Los Angeles Times

Don’t call them ‘activists’

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Re “Armed activists take on U.S. government,” Jan. 4

No, the people occupying a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon are not taking on the U.S. government; they are taking on the U.S. citizenry. We all own the land, which is held in trust for us.

When Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy, whose son Ammon is participat­ing in the current occupation, refused to pay to graze cattle, he was withholdin­g payment from Americans to use the land held in that trust. It was no different than if he grazed his cattle on his neighbor’s land and refused to pay for it.

One of the foremost principles of our democracy is that we all agree to obey the law, and when one of us violates it, we have agreed there will be consequenc­es — whether it is paying to graze cattle or paying a parking ticket.

Judi Jones

San Pedro

“Activists”? Seriously? Activists don’t threaten to shoot representa­tives of property owners (law enforcemen­t working on the public’s behalf ) who come to escort them off the property.

Just because none of us wants another Waco doesn’t mean we shouldn’t call these people what they are: insurrecti­onists. Profession­al writers sure ought to know the difference.

Joanne Zirretta

Aliso Viejo

According to another article in The Times, the armed men who took over a national wildlife refuge in Oregon now claim that what they are doing is “akin to environmen­tal groups who take up residence in trees to stop logging.”

This is intellectu­ally insulting. Environmen­tal activists who do this are practicing peaceful civil disobedien­ce, while the ranchers and loggers in Oregon are armed and are threatenin­g to shoot law enforcemen­t officers or others who stand in their way.

Moreover, tree-sitters do not claim that the federal land in question is theirs, and they do not openly declare “war” on the federal government.

If the armed people in Oregon were affiliated with Black Lives Matter, were Muslim or were environmen­tal activists for that matter, many in the national media, law enforcemen­t and policymake­rs would not hesitate to call them terrorists. Why the double standard?

Chad Hanson

Big Bear City, Calif.

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