Are
the Palins Members of an Extremist, Traitorous, Un-Patriotic, Un-American,
Secessionist Group?
by
Thomas Andrew Olson
by Thomas Andrew Olson
DIGG
THIS
While the world
contemplates the meltdown of the financial sector over the last
few of weeks, things have not stood still on the campaign trail.
The "smearbunds" on both sides, in fact, have been working
overtime in a desperate grab for reader and viewer attention. Of
course, this is not really about "attention" at all –
it’s about engendering a knee-jerk emotional distraction from the
real issues. The latest theme is: Guilt-by-Association.
Over the previous
week, the McPalin camp fired a couple of broadsides: the first accusing
Barack Obama of associating with Bill Ayres, someone who, nearly
40 years ago, was a member of the Weather Underground. The second
attacked Obama for his ties to ACORN, a voter registration organization
that is currently under investigation in eight states for fraud.
While the Weather
Underground did engage in bombings on public property (including
the Pentagon), their main goal was to disrupt the Vietnam war machine;
Ayres insists today they were not a "terrorist" organization.
You can take that at face value, or not. Both organizations, nevertheless,
have documented, public record paper trails suggesting Barack Obama
has at least a tangential link. Whether that should be sufficient
to sandbag his Presidential bid, however, is open to debate (it
hasn’t yet).
Given Obama’s
lead in the polls, however, one would think liberal pundits, bloggers,
and campaign staff would be encouraged to stay on the high road,
and not sink to a retaliatory, ad hominem level of campaigning.
One would be
wrong. In fact, the liberal punditocracy over a week ago set an
even lower bar than the McPalin camp, namely, savaging the integrity
of a political opposition group, and then, in the same breath, associating
that group with Sarah Palin and her husband. The group in question
is the Alaska Independence
Party (AIP), a legitimate, third-party political organization
with ballot access in that state, whose avowed goal is simply a
new plebiscite on Alaska statehood.
For an entire
week, liberals pundits and bloggers, including such luminaries as
Keith
Olberman and RFK
Jr., are spewing unimaginable vitriol at this group, tarring
them as "extremist," "un-American," and "traitors,"
for asking for a second public vote concerning Alaska’s political
status. Apparently, "secession" is still a very sensitive
topic for a lot of people. Given the laughingly hysterical arm-waving
on opinion/social network sites like DailyKos,
Digg
and Huffington
Post on this claim, I thought it was time to investigate further.
Ironically, I’d never heard of the AIP until all this virtual hysteria
metastasized out of proportion, but as a direct result of that,
now I’m interested…go figure.
So let’s take
a look at the political movement with which the Palins have been
associated:
The AIP was
founded in the 70’s by Joseph
Vogler (1913–1993), a man who was, to put it mildly, a "colorful"
character, the kind one would often expect to see in the rough and
rugged Alaskan countryside, of that or any era. He loved his chosen
home, and wanted to see it free and prosperous. He was also known
for a sharp tongue and temper. But all his life, he firmly believed
that in the 1956 plebiscite for Alaska statehood, somebody pulled
a fast one:
"The
basic argument of the Alaskan Independence Party has always been
the number one plank in our platform – the question of our vote
to become a state. So…the most blaring disparity in that [1956]
vote was the definition of an eligible voter. Among those qualified
to cast a ballot were 41,000 American soldiers and 36,000 dependants.
Now, to the native population of Alaska, to me, these were occupation
troops! And they were made eligible and, in fact encouraged to
vote. There were educational meetings held on the military bases.
I can’t imagine them telling anyone anything but that statehood
would be very good for the military in fact they still have
6, 7 big bases and numerous smaller holdings in the state. Statehood
would be good for the military. Now can you imagine the international
uproar if American troops had all went and got their purple fingers
in Iraq?"
~
Dexter Clark, AIP Vice-Chair
The "smoking
gun" video, the one the bloggers are using to nail Sarah
Palin as a confirmed member of the AIP, contains much of this information.
They claim that originally, in the 1956 plebiscite, all Alaskan
territorial residents would be able to vote, and be given a choice
on one of four outcomes: (1) Alaska remains a territory, (2) Statehood,
(3) an Alaskan "Commonwealth," or (4) a free and independent
Alaskan nation. According to Clark in the video, that’s not the
way it actually went down the ballot only offered a "yes-no"
checkbox for statehood with no other options listed, and all Native
Alaskans were disenfranchised. If that’s true, some could certainly
argue that the fix was in.
Given the results
of that decision 50 years later, with most Alaskan territory the
"property" of the US government, homesteading virtually
banned, and the cream of the state’s resources skimmed off for the
benefit of the corporatocracy, is it any wonder the AIP is lobbying
for a re-do, an honest vote, with all Alaskans participating?
(And, by the way, they’re happy to live with the results of that
vote, regardless.) How is this a form of "sedition"? After
all my digging, I can’t find anything in the history of the AIP
documenting them advocating anything but political change through
peaceful, democratic means. In fact, many of their positions are
very libertarian.
So, why not
have a new vote? What’s everyone so terrified of? Quebec has had
two votes on whether to leave Canada. The measure lost both times,
the second one only barely. The Earth failed to break away from
its orbit over this, and I’m certain had the vote gone the other
way, the world would have managed to adjust to the new situation.
So why do liberal
pundits and bloggers insist – wrongly – that the AIP is a subversive,
America-hating "terrorist" organization? It has to do
with the volatile personality – and mysterious death – of the founder
himself. Joe Vogler disappeared in 1993, his remains were found
in 1994. His confessed murderer led police to the site, and then
later testified the death had resulted from "an explosives
deal gone sour." Essentially, Vogler’s own murderer
was accusing him of attempting to purchase military grade C4 plastic
explosives on the black market, for what insidious purpose, no one
could speculate. But this is the one and only data point by which
HuffPo, Kos, et al., are insisting that the AIP is a terrorist organization.
Now, why would
a man in the twilight of his years, a man who had devoted the previous
three decades to peaceful and democratic change within the system
he was compelled to work with, all of a sudden embrace more deadly
means of sending his message, and ruining everything he and the
AIP had been working for? Vogler’s own family, friends, and political
allies never believed that official story, smelling a setup to discredit,
in death, the man who was such a thorn in the sides of the US-corporate
power elite in Alaska. The FBI has had plenty of time to investigate
these allegations, and obviously nothing came of it, as the party
still exists, fifteen years later.
There is a
fundamental difference between secession and terrorism. If anything,
a lot of the AIP’s goals are ones that many liberals would appreciate,
like ending sovereign immunity for government agents, and libertarians
would like their stance on jury nullification.
While the AIP
takes credit for putting together the coalition that got Walter
Hickel elected governor in 1990, they have never expressed a desire
to expand their influence beyond Alaska. Everything they’ve done
has been peaceful, honest, and under the letter of the law. But
the liberal tar brush punditocracy continue to chant Vogler’s vague,
mysterious death story to substantiate their claim that the AIP
is a subversive, unpatriotic, un-American, terrorist group.
Nowhere, in
the writings or public speeches of AIP members, is violence ever
advocated. No actual violent acts, in all the years of AIP’s existence,
have ever been recorded and pinned on AIP activists. I challenge
anyone reading this to cite one verifiable example. Just one. (Yes,
there have been reports that Vogler had a hot temper, but so does
McCain, and he’s angling to have his finger on the nuclear trigger.
That should give you far more pause.)
Ergo, to all
intents and purposes, the AIP are who they say they are, and frankly,
I don’t care if "Caribou Barbie" hangs out with them or
not, nor should anyone else. So-called "progressives"
betray themselves in their frantic efforts to swift-boat a legitimate
political association, albeit one with whose aims they disagree,
just to "get" an opposition candidate. If allowed to get
away with it, Libertarians or Constitutionalists could be next,
between election cycles, especially Libertarians, as we also insist
on the fundamental right to secede.
Vogler once
said: "I'm an Alaskan, not an American. I've got no use for America
or her damned institutions." This was a statement used by the
liberal pundits to tar AIP.
Now, let’s
change that sentence to read, "I'm an American, not British.
I've got no use for England or her damned institutions."
Watch
out! If one wasn’t careful, one might attribute the latter to someone
like Sam Adams or Thomas Paine! Our Founding Fathers – radical,
seditious, secessionists, all. True patriotism means love of country,
not necessarily love of that country’s government. The Founders,
writing in the Declaration, were pretty adamant about that.
There are serious,
vital issues to consider in this election, and none of us should
be wasting our time with baseless distractions such as this. Put
the issue to sleep, HuffPo, Kos. You’re supposed to be better than
this. Move on.
October
18, 2008
Thomas Andrew
Olson [send
him mail] is a technology consultant, writer, and speaker
in New York City.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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