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Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Dana Milbank: Armed To The Brickload.

Armed to the brickload
By DANA MILBANK

WASHINGTON — They came in camouflage and ammunition vests, carrying AK-47s slung over their shoulders and pistols in their hip holsters. They were in Northern Virginia, on the 15th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, to stand on federal land and to voice violent thoughts.

They did this in a strictly nonviolent fashion, naturally.

“Let me hang out my shingle,” Mike Vanderboegh shouted to the 75 armed men and women at Fort Hunt Park in Alexandria on Monday morning. Vanderboegh, leader of the “Three Percent” movement, a gun-owners' rights group, slammed down a brick on the stage bearing the Roman numeral III.

This was a reference to his call for his followers to “break the windows of hundreds, thousands of Democrat Party headquarters” after health care legislation passed. Some of them did as they were told.

“I was trying to get the attention of people who are pushing this country toward civil war, that they should stop before somebody gets hurt,” Vanderboegh said of his brick-throwing campaign. He then read the philosopher John Locke's words that there comes a time when people are “absolved from any further obedience” to their government.

The armed citizenry cheered. “This is what the other side doesn't understand!” Vanderboegh shouted. “We are done backing up! Done! Not one more inch!”

The 19th of April has acquired a unique mythology of resistance and violence: the battles of Lexington and Concord in 1775, the Warsaw ghetto uprising in 1943, the sacking of the Branch Davidian compound in 1993, the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995. Now the date has a new significance as the moment when the militia movement went from the blogs and the backwoods, mustered across the river from the capital, and invited the world's media to come in and hear its warnings.

In a sense, it was good news: Better for militia leaders and activists in the “patriot” movement to be participating in a peaceful political protest than plotting in their basements over an issue of Soldier of Fortune. And the participation was weak; by the time the rally moved to Gravelly Point Park near Reagan National Airport in the afternoon, the 75 gun carriers were easily outnumbered by a journalistic mob that included representatives from Switzerland, France and Ireland. On the other hand, the event was a sign of just how confident the militia leaders are that their cause has moved, for the first time, from the fringe to the mainstream.

The Pew Research Center recently released the results of a poll showing that 77 percent of Americans are frustrated or angry with the federal government. One manifestation of that is the 363 new patriot groups in 2009 — a 244 percent increase from the previous year — documented by the Southern Poverty Law Center. As militia leader Bob Wright from New Mexico put it to the crowd: “Two years ago, most of us were screaming at the TV, and our wives wondered why we didn't just shut up. … We've seen an entire change in our country.”

The demonstrators brought their guns to Virginia from New Mexico, New Hampshire, Florida and elsewhere. Among the group was Tim Hammond, who carried two pistols, a rifle and plenty of ammunition as part of an all-black outfit that included a tricorn hat. Hammond, who said he flew in from California, told another demonstrator he believes that President Obama is the antichrist.

“If he's not the antichrist, he's pretty close,” the second man concurred.

“We're definitely in the end times,” Hammond continued. “The Rapture, in my opinion, has to be sometime this fall.”

Soon after this, event organizers whisked Hammond off to make sure he had met the rules for participation, including the use of a “chamber flag” to show that the rifle wasn't loaded; those in compliance were given a yellow armband.

Though their words were ominous and menacing, the participants went out of their way to demonstrate their peaceful intent (a new law, signed by Obama, allows them to carry weapons openly on federal parkland).

Vanderboegh said some participants were “pretty disappointed at how few people turned out here,” but then likened them to another “determined minority,” the Jews of the Warsaw ghetto.

He then led the crowd in chanting what he called a Southern “battle cry” of “Oh hell no!” Explained the Alabaman: “When you hear it, where I come from, you know that somebody's going to get beat, stabbed or shot, and the guy that takes the beating, the knife blade, or the bullet undoubtedly deserves it.”

Dana Milbank is a Washington Post columnist. His e-mail address is danamilbank@washpost.com

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