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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCharles Pierce: Republicans: Party of Sedition and Cop-Killing?
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/24307-focus-republicans-party-of-sedition-and-cop-killingAre you happy now, Wayne LaPierre? Are you happy now, Glenn Beck, and Alex Jones, and Dana Loesch, and everyone else who gins up thoughts of armed insurrection for the purposes of profits and ratings and their personal dreams of vicarious revolution? Are you happy now, all you Open Carry nitwits and weekend Robespierres and suburban Minuteman idiots who believe in the FEMA camps and the New World Order and all the other paranoid delights that have made those radio people into wealthy parasites and the rest of you into the most laughable suckers on the planet?
Are you all happy now?
People working for the Bureau Of Land Management are getting shot. It has cascaded, as most forms of madness do, from the weaponized performance art of the Bundy Ranch to threats along the highways of Utah that were so severe that the BLM people took the insignia off their uniforms, to this guy, Brent Douglas Cole, who shot a BLM agent and a Nevada highway patrolman, and who apparently is something of a lifer at the gun-crazy crackpot business.
Cole, according to The Union in Nevada City, has had numerous run-ins with law enforcement, including several other weapons-related incidents. The most recent of these occurred on Jan. 26, when he was arrested by Nevada County sheriff's deputies and charged with carrying a concealed weapon. Cole also has a history of indulging in far-right conspiracies on the Internet. At one site, he described himself as a "sovereign American Citizen attempting to thwart the obvious conspiracy and subterfuges of powers inimical to the United States." On his Facebook page, he has posted a number of conspiracy-related stories, including pieces describing the so-called "Bilderburger conspiracy" to control the world and various "Federal Reserve" conspiracy pieces. Likewise, his Twitter account is full of posts with a similar conspiracist bent.
Can't imagine where he picked up all those notions.
The conservative movement in this country has spent the last two decades empowering the polite corridors of Bedlam while winking suggestively at all the denizens of the Chronic ward. This flirtation becomes more vigorous every time a Democratic president gets elected and it's been positively lascivious since the inauguration of this particular Democratic president in 2009. (Ooh, I know why! Call on me!) Just yesterday, we had a report about a conference co-sponsored by the Heritage Foundation at which all manner of conspiratorial lunacy was let fly, and all of it was no more or less nutty than what Mr. Cole there spouted onto social media
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muriel_volestrangler
(101,405 posts)Some fear that language could be viewed as a justification for violence against Bureau of Land Management authorities or other federal agents who try to enforce laws on federal lands within the county.
The resolution says that federal officials who intend to exercise law enforcement powers shall first declare to the county sheriff their intent to enter Carbon County and then get permission to do so.
Carbon County now joins LaVerkin in the tinfoil hat world. LaVerkin, you might recall, once passed a resolution banning the U.N. from the southern Utah city.
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/58079117-90/county-carbon-utah-corrections.html.csp
The resolution was passed unanimously by 2 Reps and a Dem, on June 5th.
malaise
(269,256 posts)They can do what they want
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/18/terror-suspects-arrested/10783459/
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Two Texas men have been arrested on charges of supporting terrorism.
Rahatul Ashikim Khan of the Austin suburb of Round Rock and Michael Todd Wolfe of Austin, both 23, face up to 15 years in federal prison if convicted of conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, according to the federal Justice Department and the Central Texas Joint Terrorism Task Force. Both men were arrested Tuesday and have a hearing scheduled Friday.
Khan is accused of conspiring to recruit people in 2011 to travel overseas to support terrorist activities. Wolfe planned to travel to Syria to help radical groups fighting there, according to the criminal complaints filed against them.
Khan is a full-time University of Texas student who said in an online chat room that he was recruiting fighters for "jihad," an Arabic term sometimes used to mean holy war, the complaint said. He was born in Bangladesh but became a U.S. citizen in 2002.
A separate complaint accuses Wolfe, a Houston native, of arranging to fly with his family to Turkey so he could enter neighboring Syria and fight there. An arrest affidavit details how undercover FBI investigators developed a relationship with him and his wife, Jordan Nicole Furr, beginning in August.