A Pardon for the Hammonds

Trump ends the saga, for now. The tyrannical acts of the Bureau of Land Management will likely go unpunished, but at least the punishment visited on the family -- one of whom is 76 years old -- will halt for a while.

UPDATE: The AP says this move "rais[es] concerns that it will encourage others to actively oppose federal control of public land, which is a sensitive issue in the U.S. West where the federal government owns almost 50 percent of the land."

Concerns, or hopes, as the case may be.

4 comments:

ymarsakar said...

The USA, land of the brave or perhaps land of the slaves that think they are free while they operate on government land...

This issue of the feds owning that much land has certain... issues that Americans aren't aware of. But Trum was aware of some of it because he watches Alex Jones.

ymarsakar said...

The AP, as usual, is low balling the numbers for ideological reasons. Check Nevada or Utah fed ownership ratio.

What they don't tell the public, because most of them are ignorant whether it is top or bottom, is that the US black groups can build any base or bunker or project in those lands so long as they are self funded and not funded by Congress.

There is no way to oversight a black military or intel group that is funded by their own banks and economic trade networks.

These bases are on these fed owned land, without the knowledge of approval of the red indians or anybody else. That is because they don't get a say any more than Congress gets a say.

ymarsakar said...

Trum's Space Force is a pretty large clue. These people want to come out in the open, since some of them are patriots (apparently).

The technology given to civilians to use is no where close to what the black ops groups and military R/D uses.

E Hines said...

The AP says this move "rais[es] concerns that it will encourage others to actively oppose federal control of public land....
Concerns, or hopes, as the case may be.


Beat me to it. I was wondering "what's the downside of that?" as I read the first statement.

Eric Hines