Difference between revisions of "Cliven Bundy/BLM dispute"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(reference to "/standoff" page)
(cattle grave; more on the sequence of events)
Line 6: Line 6:
 
==About==
 
==About==
 
The dispute between [[Cliven Bundy]] and the [[US Bureau of Land Management]] (BLM), which reached its climax with an [[/standoff|armed confrontation]] in 2014, began in 1993 when the BLM, concerned about the effects of overgrazing on the endangered [[desert tortoise]], changed land-use rules to prohibit grazing on certain lands where it had previously been allowed, on penalty of monetary fines. Bundy continued grazing his cattle on the now-off-limits lands, but refused to pay the new fines.{{l/source|2014/04/15/Everything you need to know about the long fight between Cliven Bundy and the federal government}}
 
The dispute between [[Cliven Bundy]] and the [[US Bureau of Land Management]] (BLM), which reached its climax with an [[/standoff|armed confrontation]] in 2014, began in 1993 when the BLM, concerned about the effects of overgrazing on the endangered [[desert tortoise]], changed land-use rules to prohibit grazing on certain lands where it had previously been allowed, on penalty of monetary fines. Bundy continued grazing his cattle on the now-off-limits lands, but refused to pay the new fines.{{l/source|2014/04/15/Everything you need to know about the long fight between Cliven Bundy and the federal government}}
 +
 +
The confrontation began when the BLM attempted to round up the cattle in order to remove them from federal land, but the round-up was called off due to concerns about safety of BLM employees if the Bundy supporters were to initiate a fire fight; this ended the confrontation.
 +
 +
After the rounded-up cattle were released back to the Bundys, the Bundy family determined that two bulls had been shot by the BLM (which the BLM [[2014/04/17/2 bulls euthanized during Cliven Bundy cattle roundup|has confirmed]]) and several others had died from dehydration. This was followed shortly by the family's [[/cattle grave|discovery]] of the corpses of the dead cattle.
  
 
It has been widely reported (primarily in the [[right-wing media]]) that the desert tortoise was just an excuse for government to behave illicitly (in [[2014/04/08/Dave Bundy, son of Cliven Bundy, out of Jail after arrest for defending Cattle|the words of Shiree Bundy Cox]], the government was "playing the [[endangered species card]]", i.e. raising the issue solely to gain support from liberals and environmentalists).
 
It has been widely reported (primarily in the [[right-wing media]]) that the desert tortoise was just an excuse for government to behave illicitly (in [[2014/04/08/Dave Bundy, son of Cliven Bundy, out of Jail after arrest for defending Cattle|the words of Shiree Bundy Cox]], the government was "playing the [[endangered species card]]", i.e. raising the issue solely to gain support from liberals and environmentalists).
 +
 
==Discussion==
 
==Discussion==
 
* [[User:Woozle/IRC/2014/04/16/WeThePpl]]: dialogue between Woozle and a defender of the Bundys' position
 
* [[User:Woozle/IRC/2014/04/16/WeThePpl]]: dialogue between Woozle and a defender of the Bundys' position
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
{{links/smw}}
 
{{links/smw}}

Revision as of 14:08, 24 April 2014

About

The dispute between Cliven Bundy and the US Bureau of Land Management (BLM), which reached its climax with an armed confrontation in 2014, began in 1993 when the BLM, concerned about the effects of overgrazing on the endangered desert tortoise, changed land-use rules to prohibit grazing on certain lands where it had previously been allowed, on penalty of monetary fines. Bundy continued grazing his cattle on the now-off-limits lands, but refused to pay the new fines.[S]

The confrontation began when the BLM attempted to round up the cattle in order to remove them from federal land, but the round-up was called off due to concerns about safety of BLM employees if the Bundy supporters were to initiate a fire fight; this ended the confrontation.

After the rounded-up cattle were released back to the Bundys, the Bundy family determined that two bulls had been shot by the BLM (which the BLM has confirmed) and several others had died from dehydration. This was followed shortly by the family's discovery of the corpses of the dead cattle.

It has been widely reported (primarily in the right-wing media) that the desert tortoise was just an excuse for government to behave illicitly (in the words of Shiree Bundy Cox, the government was "playing the endangered species card", i.e. raising the issue solely to gain support from liberals and environmentalists).

Discussion

Links

Related

Video