Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5356|London, England

Cybargs wrote:

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:

'justice reform' = making youtube martyr videos?
No, that's just dumb.

Justice reform as in standing up to the Department of Justice ordering them back to prison because the mandatory minimum sentence is 5 years rather than the more lenient and reasonable sentence handed down by the judge. Mandatory minimums should be abolished across the board. They're an ineffective and cruel absurdity.
Ok sure, but you know there is a reason they got re-sentenced to 5 years minimum, there was an error of law during the trial by not giving the appropriate sentence.
Yes, because the law requires a 5 year minimum. I'm not arguing that the sentence being applied is incorrect. I'm saying that the underlying legislation that requires the mandatory minimum sentence needs to be stricken. It's a legislative issue, not a judicial one.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq
Member
+492|3450

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:

they are all about personal and private property and constitutional rights. the 'non-progressive left', by which i assume you mean the traditional left, are interested in socialism. are you trying to suggest these guys are somehow socialists because they are anti-government? i'm so confused as to how you are making these echo right-wing conservatives into left sympathisers, or somehow examples of the left's stupidity of public opinion.
I'm saying that if you remove economics from the equation, they're on the same side in this instance.

Here, some satire for you: https://workersspatula.wordpress.com/20 … -brothers/
what a fucking meaningless sentence. "if you remove economics from the equation".

the entire disagreement between right and left is fundamentally economic. what's the difference between communism and fascism? it's 99.5% economic. most political ideologies share the same socio-political DNA, especially the extreme fringe ones (i.e. the same despotic or totalitarian streak). it's a question of organisation and allocation, i.e. economics.

also anarchists are not the 'non-progressive left'. the traditional left is socialism. what has come to be termed 'progressivism' is basically leftish thought integrated into a working democratic framework, i.e. the social democrats of 19th century europe. anarchism in a historical and theoretical context is basically an aberration. especially if you consider the history of the position through people like proudhon and bakunin. it was always the emotive and irrational tumour that grew on socialist theory.

Last edited by uziq (2016-01-04 14:55:58)

KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6630|949

Jay wrote:

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Jay, "the left" has been at the forefront in arguing against mandatory minimums in federal sentencing for over 20 years.  Keep up.

Where exactly have the Bundy's (or Hammonds) said they are protesting against mandatory minimum sentencing?  The only quotes I've read from anyone involved with the ranchers side invokes the asinine "sovereign citizen" mumbo jumbo about restoring citizen's "constitutional rights".  Are you reading something I'm not or are you creating your own narrative?
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/ … regon.html
https://reason.com/blog/2016/01/03/on-o … qaeda-stop
https://reason.com/blog/2016/01/04/ranc … red-oregon
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Popehat/~3/SAdZRJIP3h0/
none of those quote the Bundy's or Hammonds (note that the Hammonds have disavowed the Bundy's protest) as protesting against the mandatory minimum sentencing (I couldn't listen to the video in the first link).  The articles argue that the sentencing is wrong (which is a valid argument), but a good way for the Bundy's and other protesters to make their reasoning clear is to COME OUT AND FUCKING SAY IT!  They keep repeating the "government is evil and we will stand up to them as concerned citizens" mantra.  It's akin to the Occupy protesters in that they are just, like, fighting the power, maaan.
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3718
Anarcho Capitalist are applauding these people for fighting the government in order to restore the individual's constitutional right to "log and mine" the forest.

Crazy people.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5356|London, England

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:

they are all about personal and private property and constitutional rights. the 'non-progressive left', by which i assume you mean the traditional left, are interested in socialism. are you trying to suggest these guys are somehow socialists because they are anti-government? i'm so confused as to how you are making these echo right-wing conservatives into left sympathisers, or somehow examples of the left's stupidity of public opinion.
I'm saying that if you remove economics from the equation, they're on the same side in this instance.

Here, some satire for you: https://workersspatula.wordpress.com/20 … -brothers/
what a fucking meaningless sentence. "if you remove economics from the equation".

the entire disagreement between right and left is fundamentally economic. what's the difference between communism and fascism? it's 99.5% economic. most political ideologies share the same socio-political DNA, especially the extreme fringe ones (i.e. the same despotic or totalitarian streak). it's a question of organisation and allocation, i.e. economics.

also anarchists are not the 'non-progressive left'. the traditional left is socialism. what has come to be termed 'progressivism' is basically leftish thought integrated into a working democratic framework, i.e. the social democrats of 19th century europe. anarchism in a historical and theoretical context is basically an aberration. especially if you consider the history of the position through people like proudhon and bakunin. it was always the emotive and irrational tumour that grew on socialist theory.
Progressives in America are totalitarian and largely economically agnostic. Everything can be fixed with just a bit more government. They believe in socialist redistributive policies only when it supports their Platonian goals.

There are a lot of liberal, hippie-types mixed up in there who don't necessarily like or trust the government but would never vote republican because of the anti-gay, anti-abortion etc stances.

Ultimately, American political parties just don't make any sense, really.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5356|London, England

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Jay wrote:

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Jay, "the left" has been at the forefront in arguing against mandatory minimums in federal sentencing for over 20 years.  Keep up.

Where exactly have the Bundy's (or Hammonds) said they are protesting against mandatory minimum sentencing?  The only quotes I've read from anyone involved with the ranchers side invokes the asinine "sovereign citizen" mumbo jumbo about restoring citizen's "constitutional rights".  Are you reading something I'm not or are you creating your own narrative?
http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/ … regon.html
https://reason.com/blog/2016/01/03/on-o … qaeda-stop
https://reason.com/blog/2016/01/04/ranc … red-oregon
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Popehat/~3/SAdZRJIP3h0/
none of those quote the Bundy's or Hammonds (note that the Hammonds have disavowed the Bundy's protest) as protesting against the mandatory minimum sentencing (I couldn't listen to the video in the first link).  The articles argue that the sentencing is wrong (which is a valid argument), but a good way for the Bundy's and other protesters to make their reasoning clear is to COME OUT AND FUCKING SAY IT!  They keep repeating the "government is evil and we will stand up to them as concerned citizens" mantra.  It's akin to the Occupy protesters in that they are just, like, fighting the power, maaan.
I don't disagree at all. I think they're morons just like I thought the occupiers were idiots.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq
Member
+492|3450

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

I'm saying that if you remove economics from the equation, they're on the same side in this instance.

Here, some satire for you: https://workersspatula.wordpress.com/20 … -brothers/
what a fucking meaningless sentence. "if you remove economics from the equation".

the entire disagreement between right and left is fundamentally economic. what's the difference between communism and fascism? it's 99.5% economic. most political ideologies share the same socio-political DNA, especially the extreme fringe ones (i.e. the same despotic or totalitarian streak). it's a question of organisation and allocation, i.e. economics.

also anarchists are not the 'non-progressive left'. the traditional left is socialism. what has come to be termed 'progressivism' is basically leftish thought integrated into a working democratic framework, i.e. the social democrats of 19th century europe. anarchism in a historical and theoretical context is basically an aberration. especially if you consider the history of the position through people like proudhon and bakunin. it was always the emotive and irrational tumour that grew on socialist theory.
Progressives in America are totalitarian and largely economically agnostic. Everything can be fixed with just a bit more government. They believe in socialist redistributive policies only when it supports their Platonian goals.

There are a lot of liberal, hippie-types mixed up in there who don't necessarily like or trust the government but would never vote republican because of the anti-gay, anti-abortion etc stances.

Ultimately, American political parties just don't make any sense, really.
none of this makes any sense to me. it's like you picked up the terms from reason.com and toss them like nutshells.

progressives are not totalitarian. they want to work within a democratic framework. they are pragmatic. they aim for reforms and objectives using the democratic apparatus of state. textbook non-totalitarian. socialism is a different kettle of fish: now they reject the democratic system, parliament, representatives, popular dismissal in some cases, etc. a whole different paradigm. at best they view it as a 'necessary' apparatus on the stage to some utopian or communistic end-goal. queefing about totalitarianism because a progressive wants to raise taxes and increase public spending in a bicameral system is fucking moronic.

what is a "platonian goal" and what does it have to do with progressive politics? i don't know what plato has to do with it (assuming that's who you are even referring to). if you are referring to plato's republic, which i assume is the narrow sliver of his work you are familiar with, then you should know that is incredibly autocratic and, again, has no time for things like universal suffrage, representation, arbitration, etc. plato has never been mentioned in the context of progressivism. that one very specific work has been understood as one of the earliest examples of political science/economy, but again, absolutely nothing to do with progressivism.

Last edited by uziq (2016-01-04 15:14:51)

SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3718

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:


what a fucking meaningless sentence. "if you remove economics from the equation".

the entire disagreement between right and left is fundamentally economic. what's the difference between communism and fascism? it's 99.5% economic. most political ideologies share the same socio-political DNA, especially the extreme fringe ones (i.e. the same despotic or totalitarian streak). it's a question of organisation and allocation, i.e. economics.

also anarchists are not the 'non-progressive left'. the traditional left is socialism. what has come to be termed 'progressivism' is basically leftish thought integrated into a working democratic framework, i.e. the social democrats of 19th century europe. anarchism in a historical and theoretical context is basically an aberration. especially if you consider the history of the position through people like proudhon and bakunin. it was always the emotive and irrational tumour that grew on socialist theory.
Progressives in America are totalitarian and largely economically agnostic. Everything can be fixed with just a bit more government. They believe in socialist redistributive policies only when it supports their Platonian goals.

There are a lot of liberal, hippie-types mixed up in there who don't necessarily like or trust the government but would never vote republican because of the anti-gay, anti-abortion etc stances.

Ultimately, American political parties just don't make any sense, really.
none of this makes any sense to me. it's like you picked up the terms from reason.com and toss them like nutshells.

progressives are not totalitarian. they want to work within a democratic framework. they are pragmatic. they aim for reforms and objectives using the democratic apparatus of state. textbook non-totalitarian. socialism is a different kettle of fish: now they reject the democratic system, parliament, representatives, popular dismissal in some cases, etc. a whole different paradigm. at best they view it as a 'necessary' apparatus on the stage to some utopian or communistic end-goal. queefing about totalitarianism because a progressive wants to raise taxes and increase public spending in a bicameral system is fucking moronic.

what is a "platonian goal" and what does it have to do with progressive politics? i don't know what plato has to do with it (assuming that's who you are even referring to). if you are referring to plato's republic, which i assume is the narrow sliver of his work you are familiar with, then you should know that is incredibly autocratic and, again, has no time for things like universal suffrage, representation, arbitration, etc. plato has never been mentioned in the context of progressivism. that one very specific work has been understood as one of the earliest examples of political science/economy, but again, absolutely nothing to do with progressivism.
I am fairly certain Plato's allegory of the cave has something to do here
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5356|London, England

uziq wrote:

Jay wrote:

uziq wrote:


what a fucking meaningless sentence. "if you remove economics from the equation".

the entire disagreement between right and left is fundamentally economic. what's the difference between communism and fascism? it's 99.5% economic. most political ideologies share the same socio-political DNA, especially the extreme fringe ones (i.e. the same despotic or totalitarian streak). it's a question of organisation and allocation, i.e. economics.

also anarchists are not the 'non-progressive left'. the traditional left is socialism. what has come to be termed 'progressivism' is basically leftish thought integrated into a working democratic framework, i.e. the social democrats of 19th century europe. anarchism in a historical and theoretical context is basically an aberration. especially if you consider the history of the position through people like proudhon and bakunin. it was always the emotive and irrational tumour that grew on socialist theory.
Progressives in America are totalitarian and largely economically agnostic. Everything can be fixed with just a bit more government. They believe in socialist redistributive policies only when it supports their Platonian goals.

There are a lot of liberal, hippie-types mixed up in there who don't necessarily like or trust the government but would never vote republican because of the anti-gay, anti-abortion etc stances.

Ultimately, American political parties just don't make any sense, really.
none of this makes any sense to me. it's like you picked up the terms from reason.com and toss them like nutshells.

progressives are not totalitarian. they want to work within a democratic framework. they are pragmatic. they aim for reforms and objectives using the democratic apparatus of state. textbook non-totalitarian. socialism is a different kettle of fish: now they reject the democratic system, parliament, representatives, popular dismissal in some cases, etc. a whole different paradigm. at best they view it as a 'necessary' apparatus on the stage to some utopian or communistic end-goal. queefing about totalitarianism because a progressive wants to raise taxes and increase public spending in a bicameral system is fucking moronic.

what is a "platonian goal" and what does it have to do with progressive politics? i don't know what plato has to do with it (assuming that's who you are even referring to). if you are referring to plato's republic, which i assume is the narrow sliver of his work you are familiar with, then you should know that is incredibly autocratic and, again, has no time for things like universal suffrage, representation, arbitration, etc. plato has never been mentioned in the context of progressivism. that one very specific work has been understood as one of the earliest examples of political science/economy, but again, absolutely nothing to do with progressivism.
Ok.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq
Member
+492|3450
can't you refer to someone having a political ideal or practical objective, without having to make it a 'platonian goal'? for a start, no one says platonian, and a platonic goal à la the republic would suggest a highly specific, ultra-fascistic commune type environment with some very bizarre – to our modern sensibility – proscriptions (plato was more interested in banning poets for their false mimesis than grazing rights or crises of the commune). you basically tried to sound clever and well read and betrayed the fact you are not well read on this matter.

as for the rest of the political definitions stuff, i don't see how i'm wrong in any classical/theoretical or consensually understood way.

Last edited by uziq (2016-01-04 15:51:05)

Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5356|London, England

uziq wrote:

can't you refer to someone having a political ideal or practical objective, without having to make it a 'platonian goal'? for a start, no one says platonian, and a platonic goal à la the republic would suggest a highly specific, ultra-fascistic commune type environment with some very bizarre – to our modern sensibility – proscriptions (plato was more interested in banning poets for their false mimesis than grazing rights or crises of the commune). you basically tried to sound clever and well read and betrayed the fact you are not well read on this matter.

as for the rest of the political definitions stuff, i don't see how i'm wrong in any classical/theoretical or consensually understood way.
We've had this argument before about the structure of American political parties and the dichotomy between left and right as defined here. You bowed out at the time because you didn't understand it. Our parties, Democrat and Republican, left and right, do not fit your academic models. They are amalgamations designed to appeal to single issue voters and don't conform to traditional left/right.

People who consider themselves left-wing in this country generally possess some, not necessarily all, of the following beliefs:

universal healthcare is good
wealth redistribution from the rich to the poor is good (as long as we ourselves are not defined as rich)
science has more answers than religion
guns are bad
organic is good
GMOs are bad
abortion is good
vaccines are not to be trusted
war is bad (except when we can drop bombs and not deploy ground troops)
oil is bad
big business is bad
immigration is good (unless we're pandering to union voters)
regulation is good
free speech when it offends is bad
college should be free

People who consider themselves right-wing in this country generally possess some, not necessarily all, of the following beliefs:

universal healthcare is evil
wealth redistribution from the rich to the poor is good (as long as we ourselves are not defined as rich)
religion has more answers than science
guns are good
organic is for rich liberals with more sense than money
GMOs are food
abortion is evil
vaccines are not to be trusted
war is good (when we can justify it as democracy spreading)
oil is money
immigration is bad
big business is who employs us
regulation is bad
free speech is good
college students need to stop whining

Discourse at the voter level generally does not involve economics. At the national level it's generally a war between the media and academics vs big business and it's money, for influence over the direction of the country. A cynic would argue that the embrace of Marxism by academics is a thinly veiled attempt to use economic populism to prop up their own goals of steering the nation a la Plato's Republic.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq
Member
+492|3450
A cynic would argue that the embrace of Marxism by academics is a thinly veiled attempt to use economic populism to prop up their own goals of steering the nation a la Plato's Republic.
again... what. US academics have found marxism fashionable since the french theory wave of the 60s and 70s. that's what steered american college campuses towards progressivism: continental philosophy, french theory, sociology and related social sciences, trendy french professors and immortels coming over in their roll necks and galoises. before then i don't think marxism was very fashionable in american academia – it had a slightly different trajectory in british establishments. which isn't to say that progressivism and forms of active social engagement weren't broached: but marxism is different. maybe my history of american progressivism class wasn't that comprehensive. the muckraking generation and your steinbecks didn't seem so interested in convoluted european theory.

and again i have no idea how one gets from marxian analysis or marxist discourse to plato's the republic. is this the only example of a political utopian text you know or something? no marxist will ever talk about plato in a cogent political way. that's because plato's theories of forms are completely inimical to the hegelian basis of marxism. and all of the weird transcendentalist ethics that come down through plato, aristotle and then latterly kant are completely alien to classic marxist theory. marx argues that all social animus stems from class, and correspondingly every class has its own ethics. that shit does not curry favour with platonists, who are de facto universalists in the same way that kant's ethics reaches for supra-human or super-class imperatives.

i get all of the other yadda yadda shit you say about american politics. yes, it's confusing and yes it's a clusterfuck between simplistic media representations/political machine spin and various vested interests. that confusion and welter of viewpoints is more or less healthy in any properly and transparently functioning democracy. if everyone had a black/white view and a cookie-cutter political ideology, we'd be in a significantly darker world, with everyone marching to a military drumbeat. where i lose you is when you start making recourse to these big abstract terms and just completely muddy the waters of your thinking. just talk about the issues at hand without trying to connect the dots to this classical body of philosophy to make yourself seem well read. it just becomes confusing. we can talk about hicks starting bush fires without arguing that progressives secretly all thumb the vellum of their copy of 'the republic'.

Last edited by uziq (2016-01-04 16:45:32)

uziq
Member
+492|3450
and your whole sociology and profile of left/right is not exactly incompatible with what i am saying. what i am saying is that the basis of all of those beliefs is economic. if it is not ostensibly about money, they are mostly factors of socialisation and culture, i.e. class. and class is all about economic opportunity, too. 'enlightened' people or those wielding 'liberal' views on socio-political matters will normally have more economic power or freedom. every political question is economic in my view, even if people think they are arguing over god's views on abortions. what you are effectively arguing against is people propagating views that are produced by their material conditions and social milieux. this is where i am marxist in my analysis, via bourdieu.

Last edited by uziq (2016-01-04 16:51:58)

coke
Aye up duck!
+440|6707|England. Stoke
Skimmed the thread Jay contradicting himself and backtracking, it's like a pick and mix of terrible blogs and twitter.
Should also add Mac being Mac.

Last edited by coke (2016-01-04 18:03:33)

KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6630|949

Jay wrote:

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

none of those quote the Bundy's or Hammonds (note that the Hammonds have disavowed the Bundy's protest) as protesting against the mandatory minimum sentencing (I couldn't listen to the video in the first link).  The articles argue that the sentencing is wrong (which is a valid argument), but a good way for the Bundy's and other protesters to make their reasoning clear is to COME OUT AND FUCKING SAY IT!  They keep repeating the "government is evil and we will stand up to them as concerned citizens" mantra.  It's akin to the Occupy protesters in that they are just, like, fighting the power, maaan.
I don't disagree at all. I think they're morons just like I thought the occupiers were idiots.
But you are saying it's about mandatory minimum sentencing, when the only people who have argued that point are Slate and Reason.  My original point (which still stands, by the way) is that by their own words, the stupid hick protesters are saying it's about "restoring the constitutional rights".  Whatever the fuck that means.

They are fucking dumb, and I wouldn't give them the time of day.  They don't like big government but then talk shit about the local sheriff because the sheriff won't take their side. These guys reek of insecurity.  It wouldn't be a surprise to me if they secretly like sucking cock in between polishing their gun barrels.  "But-but mister, we were only spooning naked to keep warm in this cold!  Haven't you ever seen 'Dual Survival?!'"

People like this give Americans a bad name.  Fuck 'em.
Doctor Mantis Toboggan
Post limited. Contact Admin to Be Promoted.
+1|3040
Dey Terk Urr Jerbs
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6104|eXtreme to the maX

Jay wrote:

they're morons and should've been locked up last time, but the cause they've taken up actually dovetails with the non-progressive lefts goals.
The Left is non-progressive now? There was me thinking it was the right which was conservative.
And I thought it was the right which was always pushing up sentences, raising the minimums etc to distract the populace from their failings.

I can't be bothered trying to get into the heads of these militia and second guess what they're thinking or trying to achieve.

Apparently they don't much like property rights, not those of the govt and therefore their fellow citizens at least, and they don't much like the law - except where it allows freedom of speech, freedom of association, right to carry guns etc.

I think its a damn shame these guys are white. If they'd been brown I could have enjoyed the nightly news updates, how many of them had been shot, how many had been shot, tased or night-sticked as they'd tried to surrender, and the mandatory footage of a stern fat man in a large hat and toy soldier uniform saying freedom had been protected and the survivors would all be getting the maximum sentences.

Or better yet if they'd been brown and muslim we could all have watched the footage of the JDAMs landing on the building, SWAT teams running into the homes of their relatives and associates, pulling people out and throwing them to the floor or pinning them to walls with guns in the back of their heads.

But no, they're white so none of this will happen. God Bless America.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6104|eXtreme to the maX

Jay wrote:

big business is bad.
Still don't understand why the right so-called libertarians think big business (run as a fascist mini-state and answerable to no-one) is good but big government (run by the people and answerable to the people) is bad.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6104|eXtreme to the maX
Eastern Oregon Ranchers Convicted of Arson Resentenced to Five Years in Prison




EUGENE, Ore. – Dwight Lincoln Hammond, Jr., 73, and his son, Steven Dwight Hammond, 46, both residents of Diamond, Oregon in Harney County, were sentenced to five years in prison by Chief U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken for arsons they committed on federal lands.

A jury sitting in Pendleton, Oregon found the Hammonds guilty of the arsons after a two-week trial in June 2012.  The trial involved allegations that the Hammonds, owners of Hammond Ranches, Inc., ignited a series of fires on lands managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM), on which the Hammonds had grazing rights leased to them for their cattle operation.

The jury convicted both of the Hammonds of using fire to destroy federal property for a 2001 arson known as the Hardie-Hammond Fire, located in the Steens Mountain Cooperative Management and Protection Area.  Witnesses at trial, including a relative of the Hammonds, testified the arson occurred shortly after Steven Hammond and his hunting party illegally slaughtered several deer on BLM property.  Jurors were told that Steven Hammond handed out “Strike Anywhere” matches with instructions that they be lit and dropped on the ground because they were going to “light up the whole country on fire.”  One witness testified that he barely escaped the eight to ten foot high flames caused by the arson.  The fire consumed 139 acres of public land and destroyed all evidence of the game violations.  After committing the arson, Steven Hammond called the BLM office in Burns, Oregon and claimed the fire was started on Hammond property to burn off invasive species and had inadvertently burned onto public lands.  Dwight and Steven Hammond told one of their relatives to keep his mouth shut and that nobody needed to know about the fire.

The jury also convicted Steven Hammond of using fire to destroy federal property regarding a 2006 arson known as the Krumbo Butte Fire located in the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge and Steen Mountain Cooperative Management and Protection Area.  An August lightning storm started numerous fires and a burn ban was in effect while BLM firefighters fought those fires.  Despite the ban, without permission or notification to BLM, Steven Hammond started several “back fires” in an attempt save the ranch’s winter feed.  The fires burned onto public land and were seen by BLM firefighters camped nearby.  The firefighters took steps to ensure their safety and reported the arsons.

By law, arson on federal land carries a five-year mandatory minimum sentence.  When the Hammonds were originally sentenced, they argued that the five-year mandatory minimum terms were unconstitutional and the trial court agreed and imposed sentences well below what the law required based upon the jury’s verdicts.  The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, however, upheld the federal law, reasoning that “given the seriousness of arson, a five-year sentence is not grossly disproportionate to the offense.”  The court vacated the original, unlawful sentences and ordered that the Hammonds be resentenced “in compliance with the law.”  In March 2015, the Supreme Court rejected the Hammonds’ petitions for certiorari. Today, Chief Judge Aiken imposed five year prison terms on each of the Hammonds, with credit for time they already served.

“We all know the devastating effects that are caused by wildfires.  Fires intentionally and illegally set on public lands, even those in a remote area, threaten property and residents and endanger firefighters called to battle the blaze” stated Acting U.S. Attorney Billy Williams.

“Congress sought to ensure that anyone who maliciously damages United States’ property by fire will serve at least 5 years in prison.  These sentences are intended to be long enough to deter those like the Hammonds who disregard the law and place fire fighters and others in jeopardy.”

Assistant U.S. Attorneys Frank R Papagni, Jr., AnneMarie Sgarlata and Kelly Zusman handled the prosecution of this case.
http://www.justice.gov/usao-or/pr/easte … ars-prison

It doesn't seem too complicated, they were convicted by a jury, given the minimum sentence (eventually), nothing to see here.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6630|949

The Hammonds reported to jail.  They have accepted their sentence.

The buttfucking hicks are still spooning naked in the ranger station at the bird sanctuary taking turns topping each other while shouting "I'm a sovereign citizen!"
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3718
Now, they have a name. And now, we know how long they're vowing to stay.

The armed protesters who took over a federal building in Oregon are calling themselves the Citizens for Constitutional Freedom.
...
But on Monday night, protest spokesman Ammon Bundy laid out specific demands.

The occupation would end when "the Hammonds are freed and the federal government gives up control of the Malheur National Forest," Bundy tweeted.

The tweet was later deleted.
http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/05/us/oregon … index.html

What a lame name. They should have chosen something cooler.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6630|949

Oh, so I guess they actually DON'T care about mandatory minimum sentencing.  At least people like these guys and Donald Trump bring all the dumb fucks out of the woodwork.

Does anyone know their actual beef regarding federal land?  It seems like they don't like the idea of the government owning property.  Anyone have any details about what their argument or position is?
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+635|3718
The guy ssaid something like "the government is preventing loggers and miners from using the forest. It is unconstitutional" on t.v.

Last edited by SuperJail Warden (2016-01-05 10:54:09)

https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5356|London, England

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Oh, so I guess they actually DON'T care about mandatory minimum sentencing.  At least people like these guys and Donald Trump bring all the dumb fucks out of the woodwork.

Does anyone know their actual beef regarding federal land?  It seems like they don't like the idea of the government owning property.  Anyone have any details about what their argument or position is?
Western ranchers in general hate the fact that so much land is owned by the feds rather than being privately owned. Miners and loggers feel the same way.

They have a point, to an extent, but we're talking about generally arid land that in the grand scheme would put even more stress on limited water resources. I remember driving through southern Utah ten years ago and shaking my head at the massive irrigation systems these guys had to use to work marginal land. They're the reason the Colorado River barely exists anymore.

Federal ownership in this case is probably preventing an even bigger tragedy of the commons from occurring.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
MajorSpittle
Member
+7|3089|Oregun
It is about blm.  Research it.  Lot of stupidity in this thead.

It is about the fed. Controlling land, regulating land, and states not.

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