You lefties today are a strange bunch. You yell and scream over eminent domain and the Keystone but you back the feds stealing land from First Nations and ranchers.
Native American property rights can not be compared to ranchers. Once again, you try to deflect away from the topic by bringing forth unrelated topics. Your argument for the defense of the criminal ranchers can not be defended on it's own merits. That is why you have to drag in these unrelated topics.
You don't have a clue what you are talking about. The Dann sister's plight is exactly the same as the ranchers.
The fight is grazing rights and grazing fees. You need to get up to speed before you shoot your ******* mouth off.
Here ya go sparky. Read and learn. The freaking nazis in the government stole all their horses and cattle.
"Their wish is to be left alone, and to graze their cattle freely on land they claim as their birthright.
The federal government's wish is for the Danns to stop fattening their livestock at taxpayers' expense.
This battle has gone on for 30 years, and the Danns have not given up yet, even though the government has seized hundreds of their cattle, sold the animals at auction, charged the sisters nearly $50,000 in fees and fined them $3 million for willful trespass.
''Trespass? Who the hell gave them the land anyway?'' Mary Dann asked as she mended a fence on a windswept desert morning. ''When I trespass, it's when I wander into Paiute territory.''
Her sister Carrie said: ''I was indigenous and in one single evening they made me indigent. If you think the Indian wars are over, then think again.''
The dispute is rooted in the refusal by the sisters and some other Shoshone ranchers to pay grazing fees on traditional Western Shoshone land -- nearly 26 million acres in Nevada, roughly two-thirds of the state.
The government considers it public land, and to drive the point home, 40 agents from the Bureau of Land Management descended on the Danns' ranch in September, heavily armed and fortified with helicopters, and confiscated 232 cattle, which were later sold."
Range War in Nevada Pits U.S. Against 2 Shoshone Sisters