国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Ammon Bundy delivers his remarks at the New Code of the West event.
Ammon Bundy delivers his remarks at the New Code of the West event. (Photo: Elliott D. Woods 2018)

Behind the Scenes at a Bundy Rally

Is the movement that sparked the 2016 takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge ready to age out?

Published: 
Ammon Bundy delivers his remarks at the New Code of the West event.
(Photo: Elliott D. Woods 2018)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

If there was a defining trait among the several dozen people who gathered recently to hear Ammon Bundy speak at the New Code of the West conference in Whitefish, Montana, it was their age鈥攐n average, well into eligibility for Social Security benefits. I don鈥檛 mention this to promote ageist ideas about who should be involved in political activism鈥攖he baby boomers comprise the 鈥攂ut rather to suggest that the 鈥淏undy movement,鈥 such as it exists, appears conspicuously long in the tooth.

The event was hosted by a Kalispell-based group called This West Is OUR West. The group鈥檚 founder, Lauralee O鈥橬eil, told me they spent $8,000 to rent the facility and provide a catered lunch. Perhaps it was the $150 price tag for the day鈥檚 event that kept younger attendees at bay, or perhaps it was a classic Montana scheduling conflict: Saturday, October 13, was the second-to-last day of big-game archery season. Whatever the reason, if the Whitefish event left me convinced of one thing, it鈥檚 that the Bundys and the fringe ideology they espouse has little purchase on young people鈥攁t least in this corner of the northern Rockies. And that ought to be encouraging to anyone who has worried in the nearly three years since the Bundys staged their takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Burns, Oregon, that a new and vigorous anti鈥損ublic land rebellion was catching fire. The opposite seems more likely. The Bundys鈥 antics鈥攁long with the efforts of the Trump administration and congressional Republicans to undermine environmental laws and regulations, shrink national monuments, and open millions of acres of public land and water to oil and gas development鈥攈ave galvanized a movement around environmental and conservation advocacy that is nonpartisan and transgenerational.

Ammon Bundy holds up a bronze star medal he says was given to him by a veteran during the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff in early 2016.
Ammon Bundy holds up a bronze star medal he says was given to him by a veteran during the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff in early 2016. (Elliott D. Woods)

A crowd of 300 gathered at Whitefish Depot Park to protest the Bundy event, which was taking place at the Grouse Mountain Lodge, a mile and a half away. The competing rally was organized by the and , a group affiliated with the Montana Human Rights Network and formed in response to white supremacist activity in the Flathead Valley. Judging by attendance, there鈥檚 no question which movement鈥擝undyites or public land advocates鈥攈as the numbers. Beyond Whitefish, the rapid growth of groups like Missoula-based Backcountry Hunters and Anglers illustrates the rising pro鈥損ublic land consciousness in the West and across the country. Membership has doubled every year for the past four years, topping 18,000 in 2018. The group now has chapters in 39 states and two Canadian provinces and on dozens of college campuses. One wonders what the Bundys鈥 on-campus presence looks like.

I didn鈥檛 meet any of the protesters who turned out to Depot Park, because I spent the entire day listening to jeremiads about the and the to implement one-world government. According to speakers at the Bundy event, shadowy international bureaucrats and billionaires are the font of such devious urban concepts as 鈥渟ustainable development鈥 and 鈥渟mart growth.鈥 Alex Newman鈥攁 bearded young correspondent for the John Birch Society鈥檚 New American magazine, whom the moderator hailed as 鈥渙ur next George Washington鈥濃攕aid these concepts are part of 鈥渁 global war on farmers and ranchers and loggers.鈥 The audience gasped knowingly. Newman went on to pull the old , suggesting that because in the sea ice off Antarctica one time in 2013, global warming clearly isn鈥檛 real. 鈥淚鈥檝e interviewed dozens of these UN scientists,鈥 said Newman, without mentioning any of the defectors鈥 names. 鈥淭hey told me [climate change] was a hoax, and no one would correct it, so they resigned.鈥 Phew, I thought: I guess we don鈥檛 have to worry about the UN鈥檚 updated projections鈥攚hich give us a mere to take drastic action to avoid Biblical climate catastrophes. ( place the scientific consensus at a minimum of 80 percent supporting the idea of human-caused climate change, with some estimates as high as 97 percent.)

There were shimmers of underlying anti-Semitism and white nationalism in some of the presentations, like when Washington state legislator Matt Shea channeled his inner Richard Spencer, shouting, 鈥淟et鈥檚 be American again! We are a Christian nation, and anyone who says we鈥檙e not is a liar鈥 think we need to be unashamed about our heritage and our history. Amen!鈥 Spencer鈥攚hose parents live in Whitefish and who have for their son鈥檚 racist neo-fascism, which they disavow鈥攄id not attend.

Attendees listen to Ammon Bundy's remarks at the New Code of the West event.
Attendees listen to Ammon Bundy's remarks at the New Code of the West event. (Elliott D. Woods)

The UN鈥檚 platform was the main lightning rod for the assembled conspiracy theorists. Drawn up in 1992 at the UN Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Agenda 21 is a legally nonbinding policy document that does not force anyone at any level of government of the 178 signatories to do anything. The document lays out strategies for 鈥渃ombating poverty,鈥 鈥減rotecting and promoting human health conditions,鈥 鈥渃ombating deforestation,鈥 鈥渕anaging fragile ecosystems,鈥 鈥渞ecognizing and strengthening the role of indigenous people,鈥 and that sort of thing. I don鈥檛 know about you, but whenever I hear global bureaucrats talking about 鈥渕anaging fragile ecosystems,鈥 I think to myself: Charlie鈥檚 in the wire.

鈥淵ou鈥檇 have to be pretty dang stupid not to be able to connect some of these dots,鈥 said the moderator, Dan Happel, who hosts a podcast called . A retired commercial building contractor, Happel once served as of the Montana Republican Party and as a Madison County commissioner. An avuncular fellow with a warm smile, dressed in a blazer, khakis, and ostrich-skin slip-ons, Happel provided the highlight of my day when, in the midst of his presentation, he said, 鈥淵ou thought the Kavanaugh hearing sucked? These are quotes from the leading Democrats in the country.鈥 He then read from a slide with quotes from Chuck Schumer, Elizabeth Warren, and Cory Booker. Here鈥檚 one:

鈥淭ime and time again, we find progressive laws getting struck down,鈥 Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a Senate address. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 always鈥攁lways鈥攖he ones the Constitution is against. These right-wing judges don鈥檛 think for themselves, they just do whatever the Constitution says. And it鈥檚 time for that to end.鈥

Kerry White, a Republican member of the Montana legislature, talks to reporters outside of the This West is OUR West event.
Kerry White, a Republican member of the Montana legislature, talks to reporters outside of the This West is OUR West event. (Elliott D. Woods)

They perfectly fit Happel鈥檚 narrative about Democrats鈥 disregard for the Constitution. The problem was, the quotes were fake. They came from an article headlined 鈥淪enate Democrats Demand Supreme Court Nominee Not Be Unduly Influenced by U.S. Constitution鈥 in the now-defunct Babylon Bee, a satirical online paper in the model of the Onion. Happel was not the only one to take these quotes out of their native habitat. Fox News contributor David Clarke鈥攖he erstwhile Milwaukee sheriff who caught hell for with flair pins鈥 with the same fake quotes.

The conference ground on for ten hours before Ammon Bundy finally took the mic to sing his paean about triumph over the murderous feds. This was the I鈥檝e attended, and the script did not vary much: of the Constitution mingled with tearful recitation of his family鈥檚 long 鈥渟tand,鈥 which most of us would just interpret as 鈥渂reaking the law and getting away with it.鈥 (The Bundys still in unpaid federal grazing fees. Although several of their , the Bundys were acquitted of all charges for a 2014 standoff and the Malheur occupation, due to .)

Bundy wore a straw cowboy hat and a suit coat. Toward the end of his remarks, he pulled out a garment bag with items for show-and-tell. The first was a ball cap with the Army Airborne logo that he claimed was given to him by a vet. Bundy ratcheted up the totemic power of the items until he was holding up a bronze star medal, claiming a wheelchair-bound man who鈥檇 lost his legs 鈥渟erving in the military鈥 had given it to him at Malheur. Bundy told the audience about how he鈥檇 said he didn鈥檛 deserve it, because he鈥檇 never served, and the man 鈥渢old me I was to never say again that I didn鈥檛 deserve it.鈥 Next, Bundy pulled out a folded American flag, which he claimed was 鈥減resented to me by a man who said this flag was draped over his brother鈥檚 casket because he died serving this country.鈥 Choking back tears, Bundy said, 鈥淭his man gave me this flag, and he felt that this is what his brother died for鈥e were standing up for the very purpose his brother gave his life for.鈥

Ammon Bundy talks to a supporter at the New Code of the West conference.
Ammon Bundy talks to a supporter at the New Code of the West conference. (Elliott D. Woods)

To me, it all seemed like cheap theater, but maybe Bundy believes his own myth. Many in the room seemed to. Then again, they also looked on with jaws agape as Happel warned about the UN鈥檚 plans to 鈥渆liminate anywhere from 95 percent to 75 percent of our population.鈥 While their credulity was astonishing and depressing, I doubt that these would-be crusaders present any meaningful threat to the future of public land or the republic on which it stands. They barely filled a small conference room. The only presenter who actually addressed a Montana public land issue in-depth was Kerry White, a Republican state legislator from Bozeman. White gave a talk on megafires, advocating for more thinning projects in national forests to reduce the severity of fires and boost the timber economy. While White鈥檚 interpretations of wildfire science would raise eyebrows in the company of scientists, the basic premise of thinning forests to minimize wildfires鈥 destructive capacity has in the West.

In an unexpected bit of drama, Bundy took the mic during the question-and-answer period and harangued White for tacitly acknowledging the federal government鈥檚 right to manage public land. Waving his weathered pocket Constitution, Bundy asked, 鈥淒o you see or do you not see that the control of our lands in federal hands is the problem?鈥 White seemed taken aback. 鈥淚 disagree with that,鈥 he said. In a tense back-and-forth, White鈥攁 conservative warhorse in the Montana legislature, born and raised on his family鈥檚 ranch in the Gallatin Valley鈥攔efused to give in to Bundy. Exasperated, he said, 鈥淭he people gave the government the power to do things for us. If they don鈥檛 do it correctly, it is the power of the people to change that. Does that make sense?鈥 Indeed, it was the most sensible thing anyone said all day.

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online