I haven't read the whole thread here, but it looks like a wide-open opportunity to demonstrate alternative forms of elitism. . . . lol
intellectual elitism not excluded. . . .
OB, some of us are actually very long-suffering souls when it comes to just enduring the way other people are. Did it never occur to you that it might seem to some that starting a thread on another person might make them feel like they are being hounded, stalked, ridiculed, and mocked, however subtly? Can you take a suggestion to rename the thread and take Hantlers out of the title? But who knows, maybe he likes the attention or something. . . . so don't do it just on my say-so. . . .and maybe you have already make some fine appropriate acknowledgement of your sensitivity to the concern. . .
And who am I to criticize you, I could see where you could feel much the same, if not more "hounded, stalked, ridiculed, and mocked" by me, even for just saying this.
One of the roots to my generally adverse reaction to progressivism, particularly when the methodology includes empowering government force to advance the causes, is just that air of superiority. As you may have already noted, I consider the high ideals behind governmental do-gooderism to mean, essentially, that us less-enlightened folk are being rounded up and put on some form of reservation where we can be efficiently rendered dependent and subservient.
In regard to Potlatch, it's similar to many cultural symbolisms. Amazing to me that the feudal Lords of Canadian progress objected to it in any way, except that it constituted a competitive power system that effectively undercut their own Lordly ways of maintaining power.
I have lived near reservations and been able to observe how the Reservation system works, and I adamantly insist that is what "The Great Society" did to the black folk who were sucked in to welfare dependency.
And it does the exact same thing for all other people, which is why I see the need for a restoration of American principles of self-determination economically, which is linked to the need for people to have more access to the land and the resources that can be drawn from it, to the exclusion of cartelists who are using environmentalism to strengthen their monopoly positions on supplies of everything.
you might notice how in some aspects I do have a common idea with "marxism": I just know people need property rights, and I know socialism is an attack on actual property rights. . . and that our particular set of very wealthy "robber barons" have co-opted socialism as a tool for exerting their own control, tax-exept, of our government as well as all of the natural resources on planet earth. The answer is not their little "false flag of social justice", but a return to the roots of American principles......freedom and actual equal rights for people who are in fact the managers of their own government.
Cliven Bundy is not such a moron as some may suppose. Simple and naive to the ways of sophisticated folks perhaps, but just bedrock right about his vision of what the Constitution originally meant, at least for the settlers. He knew how they could settle and claim any land they could put to use. He knows that all people need access to the resources of the land, and he knows even the blacks would be better off if they could have land to work with, instead of living on the government dole, which is their only option when they have no land that is theirs.
In his view, people who work for corporations are more accurately described as 'wage-slaves' working on a modern form of plantation which does not even have the same care for the worker that slave ownership once implied to a few "good" slaveholders. A cattleman like Bundy wouldn't beat his livestock, and would see that they are cared for, perhaps. Pretty sure he had no idea how bad some slaveholders were, particularly the British oligarchs who owned the slave ships before the religious principled folk of England made the "No Sugar in My Tea" campaign to publicly hold slavers in contempt and undercut their profits.
Pretty clear to me that in Bundy's view, the BLM moving him off his grazing land and cattle business is a lot like the way the native Americans were moved out of their hunting/gathering way of life so others could use the land that was once theirs. . . .
Another interesting point of view would be the Cherokee nation circa 1820-30. People who had been recognized as holding their territorial claims by early American leaders, who insisted that the American government had no jurisdiction over Cherokee lands until formally ceded by treaty. A fraudulent treaty was quickly made up, though. The Cherokee were also prospering slaveholders and plantation agriculturalists at that time, but when Andrew Jackson held the Supreme Court in contempt and sent federal troops in to round up and move the Cherokee out, the ensuing horror and inhumanity of the Trail of Tears decimated the Cherokee population. The Cherokee took their slaves with them and basically merged as a people. Most American Indians today, in fact, have some black ancestry. . .. because both were excluded by the white majority socially and economically. . . .
A side-note