Posts Tagged Totalitarian Government

April 3, 2024 Meeting Notes

Memo: On April 3 a Town Hall meeting was held by the Egypt Valley Wildlife Refuge Committee with all area land-owners invited. Author and special speaker Tom Deweese spoke on government confiscation of lands and what recourse citizens have against this heavy-handed takings. The event was well
attended by elected representatives and filmed by Fox news 9. Photos of the event with a written presentation of losses caused by ODNR from their lack of management of the property were presented. Copy below. DD

Tom Deweese, American Policy Center, Warrenton, VA
Photos by Fox News 9

EGYPT VALLEY RECOVERY/ DEVELOPMENT

As citizens, we all have an obligation to intervene in government
and become involved – it’s the citizen who stops the bleeding.”

The day President Biden was sworn in he made mention of his 30×30 goal. Later he added a 50×50 goal to his list of future plans.

The 30×30 is a plan for the government to own 30% of the USA by 2030, then 50% by 2050. This is a flawed Agenda 21 plot that the people can not manage and should not own land—the government should be the owner of all land and all production.

This is their end game. The reason for the 30×30 land grab. The purpose for the climate crisis hysteria. We will own nothing. They will own everything.  ~Margaret Byfield

In three years the government has added 24,000,000 acres to government ownership, the most of any administration. This land is taken out of private enterprise and removed from the tax base. More land “takings” are planned and states are conspiring with the feds to help confiscate these private properties. Under words like “conservation,” “wildlife refuges,” “natural areas,” “parks,” “protected lands,”and “public lands” these acres are adding up by the millions with names that are designed to be palatable to tax payers.

“Governments are capable of absolutely anything because they consider their citizens
a national resource available for exploitation, almost like cattle.” ~Doug Casey

LOSS DAMAGE REPARATIONS FROM ODNR:

  • Back tax-base loss-recovery up to 28,000 acres
  • Development of lake and tourist park shelters as promised
  • Purchase of road maintenance equipment for Kirkwood TSP
  • Development of public water system for area use from 100 acre lake.
  • Open season year around on ODNA released predators, river otter, lions, bob cats, ferrets, etc., without licenses or fines.
  • Income from land use including oil leases payable for local use.

DEVELOPMENT FUNDING:

  • Immediate release of certain parcels for cash sales
  • Immediate release of all parcels where oil/gas leasing is possible
  • Release contracts for all select cut mature timber
  • Land liquidation will not be sold multi-parcel auction.
  • Funds acquired from Belmont County lands will be returned to Belmont County for public roads, tourist development, etc.

ASSET VALUES TAKEN FROM BELMONT COUNTY CITIZENS:

  • Loss from property tax 28 years at $11 per a 28,000 a = $8,932,000
  • Loss surface lease agriculture use or recreation 28,000 a x $30 per acre = $840,000 per year x 28 years = $24,360,000.
  • Oil/gas leases signing-deposits $5000 per acre = $140,000,000.
  • Future oil/gas royalties per year 35 years $__________________?
  • Liquidation surface 28,000 a $2000 per acre = $56,000,000
  • Private enterprise loss of collateral-investment-value (lending can be up to 75% of value.)
  • Loss to local citizens from private property taxes, income, food production, etc
  • Under full agriculture production, fee hunting plus oil and gas production can work together producing income from all sources at the same time with intelligent management. $_______________________________________________

ORDERLY LIQUIDATION:

  • Liquidation time estimate, 2 to 12 years
  • Sell all EVWR property except selected scenic areas for attractive maintained recreation of no more than 1000 acres.
  • Liquidation, research and management by an elected BOD from the area.
  • Restock useful wildlife introductions, after predator removal program, releasing turkey, quail, grouse, chukars, pheasants, etc.
  • Provide public water from 100 acre lake with taps in Fairview and Hendrysburg. (Land liquidation pays all installation main line costs)
  • No new acquisition lands will be removed from private property in the future.


Other considerations:

https://wtov9.com/news/local/egypt-valley-committee-debates-future-of-28000-acre-wildlife-area-at-community-meeting

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DEATH BY 1000 CUTS

by: Darol Dickinson

During the Tang Dynasty (A.D. 618-907), the most dastardly enemies of Imperial China suffered a process of slow torture and eventual death. It was a punishment that shoots fear up the spine even today, more than a thousand years later.

In world history, few methods of execution were as gruesome as the “Lingchi”—better known as Death by 1000 Cuts. For those who have never been hanged, electrocuted, or shot by firing squad, the Lingchi should be your last choice of a way to die. Its details evolved into an art form that allowed the victim always to die eventually, but slowly. The worse the crime, the longer the torture. The Lingchi’s success in each case was evaluated by how long the punishment could be stretched out. This process was used by the government as a public spectacle to instill fear. It was famous worldwide as a show of power, extreme severity, and Imperial Chinese savagery.

Slightly different but like the methods of the Lingchi is President Biden’s 2024 State of the Union Address. It includes a proposed budget of $7.3 trillion for fiscal 2025, with a categorical 25% tax on billionaires. (Billionaires are the ones who own businesses and hire the most employees.) Like Lingchi, this budget proposal is not designed for a quick, bloody death, but rather a slow sucking away of private assets. Its unstated goal is to equalize outcomes across the entire US population. That is a mission that makes individuals’ prosperity less likely and their survival under government stabulation ever harder.

Overtly, this $7.3 trillion budget includes a plan to sequester millions of acres of productive land for “the greater good.” Buried in it, however, is a covert scheme to take land away from private enterprise and “protect”—that is, remove—it from farm/food production and oil and mineral exploration. This confiscatory plan is an open secret, because the public has already been forewarned.

When Joe Biden was inaugurated in 2021, he immediately announced a 30×30 project to take 30% of US land from private enterprise by 2030 and retire it—i.e., make it dormant—ostensibly for “the greater good.” Soon after that, he announced his 50×50 plan, and then a grand, even-larger 70×70 plan.

To visualize the government plan. Consider the dwindling size of remaining land private-ownership with each increasing increment of government land-grab.

These proposals have ominous parallels to the Chinese Lingchi as well as to collectivist politics. Specifically, in the playbook of any communist or other authoritarian takeover, the first step is to control land, then to control production of all goods and services, and finally to control all the people. This method of long-term, covert acquisition is clearly defined in the Communist Manifesto. The strategy is clear to those who do their research.

The following table shows federal land ownership state-by-state in 2018. Today, six short years later, the total includes millions more acres. In January 2024, President Biden announced success in acquiring 24,000,000 acres for his 30×30 program, now renamed “America the Beautiful.” That new name for his initiative is a euphemism—a phrase that sounds more patriotic, sanitary, and benign than a heavy-handed government takeover of 30, 50 or 70% of private property in the USA.

Federal land ownership by state (as of 2018)

State

Federal land
acreage

Total state acreage

Percentage of
federal land

Alabama

880,188

32,678,400

2.7%

Alaska

222,666,580

365,481,600

60.9%

Arizona

28,077,992

72,688,000

38.6%

Arkansas

3,159,486

33,599,360

9.4%

California

45,493,133

100,206,720

45.4%

Colorado

24,100,247

66,485,760

36.2%

Connecticut

9,110

3,135,360

0.3%

Delaware

29,918

1,265,920

2.4%

District of Columbia

9,649

39,040

24.7%

Florida

4,491,200

34,721,280

12.9%

Georgia

1,946,492

37,295,360

12.9%

Hawaii

829,830

4,105,600

20.2%

Idaho

32,789,648

52,933,120

61.9%

Illinois

423,782

35,795,200

1.2%

Indiana

384,726

23,158,400

1.7%

Iowa

97,509

35,860,480

0.3%

Kansas

253,919

52,510,720

0.5%

Kentucky

1,100,160

25,512,320

4.3%

Louisiana

1,353,291

28,867,840

4.7%

Maine

301,481

19,847,680

1.5

Maryland

205,362

6,319,360

3.2%

Massachusetts

62,680

5,034,880

1.2%

Michigan

3,637,599

36,492,160

10.0%

Minnesota

3,503,977

51,205,760

6.8%

Mississippi

1,552,634

30,222,720

5.1%

Missouri

1,702,983

44,248,320

3.8%

Montana

27,082,401

93,271,040

29.0%

Nebraska

546,852

49,031,680

1.1%

Nevada

56,262,610

70,264,320

80.1%

New Hampshire

805,472

5,768,960

14.0%

New Jersey

171,956

4,813,440

3.6%

New Mexico

24,665,774

77,766,400

31.7%

New York

230,992

30,680,960

0.8%

North Carolina

2,434,801

31,402,880

7.8%

North Dakota

1,733,641

44,452,480

3.9%

Ohio

305,502

26,222,080

1.2%

Oklahoma

683,289

44,087,680

1.5%

Oregon

32,244,257

61,598,720

52.3%

Pennsylvania

622,160

28,804,480

2.2%

Rhode Island

4,513

677,120

0.7%

South Carolina

875,316

19,374,080

4.5%

South Dakota

2,640,005

48,881,920

5.4%

Tennessee

1,281,362

26,727,680

4.8%

Texas

3,231,198

168,217,600

1.9%

Utah

33,267,621

52,696,960

63.1%

Vermont

465,888

5,936,640

7.8%

Virginia

2,373,616

25,496,320

9.3%

Washington

12,192,855

42,693,760

28.6%

West Virginia

1,134,138

15,410,560

7.4%

Wisconsin

1,854,085

35,011,200

5.3%

Wyoming

29,137,722

62,343,040

46.7%

United States

615,311,596

2,271,343,360

27.1%

Source: U.S. Congressional Research Service, “Federal Land Ownership: Overview and Data”


Note that fourteen states have already lost more than 20% of their land to the Federal government. Collectively, the central U.S. government now owns 27.1%—more than a quarter and approaching a third—of the entire continental land mass of the United States:
Nevada80.1%
Utah63.1%
Idaho61.9%
Alaska60.9%
Oregon52.3%
Wyoming46.7%
California45.4%
Arizona38.6%
Colorado36.2%
New Mexico31.7%
Montana29.0%
Washington28.6%
District of Columbia24.7%
Hawaii20.2%
US total27.1%

Here are some methods by which national, state, and non-profit owners of US land legally execute Death by 1000 Cuts:

  1. Coveted land is normally located near or between other government-owned properties.
  2. Purchases are usually made by imminent domain or at market price. Some properties are even bought at prices inflated above appraised value to “persuade” owners who don’t want to sell.
  3. Regardless of price, taxes on citizens are typically increased enough to finance land purchases. Some properties are provisionally bought by NGO’s with contracts to hold them until enough tax revenue has been accumulated.
  4. With rare exceptions, “protected” land is usually off-limits to agriculture, food production, timber, mining, and oil exploration. “Protected” means that private enterprise is forbidden and thus cannot create jobs, goods, services, income, or profits on government land.
  5. Government land is immediately removed from tax rolls. It generates no income that would otherwise be collected from normal taxes on private property.
  6. Public services such as roads, law enforcement, and school revenues cannot be funded from tax-sheltered government land. Instead, private citizens’ taxes to pay for these services must be raised to compensate for untaxed government properties.
  7. Signs are typically posted to keep the public off government holdings even when they are labeled “public land.”
  8. Government-owned timber or grass land is rarely harvested properly. It becomes vulnerable to wildfires. Public dumping is frequently rampant near population centers. Secluded areas are often used for illegal drug deals.
  9. For quarterly and other inspections, federal inspectors drive government cars and trucks, which do not pay taxes for licenses or purchase.
  10. States cooperate with federal agencies and NGO’s to achieve the Biden administration’s goal of increased government ownership. Because all government assets are fungible, non-taxpaying entities often trade resources for bridge grants, city water systems, and land acreages. Properties can seldom be bought back from the government or non-profits that take land from private ownership.
  11. Death by 1000 Cuts engulfs historic private land “for the public good,” effectively killing it for all profitable and productive uses.

Protecting US land for profitable, sustainable use by private citizens is extremely important in a free society. Here are some tips for responsible voters:

  1. Elect representatives who pledge to never expand government land or who will vote to preserve land under only the most compelling conditions.
  2. Support representatives who pledge to sell government properties back to private owners in a systematic, orderly process for profitable use.
  3. Demand taxation of all government properties and vehicles.
  4. Explain to government officials how much public ownership actually costs private citizens for law enforcement, schools, roads—and why Death by 1000 Cuts is dead-wrong painful.
  5. Be alert to well-meaning bureaucrats who are actually scrambling to earn Biden’s approval by confiscating millions of acres of private property.
  6. Quit this tax-payer-torture! The bleeding must stop. Just say no to all new government land acquisitions and start an orderly liquidation of the government waste-land ownership.

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