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+41 +1
US Oregon Militia Gets A Surprise When Opening Their Long Awaited Supplies
Gifts of sex toys, glitter and nail polish are not what the armed protesters who seized a U.S. wildlife refuge in Oregon were expecting when they put out a public call for supplies to help get them through the winter. The occupiers, who took over buildings at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge on Jan. 2 in the latest conflict over the U.S. government's control of land in the West, had been hoping for snacks, fuel and warm clothes when they provided sympathizers with a local mailing address.
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+38 +1
Oregon Militia Idiot Steals Gubmint Truck For Vital Snack Run, Goes Directly To Jail
’But officer, this is a sovereign truck!’ By Doktor Zoom.
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+27 +1
Militants Plow New Roads At Refuge, Possibly Damaging Artifacts
The armed occupiers of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge continue to use government equipment inside the complex. One militant, who refused to give his name, again plowed dirt with a refuge bulldozer Wednesday. He wouldn’t say why he was operating the machinery, but in several places, sagebrush and vegetation had been newly removed, leaving wide patches of bare mud within the complex.
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+19 +1
Everyone Knows Everyone
The Helio Sequence
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+2 +1
Watch this sneaker wave nearly take out beachgoers in Oregon -
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+58 +1
Oregon protest leader Ammon Bundy is arrested
Federal authorities arrested Ammon Bundy and several of his followers in a traffic stop Tuesday, a law enforcement official told CNN.
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+39 +1
Video Of Oregon Occupier’s Final Moments Contradicts Claims Police Killed Him With His Hands Up
Video of the deadly encounter between police and some of the men who’ve occupied an Oregon wildlife preserve since the start of the year seems to contradict claims that occupier Lavoy Finicum was surrendering to officers when they killed him.
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+45 +1
'Monster' new species of Daddy Longlegs discovered in Oregon
There is a group of arachnids called Cryptomaster, known for being comparatively huge. Scientists recently discovered another species of this large group in Oregon forests.
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+21 +1
To Protesters Flocking To Oregon Town, Locals Say 'Go Home'
Anger erupted in front of the county courthouse in Burns, Ore., Monday as anti-government protesters in town for a rally met a wall of locals sick of outsiders trying to start a movement there.
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+66 +1
Oregon standoff: FBI moves in on last refuge occupiers
A friend of occupier David Fry was streaming online through an open phone line to the occupiers as authorities made what appeared to be a final push to end the 40-day old occupation.
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+35 +1
FBI: No Booby Traps Found at Oregon Refuge
The FBI says it hasn't found any rigged explosives or booby traps at the national wildlife refuge in Oregon that had been seized by an armed group.
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+21 +1
Can we make sense of the Malheur mess?
A writer finds camaraderie and despair inside the Oregon standoff. By Hal Herring.
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+25 +1
Miss Hobbs and the Gunslingers
“If the sheriff of Baker County would not close down Copperfield's saloons, the governor told the press, then he would send his five-foot-three-inch tall, 104-pound private secretary, Miss Fern Hobbs, to do the work.” By Joe Blakely.
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+28 +1
Oregon just used its Democratic majorities to pass a wildly ambitious clean energy bill
Oregon decides: no more coal and twice the renewable energy.
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+24 +1
No Mushroom Cloud
A fungus offers a complicated lesson in late-capitalist logistics and survival. By Miranda Trimmier.
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+2 +1
Remembering OR4: A Eulogy for a Wolf
Arguably the most influential wolf in America was killed last week. Who was he? By Wes Siler.
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+20 +1
'Oregon Trail' officially inducted into the Video Game Hall of Fame
"Congratulations! Let's see how many points you have received."
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+35 +1
Opponents of water bottling in Cascade Locks say Nestlé hid campaign contributions
Backers of a Hood River County ballot measure to block a proposed water bottling plant in Cascade Locks are accusing Nestlé of illegally hiding its contributions to a political action committee opposing the measure. They say they will be filing...
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+40 +1
Bundy brothers in jail complain about lack of Internet service, ability to gather for prayer
Ammon Bundy, his brother Ryan Bundy and their co-defendants could have iPads in their jail cells, as long as their attorneys preload the devices with the discovery documents and videos they need to prepare for trial, according to the Multnomah County Sheriff's Office. The sheriff's office would arrange to have the devices charged to ensure the defendants could use them in their cells during the day. The Bundy brothers — who are among 26 defendants indicted on federal conspiracy and weapons charges...
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+30 +1
Oregon standoff leader allegedly tried to escape jail with rope made of sheets
Ryan Bundy, a protester who helped lead the Oregon militia standoff, attempted to escape jail with a rope made of bedsheets, federal prosecutors alleged in court on Monday. The incarcerated rancher, however, denied that he was attempting to break out of jail in Portland and said he was simply “trying to practice braiding rope”. Bundy, 43, is one of 26 protesters charged in the federal case surrounding the January takeover of the Malheur national wildlife refuge in rural Harney County and is scheduled to face a trial in September.
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