The
Utah and Bundy Ranch cases are a reminder of just how constitutionally
untenable and corrupting federal ownership is.1/11/18 American Spectator
With President Trump’s recent order
to “shrink” two massive federal land grabs in Utah and a shocking turn of
events in the Bundy Ranch/BLM controversy, the issue of federal land ownership
is back in the news. Both events illustrate how the federal government has used
its massive land holdings to control the lives of Americans. And lurking in the
background of these events is the constitutionality of federal land ownership,
an issue that has been ignored for generations by politicians, the courts, and
the media. Indeed, the evidence is fairly clear that our founding fathers did
not design the federal government to be America’s largest landowner with all
the abuses that entails.
The federal government now has a
total of 640 million acres under its control — almost a third of the nation’s
land. The majority of land in Nevada, Alaska, Utah, Oregon and Idaho is owned
by the feds. In Arizona, California, Wyoming, New Mexico, and Colorado, federal
ownership exceeds a third. Indeed, if all 11 Western states were combined into
one territory, the feds would own nearly 50% of it. This land is primarily
administered by the United States Forest Service (USFS), the National Park Service (NPS), the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM), and the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). The
Department of Defense also owns 20 million acres.
But if liberals had their way, even
more land would be seized by the feds. Fortunately, it is unlikely this
administration will engage in any state land confiscations. Indeed, Trump’s
action to decrease the acreage of the two Utah “monuments” is a good start in rolling back this abuse of
federal power. These monuments were created by decree under President’s Clinton
and Obama by abusing the narrow intent of the 1906 Antiquities Act. Combined,
the two preserves originally encompassed 3.2 million acres, but Trump knocked
them down to 1.2 million acres. Not surprisingly, the left went ballistic, but
the truth is Trump is the one acting in accord with the Constitution and in the
best interest of the people of Utah, and even the environment.
Both of these land grabs were
initiated with little or no input from Utah’s civic, political, and business
leaders. And, of course, as with most Democrat “environmental” initiatives,
cronyism and corruption are evident. For example, Bill Clinton’s Utah land grab
— the “Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument” — placed off-limits all
energy development, including the world’s largest known deposit of clean
burning coal. Not coincidentally, this proviso also quietly benefited the
owners of the world’s second-largest deposit of clean burning coal: the Lippo
group, owned by the Indonesia-based Riady family and, of course, large donors
to the Clinton Foundation (and huge Clinton donors going back decades). In
other words, Clinton crippled America’s energy capabilities in order to enrich
his friends and himself. As with nearly everything the Clintons do, their
operating principle has remained remarkably consistent: “Big donors first;
America last.”
The history of federal land
management is not a pretty one. Heavy-handed federal land seizures have been
ongoing for decades in coordination with radical environmentalist groups and
almost always without the support of state leaders, Native American tribes, and
the people who work the land such as miners, ranchers, farmers, loggers, etc. Indeed, a report by
the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC), titled Divided
Lands: State vs. Federal Management in the West, concluded
that “By nearly all accounts, our federal lands are in trouble, both in terms
of fiscal performance and environmental stewardship.”
The report says that states “produce
far greater financial returns from land management than federal land agencies.
In fact, the federal government often loses money managing valuable natural
resources. States, on the other hand, consistently generate significant amounts
of revenue from state trust lands. On average, states earn more revenue per dollar spent
than the federal government for each of the natural resources we examined,
including timber, grazing, minerals, and recreation.” Incredibly, states “earn
an average of $14.51 for every dollar spent on state trust land management,”
while the USFS and BLM “generate only 73 cents in return for every dollar spent
on federal land management.”
That’s a 20-to-1 ratio. In other
words, the feds couldn’t responsibly manage a garden, let alone the millions of
acres they control. No one should be surprised. That’s why Trump’s action on
the Utah monuments will be good for Utah, good for the state’s budget, and good
for the environment because Utah will manage that land far more efficiently
than will the federal government.
But back to the Constitution. Most
Americans have no clue what our founders said about federal land management.
The Constitution’s Property
Clause (Article IV, Section 3, Clause 2) gave Congress the power to
dispose of property, but does not mention a power to acquire property. However,
under the Necessary and Proper
Clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 18), the federal government
was given the power to acquire land but only for the purpose of carrying out
its enumerated powers. This would include parcels for military uses, post
offices, etc. Nowhere does the Constitution give the federal government the
power to retain acreage for unenumerated purposes such as grazing, mineral
development, agriculture, forests, or even national parks. This was wisely left
up to the prerogative of the states and the people.
Moreover, the Constitution even
details what to do with federally owned property inside newly acquired states.
It declares that the federal government has a duty to dispose of this land
unless it is being used for an enumerated purpose, meaning that all federal
land not being used
for activities specifically authorized by the Constitution should be transferred
back to the states. An in-depth analysis of these clauses by the 10th Amendment
Center can be found here.
At no time did America’s founders
ever envision a system of land ownership that granted the federal government
ownership of almost a third of the nation’s land. And this is totally logical
and consistent with everything the founding fathers wrote and said about
federal power. They feared federal power so much they divided it into three branches and did
everything they could to protect the rights of states. Our founders knew that
widespread federal land ownership would be used to blackmail states and
compromise their independence.
Indeed, during the federal
convention debates of September, 1787, Elbridge Gerry — the future VP under
President James Madison — argued that federal ownership of land “might be made
use of to enslave any particular State by buying up its territory, and that the
strongholds proposed would be a means of awing the State into an undue
obedience.” Even the Federalists, who advocated a slightly stronger central
government, did not favor federal land ownership outside of the Constitution’s
enumerated purposes. We know that because they voted to ratify the Constitution
with the aforementioned restrictions on federal land ownership.
It is clear that generations of
politicians and even federal judges have ignored the constitutional
restrictions on federal land ownership. Over the last 150 years, the federal
government, using the BLM, USFS, FWS, NPS and even the Department of Defense,
has held on to millions of acres that should have been turned over to the
states once they joined the union. And the feds have increased this acreage
with various seizures over the years, usually under some type of
“environmental” pretense. Then they erected a vast array of outrageous
regulatory and land use controls over mining, farming, logging, oil
exploration, and so forth, in most cases with no input from local governments
or the people affected. This abuse has come at the expense of state governance
and is a total rejection of Republicanism and decentralized power as clearly
advocated by our founders. This is precisely the type of federal abuse many of
the Constitution’s signers feared would occur.
Indeed, in the Western states,
clashes between federal land management agencies and those who live and work on
or near these land holdings are frequent, but the mainstream media often
ignores such stories. However, most readers will remember the Cliven Bundy
incident, the Nevada rancher who refused to pay $1.2 million in grazing fees to
the BLM on grounds the land belonged to Nevada, not to the feds. When the
Bureau threatened to seize the ranch in 2014, hundreds of cowboys and militia
members poured in from all over the country to defend the property.
Fortunately, cooler heads prevailed and the feds backed down. Many Americans
were shocked at the appearance of armed citizens, but the reality is that our
founding fathers argued in favor of gun ownership precisely for the purpose of
resisting government tyranny.
The Bureau of Land Management’s
police-state actions at the ranch were recently exposed, thanks to former BLM
Special Agent and whistleblower Larry Wooten, whose shocking report details the
agency’s complete disregard for the rights of the Bundy family. In his report, which
became public in early December, Wooten wrote that “… the investigation
revealed a widespread pattern of bad judgment, lack of discipline, incredible
bias, unprofessionalism and misconduct, as well as likely policy, ethical, and
legal violations among senior and supervisory staff at the BLM’s office of Law
Enforcement and Security.”
Wooten wrote that the BLM had photos
of Cliven Bundy and Eric Parker on its “arrest tracking wall,” but with x’s
marked through their faces and bodies, as if they were to be eliminated. He
also reported that the Special Agent in Charge, Dan Love, had boasted that his
actions in a previous BLM controversy led to a number of people committing
suicide. Wooten’s report details outrageous statements by officials such as,
“Go out there and kick Cliven Bundy in the mouth (or teeth) and take his
cattle.” And the report says that the agents commonly referred to the Bundys
and their supporters as “rednecks,” “retards,” and “douche bags.” One agent
even boasted about “grinding” a Bundy family member’s face into the gravel.
There were also descriptive titles
given to body cam videos taken of the Bundy ranch, such as “Are you f–king
people stupid or what,” “Pretty much a shoot first, ask question later,” and
“Shoot his f–king dog first.” Indeed, the Wooten report exposes the agency as
full of arrogant do-gooders who think they are better than the rural folks they
obviously detest, a mentality similar to the attitudes held by some ATF and FBI
agents at Waco and Ruby Ridge. Indeed, Wooten wrote that he thought the Bundy
ranch confrontation very well could have turned deadly due to the attitude of
the BLM agents. One can just envision the thoughts of these agents: Hey, the FBI and ATF got to shoot civilians
at Waco, why can’t we?
This report and more were part of a
cache of 3,000 documents that Bundy’s attorneys proved to the court were
illegally withheld from them by the BLM and the U.S. Attorney’s office. As a
result, on December 20, Judge Gloria Navarro dismissed the case, although
Cliven Bundy could be tried again. Two other trials against other Bundy ranch
defendants ended in hung juries. Bundy has always maintained that his case was
all about Obama’s hatred for those who work the land and by, extension, an out
of control BLM that thrives on harassing hard-working Americans. It appears he
is correct.
The Wooten report can be read
here, but be forewarned: it has descriptions of behavior too obscene
to quote here. Trump should not only order the BLM to drop its persecution of
Cliven Bundy but, on misconduct grounds alone, he should fire everyone involved
with the Bundy case.
Lastly, it should be pointed out
that the Bundy confrontation was likely about Democrat cronyism and
fundraising. Reports appearing in Bloomberg,
Breitbart, and Reuters in 2014 indicated that former Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid had teamed up with Chinese billionaire Wang Yusuo in an
effort to create a massive 9,000-acre solar energy farm on the same federal
land apparently used by Bundy to graze cattle. And Yusuo’s company, the ENN
Group, contributed over $40,000 to Reid over the course of three election
cycles. One BLM document makes clear that Bundy’s cattle grazing negatively
impacted potential solar farm development on this land.
Although the Chinese deal apparently
fell through, at the time the BLM was trying to shut down Bundy’s ranch the
deal was very much alive. Incidentally, the BLM has to approve any deal allowing
a private company to profit off of its land holdings, but not a problem. The
BLM director was Neil Kornze, an Obama appointee and Reid’s former senior
adviser. The fix was in.
But not to worry. After the Chinese
deal fell apart, Reid began working closely with a company called First Solar
on a project called the Moapa Southern Paiute Solar Project, which, again,
targets the area Bundy’s cattle grazes on. As reported by
the Courtwatcherblog that
monitors Reid’s shady solar power/public land dealings: “Harry Reid’s interests
are clear. He doesn’t care about public lands, but what he stands to profit off
of their sale, no matter if it’s sold to China, Saudi Arabia, Russia, or even
South Africa… the facts show Harry Reid’s interests in the Bundy men being
in jail, make it a lot easier to grab their land…”
First Solar, by the way, was funded
in part by Goldman Sachs, a million dollar Obama contributor. Other investors
include Obama bundlers Bruce Heyman and David Heller, two Goldman Sachs
executives who served on Obama’s 2008 Finance Committee. Yet another Obama
bundler, Paul Tudor Jones, was a major investor in First Solar and First
Solar’s CEO, Michael Ahearn, is also a big Democrat donor.
In other words, the effort to close
down the Bundy ranch probably had less to do with grazing fees than with Harry
Reid figuring out a way to convert cattle grazing land to a solar farm, thereby
rewarding Democrat fat cats who in turn fund Democrat politicians. This is what
the BLM has become: an agency that facilitates the creation of projects that
financially benefit the Democrats.
Trump’s action to shrink federal
land seizures is admirable, but there is much more he could do if he really
wants to restore the Constitution’s restrictions on federal land ownership. He
should abolish the BLM and all other land-managing federal agencies and
transfer all their holdings back to the states, included federal preserves and
national parks, with the only exception being land needed specifically for
military use and federal offices of various kinds. This action would be on
solid constitutional grounds. Moreover, the states already have competent land
management agencies that can easily, and more efficiently, manage this land.
Certainly there has been litigation
over the years involving the constitutionality of federal land ownership but most
of these cases feature liberal judges turning themselves into pretzels trying
to ignore the plain meaning of the constitution. Typically, these judges
managed to find phony “rights” that allow the feds to justify its ownership of
a third of America’s land. There’s no doubt any effort by Trump to end the
federal government’s illegal land ownership regime would be challenged in the
courts but such a case would likely end up in the Supreme Court and there’s a
good chance the high court would rule in his favor. There is simply no body of
writing by the founders that justify federal control of so much acreage that
have absolutely zero nexus to the Constitution’s enumerated powers. It’s that
simple.
Aside from restoring proper
constitutional restrictions on federal land ownership, such a massive transfer
of federal land would do a number of things. First, it would energize the
economy of many states. Over the last 50 years, millions of acres of land with
potential oil and gas reserves, timber, mining deposits and so forth were
foolishly placed off limits by federal land confiscations created by
presidential orders or congressional action. The long-running federal war on
cattle, farmers, loggers, ranchers, and miners would largely come to an end as
state agencies and politicians would be far more accountable to the people who
live off these lands.
Secondly, contrary to the inevitable
hysteria of the environmentalists, there is little doubt some of this land
would become state preserves as the citizens of each state will want to
preserve environmentally sensitive land and historic landmarks. And the states
will do a better job managing environmentally important land than would federal
agencies that take orders from distant bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. The point
is, it will be the citizens of each state who, through their legislatures and
state agencies, would make the decisions as to how best to manage their own
land.
The National Parks may be a special
issue. While they also lack a constitutional basis, they could be transferred
back to state control on the condition they continue to operate them as parks.
Indeed, states wouldn’t have it any other way since there is much money to be
made from the national parks in the way of tourism, camping, hiking and so on.
Most Americans have forgotten this,
but the shady tactics of federal land management agencies were a big issue in
Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign. At the time, the movement of those fighting such
abuses was called the “Sagebrush Rebellion,” and this issue propelled tens of
thousands of voters to support Reagan’s candidacy. To be honest, though, Reagan
was unable to carry out any substantial reforms regarding federal land
ownership.
If Trump wants to go down in history
as a president who restored the federal government to its proper limited role,
then he should revitalize this forgotten section of the U.S. Constitution and
transfer all non-enumerated federal land back to the states. Such action will
allow states to control their own destinies, create better managed parks and
preserves, and create tens of thousands of new jobs by energizing natural
resource industries such as oil, natural gas, mining, and timber. This is a
perfect issue for him. Be bold, Mr. President, and just do it.
https://spectator.org/trump-needs-to-transfer-all-federal-land-back-to-the-states/
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