Never
too old to learn - Indians By Jim
Beers, retired FWS May 13, 2007
As I organize my notes from my recent trip to a
symposium in Oregon I am pondering how much an old
duffer can learn about something as old and
familiar as baseball and my grandmothers cooking.
Before I can put down all that took place on my
trip; my talk, the folks I met, the other
speakers, the issues coiling around Northeastern
Oregon like a smiling boa constrictor; I must
first mention Indians.
Since my retirement from the US Fish and Wildlife
Service many years ago now I have spoken all over
the country and helped in various ways all manner
of rural residents, animal owners, and
recreationists being threatened and harmed by
bureaucrats, politicians, and radical
environmental and animal rights organizations.
Quite often the mix of problems faced by these
people has included Indian reservation claims,
Indian land claims for things like "burial
grounds", "holy sites", and other "culturally
important lands" in the mix of threatening
factors.
Having read a lot over the (many) years about
history and having lived near a reservation in
North Dakota, and having had numerous law
enforcement encounters with Indians from Minnesota
to Utah over the years: I assumed I knew about
Indians. I was sympathetic to their "plight" and,
like other historically abused minorities, ignored
the current debilitating effects of decades of
government and societal treatment as inferiors
that could not "make it" unless "helped" by
preferences, special government support, and a
separate society to confirm their resentments and
sense of always having been abused and mistreated.
When Indian land claims and numerous conflicts
with local communities and their government have
come to my attention during my efforts to help
rural residents and animal owners and users I
mistakenly dismissed them as just one more Indian
incident like the Alaska Native Claims Settlement
Act affair when I worked for the government and
the Minnesota Indians' conflict with the State of
Minnesota over walleyes and wild rice years ago.
It is now beginning to dawn on me how wrong I have
been.
Indian land claims and aggressiveness toward
off-reservation communities are increasingly
coincidental with Federal programs to close down
public lands to public uses like hunting and
fishing and grazing and logging and recreation and
access and the management of renewable natural
resources and the elimination of revenues from the
public lands to help pay for the management of
such "public lands". Whether it is "Wilderness"
proposals or "cooperative agreements" with
agencies, or new "joint operations" of things like
hatcheries; increasingly Indian entities benefit
before any details are available to local
communities and requests for "why" are answered by
government silence or a knowing bureaucrats smile.
Likewise, as The Nature Conservancy silently buys
lands and offers easements while Land Trusts herd
rural landowners through sales schemes borrowed
from timeshare salesmen. Certain "targeted" areas
from Maine to Florida and Connecticut and Oregon
are experiencing increased Indian claims and
Indian social aggressiveness under the guise of
reclaiming their history. I used to think this was
just coincidence. Now, looking back, an old law
enforcement officer like me should have been more
alert about any "coincidence". Believing in
coincidences is for suckers.
Consider the following:
- Indians are exempt from the provisions of the
McCain-Feingold election contribution law.
- Indian tribes are empowered by the Dawes Act
(1930's) to claim and have jurisdiction over ALL
children of that tribe. This has allowed ruling
Tribal governments (very similar to Democratic
"machines" in many large cities) to both seize and
threaten the children of political opponents and
to "break the arms" of a white mother (per an
"Indian judge) of an illegitimate tribal child
being held by the white mother in an Indian court.
- Indian reservations are checkerboard affairs
mostly and the "governments" "rule" non-Indians
who neither can vote for them or have a say in
their policies.
- Indians have Millions (Billions?) of dollars
from casinos. They and their underworld gambling
partners spread the money around to get new casino
sites
(based on specious claims of "ancestral rights")
in present-day cities and other "high volume"
casino locations.
- Indians spend millions to stop other tribes from
getting a new casino site that would compete with
another Indian casino.
- When Jack Abramoff "bought" Federal politicians
with Millions of dollars, the money all came from
Indians buying influence. Was any Indian blamed?
Was there any "backlash" like there would be if
North Korea or Ted Turner or Exxon gave Abramoff
millions to "buy" Federal politicians? Why?
Because Indians are "victims"? Because Indians are
not responsible like the rest of us (with a couple
of glaring exceptions)?
- Why does everyone shrug and go along when
Indians "claim" this site or that?
- Does anyone care that Federal Wilderness
designations or Forest Service "Roadless" policies
or other Federal land closures keep the
descendants of early American pioneers or ranchers
or farmers from the graves of their ancestors?
Does anyone care that a planned expansion (2
Counties, ½ million acres of private property) of
Ft. Carson in SE Colorado for an artillery range
while the Federal government owns ½ BILLION acres
or 25% of the nation will mean blown-up gravesites
of the people that MADE THIS NATION (not some
primitive tribe) great or that their descendants
will be denied visits or "services"? Why?
- One tribe that has sued the federal government
for poor record keeping has been offered $7
Billion but wants $140 Billion. Many other tribes
are expecting to follow suit.
- Indians claim that the "right" to hunt and fish
equates with the "privilege" to hunt and fish and
some camp on private property and threaten and
defy owners to evict them. Law enforcement turns a
blind eye in almost every instance.
- Indian robberies and break-ins on non-Indians in
many rural areas are treated differently than when
non-Indians are perpetrators, that is they are not
prosecuted.
- Indians increasingly sell untaxed cigarettes and
fireworks in defiance of state laws over
ever-expanding areas further eroding State
Constitutional authorities.
- Indian "donations" to state and Federal
politicians are enormous and unnoticed and
unmentioned thanks to casino profits that grease
mobs as well as the politicians.
So what does this old wildlife biologist hope to
gain by writing about something "he knows nothing
about"? He must be a bigot. Not at all. My mother
is buried next to a chapel on an Indian
reservation.
Ask yourself, why do Indian "claims coincide with
"destroying" dams on the Columbia River? With
shutting down Klamath irrigators? With the Federal
takeover of the Everglades, Eastern Oregon,
Western Montana? With wolf protection in Idaho?
With Federal chicanery to control Eastern
Connecticut Rivers and roads? With TNC campaigns
in Maine? With law enforcement on National
Forests? With operation of new Federal fish
hatcheries? With operation of National Wildlife
Refuges? With wolf protection or salmon
"management"?
Whether you subscribe to the "coincidence" theory
or the "conspiracy" theory, one thing is sure. As
rural communities are threatened and disrupted by
the Federal government (whether for extinct
woodpeckers or owls or wolves or grizzlies or
black bears) or for new National Parks or
Wilderness closures or Forest shutdowns of roads
and logging and grazing and hunting and fishing
and camping or by the "Non-government" behemoths
like The Nature Conservancy or the Land Trusts
buying land or selling easements
(to be "monitored" by Federal satellites): the
various tribes see opportunities.
Opportunities to further disrupt the rural
communities to get more Indian claim lands by
"cooperating" with and to the advantage of the
Federal bureaucracies and their radical partners.
Also, the locals are less able to fend off the
takeover of land and rights while they try to
understand and oppose what the Federal government
is doing. It is a vacuum that Tribes manipulate to
their advantage while amoral bureaucrats and
radicals manipulate the Tribes with offers of
"partnerships" and "joint ventures" to their
advantage. Remember that the Federal oversight of
Tribes is the Secretary of the Interior, the same
guy or gal that controls their Federal dollars;
the same person that is being sued for gazillions
of dollars for not keeping good books; the same
person behind the Wilderness and Endangered
Species and National Parks oppression; AND THE
SAME PERSON THAT ENABLES TRIBES TO GET NEW CASINO
LICENSES AND LOCATIONS. At least it isn't the same
guy that got them their exemption from
McCain-Feingold oppression that unconstitutionally
restricts the rest of us, that guy is running for
President.
I guess if I was asked I would say that Indians,
like every other "minority" would be best served
by becoming American citizens that sink or swim
like the rest of us that must rely on hard work
and sacrifice. However that is not why I wrote
this. The Indian phenomenon of 2007 is an integral
part of the Federal
(bureaucrat/politician)/State/radical coalition
that is threatening rural America and ultimately
the nation as a Republic. They are part of the
Federal power growth and State power elimination
growing in this country. They are an important
part of what is killing hunting and fishing and
ranching and grazing and logging and dog and horse
ownership and rural economies. They are committed
to eliminating rural American life even more than
most radical environmentalist and animal rights
extremist organizations. Their goal is their own
aggrandizement just as the radicals and
bureaucrats and politicians only see their own
benefits.
I am writing this because this self-evident fact
has stunned me because it has been right before my
face for years but I just didn't see it, like
Poe's Purloined Letter. I guess it is true that
you are never too old to learn new things, even if
they have been there all the time. But we must
heed this lesson and take it into account as we
try to "save" our Constitutional rights and
traditions and the Republic.
Jim Beers
13 May 2007
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- This article and other recent articles by Jim
Beers can be found at
http://jimbeers.blogster.com (Jim Beers Common
Sense)
- Jim Beers is available for consulting or to
speak. Contact:
[email protected]
- Jim Beers is a retired US Fish & Wildlife
Service Wildlife Biologist, Special Agent, Refuge
Manager, Wetlands Biologist, and Congressional
Fellow. He was stationed in North Dakota,
Minnesota, Nebraska, New York City, and Washington
DC. He also served as a US Navy Line Officer in
the western Pacific and on Adak, Alaska in the
Aleutian Islands. He has worked for the Utah Fish
& Game, Minneapolis Police Department, and as a
Security Supervisor in Washington, DC. He
testified three times before Congress; twice
regarding the theft by the US Fish & Wildlife
Service of $45 to 60 Million from State fish and
wildlife funds and once in opposition to expanding
Federal Invasive Species authority. He resides in
Centreville, Virginia with his wife of many
decades.
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