many
times in life, the fireplace or a campfire have provided that same warmth and
serenity. Candlelight offers a semblance of that comfort even though it may be
overshadowed by place and events. In another life, there was a dinner I ate
alone at the Conrad just under the tram on Victoria Peak
in Hong Kong. Hong Kong
at night is one of the world’s great experiences. At that time, before the
Chinese reunification, it had to be the cleanest city I have ever witnessed.
The lights were at once subdued and yet magnificent. The flight down from Taiwan had
concluded an objectionable experience of collecting debt on a table grape deal
gone bad. The whole experience including the pollution and chaos of Taipei had changed as the
plane settled into the basin formed by Hong Kong
on one side of Victoria
Harbor and Kowloon and the Chinese
mainland to the north on the other.
The scene
was truly breathtaking.
That
impression didn’t change when I checked into the Conrad and rode the elevator
to some upper floor and the room. There I stood looking out over the city. I
showered and decided I needed to eat something. I wound up in the one of the
restaurants in the hotel staring at a crystal candelabra and a huge marble ball
elevated in suspension and propelled in a rolling motion by water. After awhile,
the glowing candelabra gained my attention and I ate alone in a place more
foreign than the actual miles from the Gila River
and my boyhood and preferred home.
What a far
cry that source of light was from that previous fall when Dusty and I had
chosen to hunt Schoolhouse
Mountain. We had hunted
hard without any success only to get caught in a wind driven rain and sleet
storm that soaked us to the bone. We remedied our problem by building a
veritable bonfire and stripping to dry our clothes and warm our bodies. There
we stood turning trying to warm one side before we froze the other. We laughed
while we were reminded what a great chapter that little episode would mean in
our book of experiences.
On another
hunt on Granny Mountain, we arrived at the campsite in
time to put things together before an all night rain storm set in. We built a
fire in the stove and sat there warm and dry and listened to the rain pummel
the tent. No symphony was more impressive than that night listening to the
river to our backs, the rain overhead, and the crackling fire before us.
That was
the same tent Steve (the Steven one) joined Dusty and I on a hunt in Woodland Park. It was cold, and, by the time the
fire played out, our breath in the tent replaced the stream of smoke out the
top of the stack. Sometime after midnight
what we think was a C-131 came over at treetop level scattering horses, mules
and our sleep in all directions. The cold had set in with earnest and we would
have been better off building a fire and waiting for daylight.
There were
many other, similar fires that never failed to subdue the anxiety, the failure/success
of the day, or the weariness/elation of the experience. Staring into a
crackling fire never fails to regenerate positive expectations. It is not just
therapeutic.
It is primordial … a point of light
that offsets the chaos all around.
Notice of Hinterland Final Policy
In the face of broad opposition from
local communities and elected officials without rings in their noses, this
government continues to transfer the Crown’s land from conditional multiple use
to conditional access for the subjects as if it was ordained by the great
mother Earth, herself, to save it all from intangible global warming Armageddon.
The Cascade-Siskiyou
National Monument is on
the table at the moment, and, before the 20th and inauguration day
finally gets here, there is no clue to what might be next.
Those of us who have witnessed the landscape
scale Valhalla harvests up close and personal
have to smile at the outbursts from the locals who finally have their day in
the barrel. As long as this fellow is in office and his SOI is in the enviable
position of creating outdoor wear and equipment sales potential for her future
business ventures at this rate of burn, there is nothing safe.
Even if we make it to January 20,
the Dems have vowed to do everything in their power to derail any glide path
back toward sanity. One of their bald headed transhumans, California governor “Moonbeam”
Brown, has served notice.
“We’ve got the scientists, we’ve
got the lawyers, and we’re ready to fight,” he threatened.
What we do know is that as long as
special interests are “dignified” at the expense of local communities, the knot
will tighten and the animosity toward the federal government will only grow.
True local interests must be heard and the unrelenting abuse of power by
bureaucrats and elected national leadership alike must be altered.
Summary:
We, the Western Hinterland Citizenry (WHC) announce the final Antiquities Act
(AA) Compensatory Reversal Policy. The new policy steps down and renounces
recent Executive Office, Department of Interior, and Service land designation
policies that reflect a shift from multiple use legislation and Constitutional
supremacy to bureaucratic and extra legal executive branch, landscape-scale
approaches of custom and culture destruction. The new policy is established to
recognize and install an equal footing doctrine that puts the West on a level
playing field with the original thirteen colonies and all subsequent states up to and including all states admitted to the Union east of the 100th
Meridian. This policy renounces all global warming mitigation, conservation
banking, in-lieu fee programs, and all third party NGO partnerships and
stresses the need to hold all constitutional interpretations to equivalent and
effective standards.
Point of light
In
retrospect, campfires have always had more appeal than the majority of
candelabras. Even huddling there trying to catch some warmth beside a
flickering fire, booted and spurred and bedecked with leggin’s, slicker, and
soaked sombrero, the preference of a naked, raw American West exceeds anything
I have ever known. I’ll take it every time. I’ll also take the kinship of those
who are similarly impacted by this way of life.
We can
manage our surroundings better than anybody. Our campfires and our Antiquity
Act Compensatory Reversal Policy form a place to start.
Stephen L. Wilmeth is a rancher from southern New Mexico. “President
Trump … don’t treat us like subjects.”
Wilmeth refers to the "Crown's land", equating federal land in the U.S. to those owned or controlled by the monarchy in the United Kingdom. Let's take a closer look at that.
Wilmeth refers to the "Crown's land", equating federal land in the U.S. to those owned or controlled by the monarchy in the United Kingdom. Let's take a closer look at that.
The United Kingdom contains 60 million acres. According to Wikipedia the Crown Estate owns just under 2 million acres of agricultural and forested land, or 3 percent of the total. Compare that to 29 percent in the U.S.
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