This
Land Is Our Land: American Democracy, At A
Theater Near You
By
Finian Cunningham
January 17, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"RT"
-
Ever since armed white ranchers took over
federal property in Oregon the unfolding drama
has resembled a parody of a Hollywood Western.
Trouble is, no-one is quite sure who’s wearing
the white hats as opposed to the black ones.
Then, among the squabbling commotion over land
rights, along comes a native American tribe to
remind everyone of a much bigger perspective: If
anyone deserves ownership of the disputed
prairie it is surely the people who roamed it
15,000 years ago before the white man even set
foot on the North American continent.
When the
Paiute Indians entered the fray with their
claim, it had the effect of stunning the
protagonists with its truthful impact. The US
media generally appeared to ignore the
historical larger picture, as if the reality was
too hot to handle.
The New
York Times admittedly reported
the natives’ grievance as a main story on one of its
inside pages, with the headline: “Paiute Indians
Assert Legacy on Occupied Wildlife Refuge Land”.
But the way the Times presented the story was
curious. Despite the headline, the Indian viewpoint
was buried in the bottom half of the article, with
the top half giving prominence to the views of the
local white community on the stand-off between the
armed ranchers and the federal authorities.
But let’s
rewind “the movie” a bit. When the Bundy boys first
rode into the small town of Burns, Oregon, they
proceeded to forcibly take over a federal
government-owned wildlife sanctuary. Ammon Bundy and
brother Ryan have been holed up now for more than
three weeks on the federal reserve. Dozens of other
ranchers toting assault rifles have joined them in
their siege.
The
ranchers say that “big government” in
Washington has for years confiscated too much land
across the Western states of Oregon, Nevada,
Colorado and Arizona, among others. They say their
livelihoods are at risk because of the restricted
land use. As a result, it is claimed, they are
making a stand against a “tyrannical”
federal government and “defending the US
constitution”.
This is not
the first time the ranchers’ grievances have gone up
against the state. In 2014, the Bundy boys’ father,
Cliven, gained national notoriety for leading an
armed standoff against federal agents in the state
of Nevada over a cattle grazing row. Famously, he
forced the feds to back down and hence became
something of a folklore hero for many Americans who
feel the government in Washington has become a
behemoth trampling on their “constitutional rights”.
This is
where the story takes a sinister twist. The Bundys
and the ranchers have become a rallying point for
far-right militias who see practically every action
on behalf of the government as a “communist plot”.
Typically, the militias are also big advocates of
gun rights and view any attempt by the Obama
administration to curb firearms as a conspiracy to
disarm the population in order to extend its
“tyranny” against them.
Another
noxious aspect is the white ranchers have espoused
repugnant racist views. When Cliven Bundy made his
stand against the feds back in 2014, he also ranted
in media interviews about how African-Americans
would be better off picking cotton on slave
plantations instead of parasiting off the state
government through welfare handouts. Fox News and
their right-wing pundits were obliged to disown
Bundy at that point for going too far.
Nevertheless,
the white ranchers and their land claims have
remained a mobilizing issue for right-wing
politicians and media in the US. Fox News has given
the latest standoff in Oregon copious coverage in
support of the Bundys and the other armed occupiers.
Large sections of the Republican Party have also
rallied to their cause.
There is
more than a sneaking suspicion that the increasingly
fascistic US right-wing is using the Oregon siege as
a gambit which is tantamount to a call for armed
revolt against the Obama administration. Listening
to the Republican Party presidential debates led by
arch-reactionaries Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, it is
clear that the American right has become ever more
extreme to the point of embracing fascism.
The way
that the Oregon ranchers are being lionized in the
right-wing American media has the hallmarks of
veiled treason against the elected government in
Washington.
That is
probably why the federal authorities have stood back
from the siege at the Oregon wildlife sanctuary.
Mindful of a Waco-style shootout, Washington doesn’t
want a violent showdown which could inflame
anti-government sentiments, giving the secessionist
current even more momentum.
Double standards
regarding race?
The
indulgence of the federal authorities towards what
is an armed trespass of government property,
including destruction, has in turn prompted wider
grievances. The Muslim, Latino and Black communities
have rightly pointed out that if the occupiers were
non-white, then the FBI and military Special Forces
would have raided the compound within days, very
probably with lethal consequences for the occupiers.
The
egregious double standard is further underlined by
the local community in Burns saying
that they don’t want the militia coming to their
area. Schools have been shut out of fear of
impending violence and children have reportedly been
living in terror as a direct result of the ranchers’
occupation. The legal definition of the occupation
falls very close to that of terrorism – but because
it’s carried out by a bunch of white folks, then the
law enforcement agencies effectively turn a blind
eye.
The story is
germane to how American politics, generally, has
become something of surreal parody. Riven with
contradictions, double standards, sentimentalism and
hypocrisy bereft of any historical perspective.
The white
ranchers are oblivious to the fact that they
acquired their homesteads by exterminating native
Americans. The ranchers have also got rich over
decades from receiving government
subsidies to support their cattle farming.
Cliven Bundy is reckoned to owe over $1 million in
unpaid grazing fees to the Bureau of Land
Management. So much for his tirade against Black
welfare queens.
As for the
Washington government. Yes, it is a tyranny. But not
in the way that the ranchers would see it. The
annual federal expenditure of $600 billion on
military budget while a fraction is spent on health,
education and social infrastructure is a sure sign
of an oppressive bureaucracy that is indeed way out
of control. But taking up arms against this
monstrosity by racists, white supremacists and
fascists who denounce Washington and its war
criminals as “communists” is not the answer
either.
The
United States has lost its way, politically and
intellectually. Grievances and disillusionment are
mounting among disparate groups. However, few seem
to understand who or what is the
“enemy of the people”.
Maybe that
is because from its very origins the US has been
doomed to live in denial. The modern state has been
built on genocide of the native people – a genocide
that is still barely acknowledged. And let’s not
forget the genocide by white Anglo-American
corporate capitalism continues in the form of
ongoing dispossession of native people by
Washington-endorsed mining companies in Arizona,
Utah, Colorado and New Mexico; it continues in the
form of overseas wars for regime change in the
Middle East, Africa and Eurasia.
American
consciousness of their system’s diabolical,
destructive nature has been all but obliterated.
Democracy has been projected on to a fictitious
screen of good guy and bad guys. The people watch as
impotent spectators, no longer even aware of the
real story out there.
inian
Cunningham (born 1963) has written extensively on
international affairs, with articles published in
several languages. Originally from Belfast, Northern
Ireland, he is a Master’s graduate in Agricultural
Chemistry and worked as a scientific editor for the
Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England,
before pursuing a career in newspaper journalism.
For over 20 years he worked as an editor and writer
in major news media organizations, including The
Mirror, Irish Times and Independent. Now a freelance
journalist based in East Africa, his columns appear
on RT, Sputnik, Strategic Culture Foundation and
Press TV.
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