This Is What White Supremacy Looks Like: A Party At The Bundy Ranch, A Funeral In North Charleston One Year Ago, Cliven Bundy Threatened War On The Federal Government. This Weekend, He’s Throwing A Party.

Cliven Bundy (Credit: Reuters/Jim Urquhart)
Cliven Bundy (Credit: Reuters/​Jim Urquhart)

This week­end, the Bundy ranch in Nevada will host a reunion to cel­e­brate own­er Cliven Bundy’s con­tin­ued law­less­ness. Bundy became a hero of the far-right a year ago when his refusal to pay 20 years’ worth of fed­er­al graz­ing fees for his cat­tle — totalling $1.1 mil­lion—brought fed­er­al agents to col­lect, which Bundy and sev­er­al hun­dred armed right-wing mili­tia mem­bers repelled with a show of force. Fox News and oth­er right-wing news out­lets raced to the ranch to report on what Bundy sup­port­ers called the “Second American Revolution” and the “American Spring,” the moment when the rhetoric of “tyran­ny” and “total­i­tar­i­an­ism” under President Obama would mate­ri­al­ize into actu­al armed con­flict against the loath­some fed­er­al government.

For any­one con­fused about whether a polit­i­cal move­ment which cel­e­brates the Second Amendment and ral­lies around an iconog­ra­phy of war and rebel­lion is inter­est­ed in actu­al com­bat against the “lib­er­al” fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, the Bundy affair answered any remain­ing ques­tions: Yes, the prospect excites many far right-wing con­ser­v­a­tives like noth­ing else. Fox News’ Sean Hannity was gid­dy in his ini­tial intro­duc­tion of Bundy as some­one threat­en­ing a “range war” against the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment. Fox News cov­ered the ranch saga dai­ly, with Bundy pre­sent­ed as a hero, and Hannity alone would fea­ture Bundy on his show numer­ous times over the sev­er­al weeks of the stand­off, at times giv­ing the rebel ranch­er a prime­time micro­phone mul­ti­ple times a week to ral­ly right wingers to his cause.

Two extrem­ists, Jerad and Amanda Miller, who trav­eled to Bundy’s ranch, only to be turned out, would go on to exe­cute two Nevada police offi­cers in June, drap­ing the famil­iar Gadsden “Don’t Tread on Me” flag over the corpses and pin­ning a note to their gov­ern­ment vic­tims say­ing, “This is the start of the rev­o­lu­tion.” Jerad and Amanda heard the call for a “range war” and took it upon them­selves to be the van­guard of the Bundy rebellion.

In the end, the two offi­cers were the only casu­al­ties and Bundy’s boys went home with not so much as a band-aid, as fed­er­al agents were backed down by a ver­i­ta­ble army of mili­ti­a­men. The gov­ern­ment blinked, and Bundy was allowed to con­tin­ue to flout a law he’d decid­ed didn’t apply to him.

That, ladies and gen­tle­men, is white power.

And this is black vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty: In the inter­ven­ing year since the Nevada show­down, much of America has become out­raged by a series of cas­es of unarmed black men killed by police. The epi­dem­ic of police vio­lence against black men has been ongo­ing for decades, of course, but a con­flu­ence of a new pub­lic atten­tive­ness and video evi­dence in some cas­es has pushed the cri­sis into the main­stream discourse.

The lat­est case, the shock­ing mur­der of Walter Scott in North Charleston, SC, should be held up for com­par­i­son with the Bundy stand­off. Before the video sur­faced and con­tra­dict­ed his report, Scott’s killer, Officer Michael Slager, jus­ti­fied his use of dead­ly force by claim­ing that Scott gained con­trol of Slager’s taser, thus mak­ing him a threat wor­thy of fatal elimination.

So the threat of a 50-year-old black man with a taser is so great that 8 shots into the back can be jus­ti­fied — but line up hun­dreds of white men on horse­back and armed to the hilt with mil­i­tary-grade weapons, and agents of the gov­ern­ment are powerless.

A sin­gle unarmed black man in Staten Island sell­ing loosies is con­sid­ered enough of a threat to be choked to death in broad day­light. Yet armed ex-mil­i­tary men pro­tect­ing a crim­i­nal with high-pow­ered rifles trained on fed­er­al agents are not enough of a threat to law and order to sim­i­lar­ly mer­it the use of force.

Is that what we learn when we look at the cas­es? Does the specter of some imag­ined vio­lent nature of black men exceed the fear stoked by white men with actu­al guns, actu­al­ly point­ed at state agents, fin­gers on triggers?

Or is it that the Bundy army was too much of a threat? The sim­mer­ing anger on the American right since President Obama’s elec­tion has seethed just at the precipice of vio­lence, and for Obama’s troops — as they would be viewed — to right­ly fire on white peo­ple angry about tax­es would have no doubt enraged extrem­ists to a degree unseen since per­haps the 19th cen­tu­ry. These weren’t the creepy cultists of the Waco stand­off; Bundy was a hero head­lin­ing Fox News, the Drudge Report, and the oth­er lead­ing con­ser­v­a­tive news out­lets. He would have been a mar­tyr to Tea Partiers and the far right.

The mili­tia and “Patriot” move­ments have seen “stun­ning growth” dur­ing the Obama years, accord­ing to the Southern Poverty Law Center, a group that tracks vio­lent extrem­ism. Bloodshed at the Bundy ranch could have very well sparked vio­lence else­where, just as the fed­er­al sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco dur­ing the 1990s ani­mat­edthe nascent mili­tia and Patriot movements.

What les­son then have we learned from Cliven Bundy? What les­son do we learn from Walter Scott? Or Eric Garner. Or Michael Brown? Sean Bell?Oscar Grant? Amadou Diallo? Ramarley Graham? Maybe the Huey P. Newton Gun Club in Texas has the right idea. Named after Black Panther Party co-founder Huey Newton, the group takes advan­tage of open car­ry laws in the Lone Star State to patrol their neigh­bor­hoods in squads of men and women armed with assault rifles, what Newton and the Panthers did in Oakland in 1966.

But while Panther-style armed resis­tance might pro­tect some vic­tims from police vio­lence, it’s hard to imag­ine it rem­e­dy­ing the under­ly­ing prob­lem: white suprema­cy and the assump­tion of black men as almost super­nat­u­ral­ly dan­ger­ous. That’s why Slager’s ini­tial sto­ry about Walter Scott would have prob­a­bly suf­ficed, were it not for the video; the per­ceived threat posed by black men is that great. And it’s why Bundy’s men were per­mit­ted to point sniper rifles at state offi­cials and still not be con­sid­ered a threat wor­thy of elimination.

Saturday will be a day of cel­e­bra­tion in Nevada; the day brings a funer­al to North Charleston.
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