Freedom Outpost – by Tim Brown
Garfield County Sheriff James “Danny” Perkins has issued threats in Utah against the Bureau of Land Management and the US Forest Service if they sought to close access by Americans to public lands.
NPR reports:
Federal land makes up 94 percent of this county, so you’d think that Perkins would welcome the help of federal authorities. Think again. In the sage brush hills outside the one-stoplight town of Panguitch, he pulls off the highway and points to a dirt track.
“This is a conflict, and you’re gonna see just a little bit of it. Here’s a road right here, that was put here with teams and wagons,” Perkins says.
“We’re talking pioneer wagons here. Boulders lie in front of it and a bulldozer chewed it up so pickups or ATVs can’t drive up it anymore. Federal rangers did this recently,” he says. Locals have had access here for generations.
“There is an agenda — and don’t kid yourself — there’s an agenda to get rid of the grazing, there’s an agenda to shut down our roads,” Perkins says.
Tensions over federal land — who gets to do what on it, and who is in charge of it — are as high as they’ve been out here since at least the 1990s. Perkins and many others in his position will give you an earful about how they believe federal agencies have been taken over by environmental extremists. But this is more than just a turf battle. Perkins, too, has an agenda. He proudly refers to himself as a constitutional sheriff.
“Because I raised my arm to the square and I swore to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,” he says.
A few miles away, in his office, he swivels back in his chair and starts digging through a file cabinet. He keeps copies of the papers and the Constitution on hand. Nowhere in them, he says, does it say anything about Bureau of Land Management or Forest Service law enforcement officers, let alone whether they have authority to pull people over for driving off-road or arrest people for illegal campfires. He says, as sheriff, he answers to the state of Utah.
“The powers delegated by the proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined,” he says. “I can even understand that!”
Indeed, those powers are very, very limited. These are things that Ammon Bundy tried to communicate to FOX News’ Megyn Kelly, but few would listen because they are submitting that the central government has all the answers rather than understanding it is restricted by the Constitution.
“I told the Forest Service ranger that if he went out and closed a road that Garfield County has jurisdiction on, I would arrest him,” he added.
I think though that Sheriff Perkins would do well to actually read and understand his Constitution. While he stands rightly to arrest these agents, he adds concerning those who stood against them at Bundy Ranch:
“I said it at the time, and I’ll stand by it, that is nothing but domestic terrorism. Yes, there’s been a story, a lot of these guys have been bullied around by the BLM, but you don’t handle it that way.”
Sorry to hear the sheriff is siding with communists like Harry Reid. These people were defending property right and at the Constitution. Personally, I have to wonder if Sheriff Perkins is a blowhard, but doesn’t actually understand the Constitution’s restrictions on the central government’s claims and control of land.
What do you think?
“Because I raised my arm to the square and I swore to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States,” he says.
Raised my arm to the square? Sounds Masonic to me. I like the idea of taking back our public lands from Federal, but this hints at what Henry has frequently said regarding just WHO is making all the noise about it – the old boy Masonic lodge club.
Raising your hand to the square is a mormon thing. Being a Utah sheriff he is most likely mormon. It has zero to do with masonic hoo-haw.
Your statement that it is a Mormon thing is clearly true on the face of it, since the term “raising my hand to the square” has it’s roots in Mormon temple practice, and this is likely the source of his using the term. However, because it is used by the Mormons does not mean that it has zero to do with Freemasonry.
Since the square and compass are the symbols of Freemasonry, and since Smith is proven to have both been a Freemason and to have plagiarized large portions of the Bible in forming his “Book of Mormon”, I do not doubt for a minute that he plagiarized and adopted much ritual and symbology from Freemasonry when formulating his false religion. Therefore, the Sheriff, in using this term, (assuming he is a Mormon, which is likely) is utilizing a Mormon perspective, but the origin of the symbol is ultimately Masonic. Aside from this, the issue remains that those who claim to want to restore public lands to the people tend to lean to the “good ole boy” Masonic network in their allegiance, and not to the true sovereign right of free men to live free and make their living on the land. I still think our friendly Sheriff is one of those folks, but watching him and his deputies arrest some Federals and the subsequent response from the alien occupiers would make for some interesting entertainment.
https://youtu.be/H3er7IZLRek?t=62
Sorry, Darzak, YouTube video boxes refuse to come up any longer.
“What do you think?”
I’ll tell you what I think, Tim Brown (author); I think this is all theater to raise a debate over how much control the Federal Government should have over U.S. territory, and that debate will end with the Supreme court deciding that everything belongs to Obama, or whatever puppet King is sitting on the throne at the time.
In truth, they have no right to control our land, but there are a lot of people who’ll profit from this theft, and that will motivate a lot of lying, and the same acting skills you’ll see displayed by any con artist.