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- <text id=94TT1775>
- <title>
- Dec. 19, 1994: Society:Patriot Games
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 19, 1994 Uncle Scrooge
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 48
- Patriot Games
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Irate, gun-toting white men are forming militias. Are they
- dangerous, or just citizens defending their rights?
- </p>
- <p>By Christopher John Farley--Reported by Ed Barnes/L'Anse,
- Patrick Dawson/Kalispell, David S. Jackson/Shingletown, Scott
- Norvell/Pensacola and Richard Woodbury/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> In a remote meadow in northern Michigan, inside a large
- tent heated by a wood stove, 50 white men dressed in combat
- gear and wielding rifles talk about the insanity of the outside
- world. The men, civilians all, see threats everywhere. There are
- reports of foreign soldiers hiding in salt mines under Detroit,
- some of the men say. Others speak of secret markings on highway
- signs meant to guide conquering armies. The men's voices subside
- as "General" Norman Olson, a Baptist minister, gun-shop owner
- and militia leader, enters the tent. He tells the men they are
- the shock troops of a movement that's sweeping America, that
- the "end times" are coming, and civil wars are two years away.
- "People think we are the ones who bring fear because we have
- guns," Olson says. "But we are really an expression of fear."
- </p>
- <p> In dozens of states, loosely organized paramilitary groups
- composed primarily of white men are signing up new members,
- stockpiling weapons and preparing for the worst. The groups, all
- privately run, tend to classify themselves as "citizen
- militias." They are the armed, militarized edge of a broader
- group of disgruntled citizenry that go by the label of
- "patriots." The members of the larger patriot movement are
- usually family men and women who feel strangled by the economy,
- abandoned by the government and have a distrust for those in
- power that goes well beyond that of the typical angry voter.
- Patriots join the militias out of fear and frustration. Says Jim
- Barnett, leader of a Florida militia: "The low-life scum that
- are supposedly representing us in Washington, D.C., don't care
- about the people back home anymore. We're grasping at straws
- here trying to figure out what we can do to get representation,
- and this is our answer."
- </p>
- <p> Patriots claim to be motivated differently from other
- fringe groups that have sprung up in America and taken up arms.
- The Ku Klux Klan, for example--born as a social club and
- quickly evolving into a militia, recruiting members through
- appeals to patriotism--still thrives on hatred of blacks, Jews,
- Roman Catholics and foreigners. The moribund Posse Comitatus,
- a militant group based in the Farm Belt, wanted to wipe out the
- tax collectors. The patriots, by contrast, have a more
- generalized fear of Big Government, which they say is rapidly
- robbing individuals of their inalienable rights, chief among
- them the right to bear arms. Patriots were particularly enraged
- when Congress passed a crime bill last August that banned
- assault weapons. Complains Henry McClain, the leader of another
- Florida militia unit: "The Federal Government has taken it upon
- themselves to regulate everything you can think or touch or
- smell."
- </p>
- <p> Patriots also fear that foreign powers, working through
- organizations like the United Nations and treaties like the
- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, are eroding the power
- of America as a sovereign nation. On a home video promoting
- patriot ideas, a man who gives his name only as Mark from
- Michigan says he fears that America will be subsumed into "one
- big, fuzzy, warm planet where nobody has any borders." Samuel
- Sherwood, head of the United States Militia Association in
- Blackfoot, Idaho, tells followers, absurdly, that the Clinton
- Administration is planning to import 100,000 Chinese policemen
- to take guns away from Americans.
- </p>
- <p> Such wild allegations have proved to be an effective
- method of grabbing the attention of the disaffected and
- recruiting them into militias. Most experts agree that the
- groups are multiplying and their membership is expanding, though
- estimates vary. Chip Berlet, who studies militias for Political
- Research Associates, a Massachusetts think tank, says militia
- units exist in 30 states, including large organizations in
- Michigan, Montana and Ohio, and he suspects there may be units
- in 10 other states. Although there may be hundreds of thousands
- of people who identify with the patriot movement, Berlet
- estimates that only about 10,000 people have actually joined the
- armed militias.
- </p>
- <p> On their wilderness training excursions, these would-be
- warriors give themselves a vigorous workout. In Michigan the
- members of a local militia build their endurance by running
- army-style outdoor obstacle courses or tramping long distances
- across rugged terrain while holding heavy semiautomatic rifles.
- John Schlosser, coordinator of Colorado's Free Militia (claimed
- membership: 3,000), admits that his group's doomsday
- preparations sometimes amount to no more than "playing games in
- the woods." Militia members, sometimes with their families in
- tow, play hide-and-seek and capture the flag, all to build
- conditioning in case of an armed conflict.
- </p>
- <p> When it comes to organization, however, the troops go
- high-tech. The militia movement, says Berlet, "is probably the
- first national movement organized and directed on the
- information highway." Patriot talk shows, such as The Informed
- Citizen, a half-hour program broadcast on public-access TV in
- Northern California, spread the word that American values are
- under attack from within and without. Militias also communicate
- via the Patriot Network, a system of linked computer bulletin
- boards, and through postings in news groups on the Internet. One
- recent posting by a group calling itself the Pennsylvania
- Militia, more specifically the F Company of the 9th Regiment,
- asked for "a few good men" to join up and "stand up to the
- forces of federal and world tyranny."
- </p>
- <p> The patriot movement was galvanized by two events: the
- bloody face-off in rural Idaho between white separatist Randy
- Weaver and law-enforcement officials in 1992 and the fiery siege
- of the Waco, Texas, compound of cult leader David Koresh in
- 1993. The violent confrontations helped convince many would-be
- militia members that the U.S. government was repressive as well
- as violently antigun and untrustworthy. "The Waco thing really
- woke me up," says Frank Swan, 36, a trucker who is a member of
- a militia in Montana. "They went in there and killed women and
- children."
- </p>
- <p> Critics of the militias say the genuine concern on the
- part of patriots for second-amendment rights could, in many
- cases, turn into something more menacing. In October the
- Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith issued a report titled
- Armed & Dangerous, which charged that militias were "laying the
- groundwork for massive resistance to the Federal Government and
- its law-enforcement agencies."
- </p>
- <p> But most militia groups claim to be nonracial,
- nonpolitical outfits interested only in preserving the
- Constitution and core American values. Dean Compton, a real
- estate agent and California militia member, says members aren't
- consumed by ideology: "I still play with my kids. I still go to
- the movies. It's not all gloom and doom." Compton also says
- neo-Nazis and white supremacists were purged from his militia,
- and they're not welcome back: "If they're crazies, we don't want
- 'em."
- </p>
- <p> But analyst Mike Reynolds of the Southern Poverty Law
- Center says some of the people emerging as militia leaders have
- ties with hate-mongering groups. "They are being very canny
- about it," says Reynolds. "They aren't going around lighting
- torches and burning crosses at these meetings. They are using
- code words. Instead of talking about the Zionist occupation,
- they talk about the new world order. It's the same old stuff
- dressed up for the '90s."
- </p>
- <p> Militia recruiters have no shortage of fears to play on.
- Recently, members of the Militia of Michigan stopped by the
- Veterans of Foreign Wars meeting room in the town of L'Anse to
- scout for new members. The local timber and mining industries
- are fading, and an area Air Force base is set to close next
- year. Residents, looking in vain for new solutions to old
- problems, were good targets for the militia message. Said logger
- and school board member Sonny Thoren: "I can't tell the
- difference between Democrats and Republicans anymore."
- </p>
- <p> The patriots, to him, seemed to offer a clear alternative.
- They had bold ideas and big guns. After the meeting, Thoren and
- four others stood next to a flag in the corner of the room,
- underneath a gun case filled with vintage M-1 rifles, and took
- the oath to join the militia. A new brigade was born.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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