« FFFT3 Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next

Re: A NYTimes look at mostly bizarre rancher wants in Eastern Oregon, home of militia, cults, and other critterisms. 

By: zzstar in FFFT3 | Recommend this post (2)
Thu, 18 Jan 18 8:59 PM | 69 view(s)
Boardmark this board | Food For Further Thought 3
Msg. 40335 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 40334 by zzstar)

Jump:
Jump to board:
Jump to msg. #

Another quote:

The writer William Kittredge was raised on a cattle ranch in southeastern Oregon and later spent 30 years as a professor of English and creative writing at the University of Montana in Missoula. He writes about being born into the ranching culture, loving that culture but also making the decision to leave it. He had many misgivings about “ruining” the Warner Valley, where his ranch was located. People in his hometown considered him a traitor for what he wrote. In his 1996 book, “Who Owns the West,” Kittredge calls for a change in mentality: “We have taken the West for about all it has to give. We have lived like children, taking and taking for generations, and now the childhood is over.”

The way I see it, after they got rid of the Indians, now they want to live in their 1800s primitive ways themselves.

Fuggetaboutit.




» You can also:
- - - - -
The above is a reply to the following message:
A NYTimes look at mostly bizarre rancher wants in Eastern Oregon, home of militia, cults, and other critterisms.
By: zzstar
in FFFT3
Thu, 18 Jan 18 8:46 PM
Msg. 40334 of 65535

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/18/magazine/fear-of-the-federal-government-in-the-ranchlands-of-oregon.html

One rancher, one er even went outside of Oregon in his life. Anotner woman called Yellowstone “wasted space”, and every time she saw buffalo there, she saw “steak”. :

“They visited Yellowstone National Park and saw, they said, two million acres of natural resources gone to waste. “At least one day a year,” Robin said, “we ought to be able to go in and take advantage.”

Emily thought the trees were too close together. “Didn’t look healthy,” she said, “because they don’t log.”

“And look at all those buffalo,” Robin said. “Can’t some of them be used for meat?”

“You wanted to eat them?” I said.

“I was looking at the buffalo and just seeing a steak,” she said.”


These people think the land is there to use as they wish, as if it is the 1800s.imagine if thousands went there for ...steak, how many buffalo would be left?

Worth reading, to understand the mindframe of these people who have not been touched by the Century they live in.


« FFFT3 Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next