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Saturday, December 7, 2024

RATTUS and EVIL

 

Roni Bell with White Rat in 1960

RATTUS and EVIL

Over the years I've been lectured by people who argue definitions to the finite while defending communists/socialists/fascists/Marxists/Jihadists.  

My find? They're ALL evil. Like the family Rattus, aka rats!

Regardless their long or short tail, black/brown/white or otherwise color, rats/socialists/communists/fascists/Marxists/Jihadists share these common characteristics:

1) Cause substantial food loss and increased fuel prices, especially for the poor (subsidized ethanol and shut down fossil fuel).

2) Are considered deadly pests when they become dependents of the state and bureaucrats.

3) Develop environments that breed their Rattus ideology until it becomes the world's most invasive ideology.

4) Litter and leave infectious feces everywhere.

5) They're ALL evil.

By Roni Bell 2020

Thursday, December 5, 2024

TRESPASSING BUREAUCRATS

 

         Lara Logan visiting with R-CALF members August 2024

Personal Experiences with Trespassing Bureaucrats

By Roni Bell                                                                            12/5/2024

No one, including Government parties, may access your private property (exceptions include fire/flood/terrorist) without your written permission.

By statute, pre-existing /valid/vested/senior/compensatory rights to easements (trails/roads), forage, beneficial use of water and improvements on Federal Land and deeded property should never be threatened by federal employees.

The minute any government entity (includes Federal), denies use of property, the law requires they begin Just Compensation.

Government Parties who want access to Chuck’s Wyoming property and our property in Colorado are required to sign both a Private Property Admittance Agreement and a Public Servants Questionnaire.

Some experiences I’ve had with trespassing bureaucrats include:

1)   Due to BLM’s Animal Unit Month cuts to accommodate excess feral (there are no “wild” horses in the U.S.A.) horses, BLM has forced significant income losses on Range Allotment Owners including Chuck Sylvester.

2)   Critical projects (1995 example Emily Griffith facility in Larkspur) have been aborted due to such as the incorrectly claimed Preble’s Jumping Mouse.

3)   EPA trespasses regularly to file false charges alleging regulatory violations. EPA trespassed a friend’s (Mike Calicrate) livestock facility causing him irreversible financial losses.

4)   ESA trespasses regularly to do “look sees” on private property, and to force “corridors” on property owners. WY rancher (Doug Cooper) had a stroke due to a corridor ESA forced on him.

5)   FEMA deliberately expands flood plains in order to convince towns/counties et al into conceding Water authority over to them.

The Big Thompson and Platte River Ditch company has accrued over $30,000 in attorney fees trying to fight FEMA’s illegal overreach.

6)   Years back, Premises Animal I.D. denied young 4-H and FFA members from showing livestock at the state fair. USDA still pushes Animal I.D., ignoring their “Brand Laws will be honored” promise.

7)   Wolves are stressing and killing livestock, causing owners immeasurable physical, mental and financial losses.

8)   Water is not administered in Prior Appropriation. Kevin Rein (CO State Water Engineer) may be trying to do so but it’s impossible due to the 7 Water Courts.

In 2006-7 Judge Roger Klein’s WAS case advisement - “NO harm to senior/vested/valid rights” was ignored. Whoever implemented WAS shut down senior wells, overhydrated the upper end of the S. Platte and raised the water table from its historic approximate 20 ft. to surfacing. Friend Harry Strohauer was denied watering his potato vines and his tubers were rotting. This stress contributed to a heart attack and subsequent move of most of his operation to New Mexico.

The 2013 flood I kicked FEMA off our farm on- I think -a Friday. They came back with vengeance – clip boards/tape measures etc. the following Monday. I had to inform them of their “trespass” and warn them – “any information you collect better not show up in a national database.”

Note: Because there are NO “navigable waters in Colorado” EPA, Army Corps of Engineers and FEMA have zero authority over Water in Colorado.

If you’re interested, I’d be honored to provide more cases and deeper explanations of the unjust harm government trespasses have brought Americans nationwide.

The members of R-CALF, an organization we belong to because it represents “Cow-Calf Producers,” recently voted on and overwhelmingly passed the Tenth Amendment Sanctury County resolution.

Overview: To protect the rights of Americans and community economies, I urge you to pass the Tenth Amendment Sanctury County. This will re-confirm a County’s authority to reject any request by Federal that’s outside of Federal’s Enumerated Powers.

 

This sign has teeth. Use it!




 Water Meeting in Weld County, CO 2014


 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, July 20, 2020

BIG LYING MARXISTS +


For cry'n out loud folks!
PLEASE know what the heck you're marching for and against!
Examples:
BLM: A Marxist campaign that has nothing to do with the color of one's skin. BLM stands for Big Lying Marxists.
If someone tells you black lives matter, demand details. Keep this color chart handy, point at it and ask, "which color black?"
Antifa: Claims to be anti-fascism as they destroy and render property useless. Fascism is "denied use of property." Therefore, Antifa is anti-itself.
If someone tells you Antifa's hunky dory, ask for their list of all properties they've destroyed, and all properties they've built.
NOTE: Please know that should you align with BLM and Antifa, you're endangering YOUR life, and the lives of your loved ones!
Planned Parenthood: Margaret Sanger's genocidal program. The name Planned Parenthood is extremely misleading, for they remove the child from opportunity to be parented. "It's my body" isn't the body the carrier wants murdered.
Climate change: The findings of over 31,000 scientists reveal: 1) The climate's been changing forever. 2) The science is not and never will be "settled."
Global Warming: Al Gore's global sized scam. Al engages children like Greta Thunberg, to pitch his scam, because he knows no smart, independent discerning adult would sell his shoddy product.
Just say "NO" to Al!
This is just for starters. Do your own research and you'll find more.

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

WHICH BLACK LIVES MATTER?

Which Black Lives Matter?
by LeAnne Price 
Speaking Out With Love and Wisdom

LeAnne Price 
I am just so upset with what’s going on.
All of these “black” people saying “black lives matter” is just a way to divide us even more.

You guys don’t seem to care about “black lives” when black people kill other black people. You only seem to care when a “white” person kills a “black” person.
You realize you’re continuing the racism right?
You realize you’re keeping the fire and hate going right?
Acting out in violence isn’t going to give you justice.
Acting out in violence ISN'T DOING ANY GOOD. Why don’t you see that???
You’re dividing this country even more by prioritizing your race over every other race. It’s pathetic and hypocritical.
“Black lives matter”, so what about the other races?? Do they not matter??
When a Mexican gets shot by a white police officer, do you hear them complaining and dividing us even more?
When a black police officer shoots a white person, do you hear them complain and prioritizing their race over every other race?? NO!!
Please just stop with this. It’s absolutely pathetic and saddening.
And frankly, I don’t care if this upsets you. This is MY Facebook and MY page. Go ahead and unfriend me, block me whatever.
While you are creating more problems, and dividing everyone, I’ll be over here praying for EVERYONE, and for God to step in and to bring peace to this world again!!!!!"

Thursday, April 2, 2020

HATE CRIMES


Hate Crimes
by Roni Bell                                                                                        April 2, 2020
Definition of hate crime: any of various crimes (such as assault or defacement of property) when motivated by hostility to the victim as a member of a group (such as one based on color, creed, gender, or sexual orientation).
Because we're ALL "Equal under the law," I see zero reason for a "hate crime" category. A crime is a crime is a crime!
But - since such exists, let's add "Property Owners and U.S. Citizens."
Here's a starter list of known "hate crimes against Property Owners and U.S. Citizens."
1) Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Chuck Schumer + hostile assaults against President Donald J. Trump.
2) Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Chuck Schumer + hostile assault on U.S. Citizen's earnings, by mandating they pay for their hostile assaults on President Donald J. Trump.
3) HSUS, PETA + trespass, assault lives and livelihoods and deface property.
4) Water thieves trespass, dump water and deface property and assault property owner by denying them use of property.
5) Nancy Pelosi + commit hate crimes each time they delay bills, thereby jeopardizing the safety of U.S. Citizens.
6) Alexandria Cortez, Rashida Talib, Ilhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley's refusal to protect us assaults U.S. Citizens.
7) Governors assault Property Owners earnings, by denying them their right to produce energy.
8) Governors assault U.S. Citizens by denying them their right to protect themselves.
9) Eco-terrorists have assaulted Property Owners including loggers, farmers, ranchers, fishermen, roustabouts (Domestic Resource Providers) for years, by trespassing, pouring sand in their fuel tanks, spiking roads, and claiming endangered species on property.
10) Rogue bureaucrats and their Eco-terrorist partners assault Property Owners, cripple food and fuel production and jeopardize our National Security.
11) Mayors, governors, D.A.'s etc. install Sanctuary Cities then allow the illegals and Sharia Law enforcers further assault us.
12) Bill Clinton committed a hate crime against the entire Escalante, UT community, when he swapped their land for campaign contributions from Indonesia and killed their economy.
13) Harry Reid committed so many hate crimes against Property Owners and U.S.Citizens, I don't know where to start.
14) Then there are the inciters of hate crimes - like Maxine Waters...Well, you get it by now.
This is just a starter list...

Sunday, March 15, 2020

ANXIETIES ABOUT HIDDEN FORCES

Frank Furedi

John Dunn notes in (parens), Frank Furedi material in bold...

Monday 11 October 2010
"Inviting us to bow down before the god of fortune Today’s deification of fear encourages us to succumb to fate. But we should learn from the Romans and seek to subdue Fortuna." Frank Furedi

Frank Furedi spoke on fear, fate and freedom at the Philosophy Festival in Modena, Italy, on 18 September 2010. An edited version of his speech is published below.

Who decides our individual fates? How much of our future is influenced by our exercise of free will? Humanity’s destiny has been the subject of controversy since the beginning of history.

Back in ancient times, different gods were endowed with the ability to thwart our ambitions or to bless us with good fortune. The Romans worshipped the goddess Fortuna, giving her great power over human affairs. Nevertheless, they still believed that her influence could be contained and even overcome by men of true virtue. As the saying goes: ‘Fortune favors the brave.’ This belief that the power of fortune could be limited through human effort and will is one of the most important legacies of humanism.

The belief in people’s capacity to exercise their will and shape their future flourished during the Renaissance, creating a world in which people could dream about struggling against the tide of fortune. A new refusal to defer to fate was expressed through affirming the human potential. Later, during the period of Enlightenment, this sensibility developed further, giving rise to a belief that, in certain circumstances, mankind could gain the freedom necessary to influence its future.

In the twenty-first century, however, the optimistic belief in humanity’s ability to subdue the unknown and become the master of its fate has given way to a belief that we are powerless to deal with the perils that confront us.
(Dunn note: more importantly, the polis has been influenced to think they are at the mercy of fate or accident and must look to the state for protection. The individual cannot provide for himself and his family and assure the safety and succor provided by the state—therefore the state must be promoted and the collective must be respected as the answer.)

Today, the problems associated with risk and uncertainty are constantly being amplified and, courtesy of our own imaginations, are turned into existential threats. Consequently, it is rare for unexpected natural events to be treated as just that; rather, they are swiftly dramatized and transformed into a threat to human survival.

The clearest expression of this tendency can be found in the dramatization of weather forecasting. Once upon a time, TV weather forecasts were just those boring moments when you got up to make a snack. 

But with the invention of concepts like ‘extreme weather’, routine events such as storms, smog or unexpected snowfall have been turned into compelling entertainment. Also these days, a relatively ordinary technical IT problem, such as the so-called Millennium Bug, can be interpreted as a threat of apocalyptic proportions; and officialdom’s reaction to a flu epidemic can look like it was taken from the plotline of a Hollywood disaster movie. Recently, when the World Health Organization warned that the human species was threatened by swine flu, it became clear that cultural prejudice rather than sober risk assessment influences much of current official thinking.

(Dunn note: Again, the importance and the omnipotence of the state are essential to survival and welfare of the weak and impotent citizen. If the citizen is at the mercy of the hands of fate, the only alternative is an appeal to the state and submission to the states power and capability.)

In recent times, European culture has become confused about the meaning of uncertainty and risk. As a result, it finds it difficult to live with the notion of Fortuna. Contemporary Western cultural attitudes towards uncertainty, chance and risk are far more pessimistic and confused than they were during most of the modern era. Only rarely is uncertainty about something looked upon as an opportunity to take responsibility for our destiny. Invariably, uncertainty is presented as a marker for danger, and change is often regarded with dread.

(Dunn note: for the virtuous and competent, uncertainty creates opportunities, challenges are opportunities or barriers, depending on the attitude of the individual, that is determined by the measure of the individual’s virtue.)

Frequently, worst-case thinking displaces any genuine risk-assessment process. Risk assessment is based on an attempt to calculate the probability of different outcomes. Worst-case thinking – these days known as precautionary thinking – is based on an act of imagination. It imagines the worst-case scenario and demands that we take action on that basis. For example, earlier this year, the fear that particles in the ash cloud from the volcanic eruption in Iceland could cause aeroplane engines to shut down automatically mutated into the conclusion that they would. It was the fantasy of the worst case, rather than risk assessment, which led to the panicky official ban on air travel.
(Dunn note: pretty simple—consider the positive or the negative, if fear dominates the mental state—precaution is the rule, if virtue as in fortitude, measured effort in the face of risk is the result.)

Implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, advocates of worst-case thinking argue that society should stop looking at risk in terms of a balance of probabilities. These critics of probabilistic thinking are calling for a radical break with past practices, on the grounds that today we simply lack the information to calculate probabilities effectively. Their rejection of the practice of calculating probabilities is motivated by a belief that the dangers we face are so overwhelming and catastrophic (Dunn note: FEAR) – the Millennium Bug, international terrorism, swine flu, climate change – that we cannot wait until we have all the information before we calculate their destructive effects. ‘Shut it down!’ is the default response. One of the many regrettable consequences of this outlook is that policies designed to deal with threats are increasingly based on feelings and intuition rather than on evidence or facts.

(Dunn Note: that also is the product of what an individual might consider his level of competence and ability. Those who have no confidence and no experience with success and effort, chose retreat and fear as the default position.)

Worst-case thinking encourages the adoption of fear as one of the dominant principles around which the public, and its government and institutions, should organize their lives. It institutionalizes insecurity and fosters a mood of confusion and powerlessness (Dunn Note: but most of all it is the byproduct of a lack of experience and development of confidence from effort and acceptance of the results of that effort. More than anything, it is the attitude that since there is a chance of failure, best not to try.)

By popularizing the belief that worst cases are normal (Dunn note: or unavoidable when one has no confidence or fortitude and determination) , it incites people to feel defenseless and vulnerable in the face of a wide range of threats. In all but name, it is an invitation for us to defer to Fortuna. (Dunn note: this means that not only are the difficulties and challenges overestimated, but the ability to deal with them is a measure of the lack of confidence, virtue, and fortitude—a self fulfilling prophesy of failure is easy to accomplish or concede.)

Crisis of causality
The tendency to engage with uncertainty through the prism of fear (Dunn note: or the inability to be rationale and analytic in the face of a challenge), and always to anticipate destructive outcomes, can be understood as a crisis of causality (Dunn note: or a crisis of confidence or commitment to being an actor as opposed to a victim or an object.)

Increasingly, policymakers are demanding precaution in relation to various different problems. When events appear to have little meaning, and when society finds it difficult to account for the origins and the possible future trajectory of those events, then it is tempting to rely on caution (Dunn note: or retreat) rather than on reasoning (or engagement and competent confrontation). Human beings have always exercised caution ( and courage if they were capable of it) when dealing with uncertainty. Today, however, caution has become politicized (or assumed as a default position and an easy out) and has been turned into a dominant cultural norm (or a cheap and easy out).

The clearest manifestation of this is the rise of the idea of sustainability. The doctrine of sustainability demands that we don’t take any risks with our future (or assume that whatever we do, it is bad for the sustainability, so it’s best to avoid doing anything and making as little a footprint as possible.). Taking decisive action to promote progress is seen as far more dangerous (or destructive of the precious environment) than simply staying still. That is why, these days, the ideals of development, progress and economic growth enjoy little cultural valuation. In contrast, just to ‘sustain’ a future of more of the same is represented as a worthwhile objective. (Dunn note: the basic assumption being that human action is bad, inaction is good, and we are a cancer on the planet, and the other non human initiated activities or effects are somehow natural and not destructive. Lion’s killing wildebeests is natural, humans killing wildebeests is destructive.)

Today’s precautionary culture answers the age-old question about where fate ends and free will begins by insisting that our fate is to sustain. (Dunn note: more important it is human fate to avoid effecting nature or the planet.)

In Roman times, and during the Renaissance, it was argued that Virtus could overcome the power of Fortuna. The ideals of virtue upheld courage, prudence, intelligence, a dedication to the public good, and a willingness to take risks. Petrarch’s remarkable The Remedies of Both Kinds of Fortune (1366) proposed the very modern and radical idea that mankind had the potential to control his destiny. In the context of the Renaissance, the conviction that people had the power to transform the physical world began to gain ground. 

In the current climate, however, when Western culture is so apprehensive about dealing with uncertainty, (Dunn note: not true, it is not uncertainty that is our problem is guilt about our existence and a sense that we are invading a non human perfect natural world because we exercise free will and act in ways that non humans cannot.) our aspiration to transform, develop and progress has been overwhelmed by the ethos of caution and sustainability. (Actually overwhelmed by our sense of guilt for existing. We think and teach that we are destructive and defile the planet and the universe by our very existence. We seek to become invisible.)

The crisis of causality expresses a profound sense of unease towards people’s capacity to know. This has a significant influence on the way that communities interpret the world around them. Once the authority of knowledge is undermined, people lose confidence in their ability to interpret new events. Without the guidance of knowledge, world events can appear as random and arbitrary acts that are beyond comprehension. This crisis of causality does not simply deprive society of an ability to grasp the chain of events that led to a particular outcome; it also diminishes the ability to find meaning in what sometimes appears as a series of arbitrary events.

Frequently, the dangers faced by humans are represented as problems that we can’t really understand. (Dunn note: again, not true, since we know plenty and our problem is justifying our existence and the effect we have on the world.)
In contrast to the Enlightenment’s conviction that knowledge could eventually solve all problems, the intellectual temper today tends to focus on the impossibility of knowing. (or the fact that we have no right to be here at all.)

This pessimistic view of our capacity to understand (or our moral right to be here) has important implications for how society views its future. If the impact of our actions on the future is not knowable, then our anxieties towards change become amplified. The skepticism about our ability to anticipate outcomes is often based on the idea that we simply don’t have the time to catch up with the fast and far-reaching consequences of modern technological development. Many experts claim that since technological innovations have such rapid consequences, there is simply no time to understand their likely effects. (Dunn note: merely a cheap excuse for the fact that uncertainty creates a chance to act rightly or wrongly and, by definition, humans act wrongly for the planet, since they act for their own interests and nature has no motives.)

In a roundabout way, the devaluation of knowledge expresses a diminishing of belief in the power and influence of human subjectivity. (Dunn note: not true, humans don’t devalue knowledge as they are convinced by culture and dogma to think that human effort and knowledge are always negative and always produce a blight on the planet.)

That is why it is now commonplace to hear the Enlightenment project described as naïve, or to see scientists castigated for ‘playing God’. The idea of diminished subjectivity, as communicated through the precautionary culture, inexorably leads to a reconciliation with – if not a deference to – fate. (Dumb nature is now the measure of wisdom, human action and effort are evil and mendacious and destroy the perfection of Gaia and nature.)

One of the most important ways in which today’s sense of diminished subjectivity is experienced is through the feeling that individuals are being manipulated and influenced by hidden powerful forces. Not just spin-doctors, subliminal advertising and the media, but also powers that have no name. That is why we frequently attribute unexplained physical and psychological symptoms to unspecific forces, such as the food we eat, the water we drink, an extending variety of pollutants and substances transmitted by new technologies and other invisible processes.

(Yes, the ignorant attempt to find mythologies to explain their sense of powerlessness.)

The American academic, Timothy Melley, has characterized this response as agency panic. ‘Agency panic is intense anxiety about an apparent loss of autonomy, the conviction that one’s actions are being controlled by someone else or that one has been “constructed” by powerful, external agents’, writes Melley. (When people lose the sense of control and the ability to control, they rationalize. Melley ignores the obvious, ignorance, cowardice require something to fill the void and excuse the lack of virtue and competent action—why not some unknown force or conspiracy?)

The perception that one’s behavior and action are controlled by external agents is symptomatic of a heightened sense of fatalism, which springs from today’s sense of diminished subjectivity. (Why do intellectuals talk in stupid terms? What is diminished subjectivity—it is not a rationally explicable phrase. Does he mean diminished sense of control of ones life—sure, subjectivity means nothing.)
The feeling of being subject to manipulation and external control – the very stuff of conspiracy theory – is consistent with the perception of being vulnerable or ‘at risk’. As Melley observes, this reaction ‘stems largely from a sense of diminished human agency, a feeling that individuals cannot effect meaningful social action and, in extreme cases, may not be able to control their own behavior’.

The re-emergence of pre-modern anxieties about hidden forces is testimony to the weakening of the humanist sensibility that emerged as part of the Enlightenment. The loss of a sense of human agency has not only undermined the public’s engagement with politics – it has also altered the way in which people make sense of the world around them. The crisis of causality means that the most important events are now seen as being shaped and determined by a hidden agenda. We seem to be living in a shadowy world akin to The Matrix movies, where the issue at stake is the reality that we inhabit and who is being manipulated by whom.

(Movies are plays and make believe, and add nothing to this discussion, but seem to be something intellectuals like to do, to show they are regular people who attend movies. Idiots can attend movies.)

In previous times, that kind of attitude was mainly held by right-wing (so goofy conspiracy theories are right wing?) populist (also right wing or maybe lefty wing?) movements, which saw the hand of a Jewish or a Masonic or a Communist conspiracy behind all major world events. Today, conspiracy theory has gone mainstream, (no, ignorance and fear and lack of virtue have become more widespread) and many of its most vociferous promoters can be found in radical protest movements and amongst the cultural left. Increasingly, important events are viewed as the products of a cover-up, as the search for the ‘hidden hand’ manipulating a particular story comes to dominate public life. Conspiracy theory constructs worlds where everything important is manipulated behind our backs and where we simply do not know who is responsible for our predicament. In such circumstances, we have no choice but to defer to our fate.
(he repeats himself to no advantage)

It is through conspiracy theories that Fortuna reappears – but it does so in a form that is far more degraded than in Roman times. To their credit, the Romans were able to counterpose virtus to Fortuna. In a precautionary culture, however, fortune favors the risk-averse, not the brave. (Not true if favor means something, since favor means creating an advantage—precautionary conduct does not favor anyone, it is cowardice in the face of uncertainty or the acquiescence to fear as opposed to action and an effort to be effective and achieve success.)

The current deification of fear instructs us to bow to fate. In such circumstances, there is not much room left for freedom or the exercise of free will. Yet if we have to defer to fate, how can we be held to account? In the absence of the freedom to influence the future, how can there be human responsibility? (indeed, virtue is its own reward, Mr. speaker)

One of the principal accomplishments of the precautionary culture has been to normalize irresponsibility (or cowardice and inaction with a dash of decadence as opposed to virtue and maturity and responsibility). We should reject this perspective, in favor of a mighty dose of humanist courage. (Yes, Yes, Yes.)

The above is a speech given at the Philosophy Festival in Modena, Italy, on 18 September 2010. An edited version was published in the Australian on 9 October 2010.

Frank Furedi’s latest book, Wasted: Why Education Isn’t Educating, is published by Continuum Press. (Buy this book from Amazon(UK).) Visit Furedi’s website here. reprinted from: 
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/9768/

John Dale Dunn, M.D., J.D. is an emergency physician and inactive attorney