Nita M. Renfrew TV interview: "Conversations With Harold Hudson Channer" 10/29/10

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6pr_CVMZB8 - NITA RENFREW

Monday, November 15, 2010

Chapter 6: SENATE HEARINGS, PETITIONING FOR REDRESS OF GRIEVANCES


Chapter 6
SENATE HEARINGS, PETITIONING FOR REDRESS OF GRIEVANCES

When all forms of government, in little as in great, things, shall rely on Washington as the center of all political power, it will render useless the checks of one government provided on another, and become as venal and oppressive as the government from which we separated.
                                                                                                                              Benjamin Franklin

On the panel with John Trochmann on June 15 were four other Militiamen; in all, they represented three Militias. John was accompanied by Bob Fletcher, who had joined the Militia of Montana early on, and was the official spokesman. Represented also was the Michigan Militia, which, unlike M.O.M., emphasized military preparedness, and was generally considered to be the largest Militia in the country. By many estimates, its numbers reached into the five figures. Norman Olson, the commander, and Ken Adams, the communications officer, were present. Having heard so often in the media that the Militias were racist, I was surprised at the time, to see that the fifth person on the panel, representing the Ohio Unorganized Citizens Militia, was black—J.J. Johnson. 
 The hearings were chaired by Senator Arlen Specter (R-Penn.), who was the chief Senate sponsor of the Anti-terrorism bill that Clinton was pushing. Specter (known to be a staunch supporter of the ADL, which, along with the Southern Poverty Law Center, was pushing for draconian anti-Militia legislation) commenced, stating, "These hearings have been convened to inquire into a number of questions. First, to what extent, if at all, do the Militia pose a threat to public safety and the federal government? And the other side of that coin is, to what extent are Americans joining the Militia because they feel, rightly or wrongly, that the federal government poses a threat to their constitutional rights?" The senator said there were indications that there were 224 Militias operating in 39 states, and he believed it was no coincidence that Oklahoma had occurred on April 19, exactly two years after Waco. Nevertheless, he said, "I believe that there is a great deal of dissatisfaction in America today, on many lines, rightly or wrongly, and that these questions ought to be aired and ought to be ventilated."
Montana Senator Max Baucus (D), in his opening statement, informed the audience that in Montana the Militia was divided into three groups: the Militia of Montana, the North American Volunteer Militia and the Freemen. (His facts were wrong from the start, for the Freemen, of course, were not a Militia.) Senator Baucus said that law-enforcement officers (in Montana) believed that while there were about 25 to 30 hard-core Militia leaders, only some five hundred people in the state had casually attended Militia meetings. The leaders, he said, tended to share two beliefs: one, suspicion of the government; and two, "a deep strain of racism and anti-Semitism." (I wondered how he was able to reconcile the “racism” with J.J. Johnson's presence on the panel.)
Michigan Senator Carl Levin (D), professing to describe the Militias' internal publications and instructional materials, said they were "filled with the language of hate and paranoid conspiracy theories." In one publication, he said, it was written that "there are four massive crematoriums in the USA now complete with gas chambers and guillotines, more than 130 concentration camps already set up from Florida to Alaska, more than two million of us are already on computer lists for detention and liquidation." Levin said, "People have the right to say hateful things—and believe hateful things—about their government. But that doesn't make it right to say them, and extreme rhetoric contributes to an incendiary atmosphere in which an unstable individual will take the rhetoric seriously and light a match or a fuse."
Next, I thought, he would be advocating a law against criticizing the government. Freedom of speech notwithstanding, it was, after all, against the law to yell "fire" in a crowded theater. If the government could sell this analogy to the public, what was to keep them from passing laws against criticizing the government? (Such legislation would, in fact, be proposed the following year.)
At one point in the hearing, one of the senators held up an acid-yellow sheet of paper showing a drawing of Hitler with his right arm raised, superimposed on a target. The senator said it was an example of the racist, anti-Semitic hate literature the Militias were putting out. A Militia panel member, however, immediately identified it as a poster put out by a Jewish civil-rights organization in Milwaukee—Jews For the Preservation of Firearms Ownership (JPFO). What it said under Hitler's image was: "ALL IN FAVOR OF 'GUN CONTROL' RAISE YOUR RIGHT HAND." This was an allusion to this Jewish civil rights organization's public position that the Holocaust could not have happened if the Jews in Europe had been armed. Copies of this poster could be bought in bulk, and were meant to be used for target practice.

A Bunyanesque John Trochmann, sitting before the senators looking solemn and grandfatherly, gray beard and mustache, like a village elder of yore, explained in his peculiarly-stilted manner, "The following are just a few examples as to why Americans are becoming more and more involved in the Militia-patriot organizations. The high office of the presidency has been turned into a position of dictatorial oppression through the abusive use of executive orders and directives... When the president overrules the Congress by executive order, representative government fails... When the average citizen must work for half of each year just to pay their taxes while billions of our tax dollars are forcibly sent to bail out the banking elite, when our fellow Americans are homeless, starving, and without jobs, Congress wonders why their constituents get upset. When government allows our military to be ordered and controlled by foreigners, under presidential orders, allowing foreign armies to train on our soil, allowing our military to label caring patriots as the enemy, then turn their tanks loose on U.S. citizens to murder and destroy, or directs a sniper to shoot a mother in the face while holding her infant in her arms—you bet your constituents get upset..."
In his characteristically-dry manner, he stated, "We the people have had about all we can stand of the twisted, slanted, biased media of America, who take their signals from a few private, covert, special interest groups bent on destroying what's left of the American way... A nation can survive its fools, even the ambitious, but it cannot survive treason from within. America has nothing to fear from patriots maintaining vigilance; she should, however, fear those that would outlaw vigilance."

Ken Adams of the Michigan Militia, looking lawyerly and comfortable in his conservative dark suit and tie, explained that the Militias were not racists or anti-Semitic, though there were bound to be fringe groups and others that would "try to attach themselves to our coattails... and try to get their public attention too—but it is wrong. If they use hate, if they use violence. If they do not abide by the law, we will be the first to expose them."
Norman Olson of the Michigan Militia, wearing camouflage fatigues and cap, with several rows of "fruit salad" over his heart and a single gold star on each point of his collar, in far-more colorful manner than Trochmann or Adams, explained to the senators that the right to form Militias and keep and bear arms had existed from antiquity. "Fundamentally, it is not the state that defends the people but the people who defend the state... The Militia existed before there was a nation or government. The Militia... is the very authority out of which the United States Constitution grew." I had never thought about it that way, but it struck me that this was true. Olson was deft with words, the preacher in him shaping the emotion-laden words into vessels for a message of unmistakable rebuke. 
"The federal government itself is the child of the armed citizen. We the People are the parent of the child we call government. You senators are part of the child that We the People gave life to. The increasing amount of federal encroachment into our lives indicates the need for parental corrective action... In short, the federal government needs a good spanking to make it behave."
The senators were all scowling now, and Specter, like a child pulling a cat's tail, began baiting Olson. He said, "I heard you say on national television that you could understand why someone would bomb the Oklahoma City Federal Building. How can you say that?"
"What I said was that I understand the dynamic of retribution," replied Olson. "Revenge and retribution are a natural dynamic which occurs when justice is taken out of the equation," and, "We are the people who are opposed to racism and hatred. We are people who love our government and love the Constitution... The thing that we stand against is corruption. We stand against oppression and tyranny in government." At that point, the Michigan preacher-Militia commander in fatigues, bursting with forthrightness and looking straight at the senators, said, "Many of us are coming to the conclusion that you best represent that corruption and tyranny."
Taking this personally, Senator Specter shot back angrily, "I want to have a full discussion with you, Mr. Olson, because I want your ideas fully exposed." When Olson suggested that there were other people on the panel, Senator Specter retorted petulantly, "I know, but I'm the chairman... I want to hear all your ideas because I want your ideas compared to mine." "And I want to let the American public judge whether you're right or I'm right... I don't take lightly your comment to me that I represent corruption. I don't take that lightly at all. And I want you to prove it if you're going to say that." 
Olson retorted that when the FBI director had said on April 27 that the Michigan Militia had had nothing to do with Oklahoma, and no one had picked up on that, and, "I submit to you sir, that the Central Intelligence Agency has been in the business of killing Americans around the world since 1946. I submit to you, sir, that the Central Intelligence Agency is probably the grandest conspirator behind all of this government. And I submit to you, sir, that perhaps the puppeteer's strings of the Central Intelligence Agency reach even into the senators perhaps before us..."
"Well," said Senator Specter, his voice lowered, "as long as you say 'perhaps,' Mr. Olson."

 I had been caught off guard. Generally, it was from the left that such charges against the CIA were made, and the Militias were supposed to be right-wing. Until then, I had always thought of the "right" as Republicans who talked about "small government" but in fact supported increased police powers and a big military, also with police powers, which translated into a police state at the service of big business. I hadn't known about populist conservatives. Recently, under Clinton, the Democrats were openly supporting the same thing as the Establishment Republicans—big business and big police. (Perhaps when they were in office they always had—at least, in recent times.) To many, Olson's statements were a breath of fresh air. What was clear was that these Militiamen were refusing to play the Washington game. They were there on their own terms. It would strike me over and over, however, during the coming months that when the left made such accusations, it was called "healthy debate," but when the Militias did so, they were "anti-government."

Senator Fred Thompson (R-Tenn.), anxious to get his two cents in, after stating with more than a touch of sanctimoniousness, "We do have a democratic society," proceeded to inquire of J.J. Johnson, "What's your problem with working through the process to solve these problems?"
Johnson replied that the Militias advocated voting more than anything, but people were "getting outright economically terrorized, socially terrorized..." He said, "What this militia is now, it’s a mindset. Its the civil rights movement of the nineties." This was the most memorable phrase in the hearings, and all the more poignant because Johnson was black.
J.J. said, "It’s people drawing a line in the sand." He said, "Let me talk about the racist aspect now. It’s getting old. I'm getting real tired of being called a Klan member. I'm getting tired of being called a member of the Aryan Nations. I spoke two weeks ago down at the Lincoln Memorial along with two other black people and Jews For the Preservation of Firearms... and the reports came out that a racist, anti-Semitic group held a rally at the Lincoln Memorial. Are these people blind, or is there an agenda afoot here?" He continued, "Good grief, almost half the people in Waco who got killed were black. This movement isn't about guns and skin color. It’s about liberty. Its about freedom."
  Earlier, he had begun to drive his message home when he had said, "Its only a matter of time before an armed confrontation." Johnson had stated, "We're the calm ones. We're the ones who calm people down... The animosity I see out there between the citizens, all of them, and the government, is frightening... I feel that with the increasing polarization between the tax-paying public out there... that the only thing standing between some of the current legislation being contemplated and armed conflict is time."
"You can see from the last two years of sales from the firearms producers in this country, this nation is probably one of the most heavily armed forces on earth. And I have heard more and more people say, 'If one of these black-suited, armor-wearing, state-sponsored terrorists come kicking down my door I'm going to blow somebody away.' They don't call themselves Militia, they don't even call themselves patriots, they call themselves American citizens who are getting tired of confiscatory tax rates, heavy regulation, which, they believe, are leading them down the path to involuntary servitude." J.J.'s passionate message, in many ways, was easier for me to hear than that of the others, because he spoke a more familiar, urban language.

One of the things that would strike me during the coming months, living in a big city as I did, was how differently people outside the cities thought. While in the cities people rarely mentioned the Constitution, except as something the experts were concerned with (usually the ACLU), outside the city, people referred to the Constitution as a contemporary document, meant to be held up to the government by ordinary people as an everyday standard. Increasingly, ordinary people outside the cities felt they were being subjected to unconstitutional and arbitrary laws and law enforcement. And between the corruption in government and the prohibitive cost of lawyers' services, more and more, they were finding themselves without recourse in the courts. (It was nothing for a lawyer to talk of $100,000- $200,000 for an ordinary case.) I already knew that a large number of people around the country lived in fear of the government. And many of the people in rural areas, as I was soon to learn, were only a hair's breadth from forming Militia groups to defend themselves from the government.
As J. J. Johnson noted in the hearings, weapons sales were at an all-time high, with ordinary people believing that stricter gun-control laws were coming, and, eventually, the total confiscation of weapons from private citizens. (Clinton's Brady Bill, they saw as a first step to registry, then confiscation.) The right to keep and bear arms was deeply ingrained in the American psyche, and people wanted to buy guns while they could.
Besides J.J. Johnson saying that the Militias were the "Civil Rights movement of the nineties" and that it was only a matter of time before "armed confrontation," the item that caught my attention the most during the Senate hearings was Bob Fletcher's statement that the government was using "weather control" as a "weapon" against Americans. At the time, I thought this was one of the most farfetched things I had ever heard the government accused of, but Fletcher told the senators that the Militias had all the backup information to prove it, and I decided to keep my mind open. Senator Claiborne Pell, added Fletcher, had written an article on the subject in the 1970s. There was, however, no visible follow-up by the media on the subject of weather engineering.
Nevertheless, Fletcher's statement had not gone unnoticed. Whenever I touched on the subject of the Militias in conversation with friends, his statement about the government controlling the weather—over and over, usually amid snickering or gales of laughter—was brought up to show that the Militias were a bunch of crackpots. I was skeptical, myself, but I was curious to know more. 
It was true, as Fletcher had pointed out, that the weather had changed significantly in recent years, and the number of natural disasters due to hurricanes, tornadoes and earthquakes had multiplied many times over. I recalled that it had been reported in the New York Times a few years earlier that Iran had attributed a large earthquake, that had resulted in thousands of deaths in Iran, to the CIA, and I had laughed it off as an example of how paranoid those Iranian mullahs were. But I also knew that in Russia there had been a lot of research in weather modification, and I had read that Russian weather machines were available commercially to farmers. So, I thought, who knows? I began to wonder, after all, if some of the increasing numbers of natural disasters were not due to government tampering with the environment, or the weather. I little suspected at the time that one day I would have the opportunity to ask Bob Fletcher in person.
After the hearings, I was asked to write a short article on the Oklahoma bombing and the rise of the Militias, for a photography magazine in Venezuela. At the time, I didn't know whether the Militias had anything to do with the bombing, so I emphasized the general discontent with the economy and the government, as the background for both the bombing and the Militias. To go with the article, I chose a photograph that had appeared on the front page of the New York Times, showing a man in military fatigues at the site, who the caption said was a fireman.
The point I was making was the militarization of civil society in the U.S. Earlier, there would have been a picture of a traditional fireman dressed in black rubber coat with yellow stripes and a red fireman's hat, not someone in jungle camouflage. The soldier was pulling a damaged American flag out of the rubble, which I thought was an apt metaphor for what was happening in the country: the military, a new symbol of government, or the "new order," camouflaged, carrying the damaged symbol of the nation of a country in economic and moral ruins. I didn't know yet how apt it was, for the flag also had yellow fringe on it, which, I was to learn later, for the Militias, had an extra, damning significance.
As the months drew on, it surprised me that there was no objective coverage of the Militias whatsoever, even in the alternative media. As it turned out later, the reason was, I was plugged into the wrong alternative media—that of the left, which, as I knew already, could be as elitist and narrow-minded as any amount of right-wing bigots. I didn't yet know there was another, alternative-populist media. The media of the right, I had never thought of as anything but propaganda for certain special-interest groups—big business or anti-abortionists—which I believed was the unwritten agenda for the entire right. As I was to learn, however, this was the same that Militia and patriot groups thought about the liberal media, which for all their talk of sharing the concerns of ordinary working people, were also an elite. The liberals, I figured, disdained the Militias because they were not their own.
I kept waiting for information on the Militias to appear, that was not hysterical or bent on demonizing them. Then came the standoff with the Montana Freemen in late March of 1996. It was during the first week of the standoff, on the day before April Fool's Day, that I embarked on my own endeavor to elucidate what the Militia movement was really about. It was a Sunday morning. I was fast asleep when I received a long-distance phone call from a banker friend I had not spoken to for some time, who happened to be from Montana originally. On another occasion, he had said to me, "Everyone in Montana belongs to the Militia, although they wouldn't say so to outsiders." My friend was also a former senior vice president of Chase Manhattan Bank, which was ironic, as it turned out, given the role the Militias accorded the Rockefellers in bringing about the "New World Order," which I was yet to learn about. That morning, my Montana banker friend told me to put on the television and watch ABC. I did so, and found myself watching a Sunday morning talk show: the subject was the Montana Freemen.
On the panel were two ex-FBI directors, Judges William Webster and William Sessions (who had been ousted by Clinton in favor of Janet Reno shortly before the Waco massacre). ABC reporter Sam Donaldson was incensed that the Freemen were holding out against the government, and was practically demanding that the FBI go in and put a stop to the situation by force. I was appalled. Many people thought the government should wait it out, no matter how long, after what had happened at Ruby Ridge and Waco. Judge Sessions pointed out that in both these cases the FBI had only gotten involved once there were dead federal agents. Moreover, he said, the Freemen were wanted for white-collar crimes, and in such cases, force was not generally used.
It was one of those puzzling reversals that had crept in during the 1980s, when the liberals, like Donaldson, had become the hawks in military and police matters, advocating tough reprisals against Iraq and Saddam Hussein, as well as against domestic undesirables. So-called conservatives, like New York City's Mayor Rudy Giuliani, likewise, that summer would defend welfare, while a Democratic President Clinton signed a bill to do away with it. What it meant was that all these self-righteous public figures stuck to their principles only when they stood to benefit.
At one point, it struck me that Sessions appeared almost to be taking the side of the Freemen when he said that this case was different, because these people saw what they were doing not as crimes but as their citizen rights. There had been reports that there were Militias surrounding the Freemen ranch to defend them from the government, so when Sessions said a debate needed to take place, something clicked, and I knew the moment was right for a book that would get inside the Militias. I began work that same day, thinking it would take only a few months. However, the subject turned out to be far more complex than I imagined. I might not have undertaken the project if I had known that it would take me the better part of five years to piece it all together.
Through a friend who had a farm in upstate New York, I was able to talk on the telephone to a Militiaman named Al Long, who was a member of the Chemung Citizens Militia, on the Pennsylvania border. He told me about a rally that was being planned for Labor Day weekend in Washington, D.C., and said it would be featuring as speakers many of the people whose ideas were popular with the Militias—the ones who wrote the books and gave the speeches. Al suggested that I contact the organizer in California, a woman named Charlena Alden, which I did. As it turned out, she headed a legal-reform organization named Citizens Against Legal Loopholes (CALL). 
Charlena, or Char, as she said she wanted to be called, told me she was planning to be in New York City the following week to do some fund-raising, on her way to Washington to meet with some Congressmen. Accompanying her would be Bob Fletcher (of the Militia of Montana), who was helping her organize the rally. She put him on the phone with me, and they agreed that we would meet. But Char and Bob postponed coming to New York several times, and I began to think they were not going to make it.

Char, in the meantime, sent me a copy of a 94-page booklet she had produced as a companion piece to the Rally, titled, Ignite the Spirit: The Plan, which contained a formal "Petition" for a "redress of grievances" addressed to the Congress. (The "right of the people" to "petition the Government for a redress of grievances" in the First Amendment followed that of the right "peaceably to assemble"; it was a right, along with the Second Amendment, often exercised by patriots and the Militias.) Char told me that her Petition pretty much summed up the issues as seen by the Militia-patriot community, and indeed, as I was to learn, there was a plethora of grassroots petitions that all pretty much said the same things. After spending a full three days reading it, however, I still didn't understand most of it. The issues were pretty dense, and much of it sounded paranoid to me. In the coming months I would find that most patriot literature was written for the believers, assuming, as it did, a prior knowledge of the complex issues put forth. Such literature, furthermore, tended to be written in legalese or poorly-polished, grassroots style, that made it easy to discredit and hard to understand for the uninitiated. I surely wouldn't have bothered to sift through the contents of Char's booklet if I hadn't already made up my mind to do so.
In the "Introduction" was reprinted a letter that Char had written to Senator Arlen Specter. She quoted J.J. Johnson right off the bat in the subject heading: "RE: Senate Subcommittee on Militias—'ITS ONLY A MATTER OF TIME BEFORE AN ARMED CONFRONTATION.' J.J. Johnson 6/15/95."
Char began the letter quoting Senator Specter, also during the hearings on the Militias, stating that a public airing of grievances was "a very useful and healthy thing," and acknowledging the Constitutional "right of the citizenry to petition the Congress." She proceeded to inform him that CALL and many other grassroots organizations were hereby accepting his offer, and asked him to "support a petition mandating open hearings and investigations into the Department of Justice, the amended Trading with the Enemy Act, the Federal Reserve and the United Nations, and their role in the usurpation of our Constitution, and the fraud and corruption in our present judicial system."
Speaking about the "strong 'Centralization of Power' that our Founding Fathers warned us about," she then quoted the "Williamsburg Resolve"—a statement signed by thirty Republican governors at a conference in Williamsburg, Virginia, on November 22, 1994:

Federal action has exceeded the clear bounds of its jurisdiction under the Constitution, and thus violated rights guaranteed to the people. The government of limited, delegated powers envisioned by the framers has become a government of virtually unlimited power... Our freedoms are no longer safe when they exist only at the sufferance of Federal legislators, Federal courts and Federal bureaucrats...

(Patriot literature, as I was learning, relied heavily on direct quotations to make a point.)
Char then proceeded to remind Senator Specter that he had taken an oath to uphold the Constitution, and asked him: "Will you live up to your word, and your oath, and carry out a petition and mandate from We the People for 'Open' hearings and investigations and to introduce legislation to repeal Section 5b of the Trading with the Enemy Act, as amended, and the repealing of the Federal Reserve Act? If not, please explain why you are unwilling to end this declared war against We the People by the Federal government and free our Great Nation from the unlawful and unconstitutional hands of the Money-Changers?" (The part about the Trading with the Enemy Act and the Federal Reserve, as yet, meant very little to me.)
She quoted Thomas Jefferson, saying, "To sin by silence makes a coward of men (women)," and pleaded:

This covert act of war upon We the People, and compound interest on compound interest has pounded us into the ground. There is no longer any accountability and our court system no longer follows the law. The abusive discretionary powers, 'gag orders', and sanctions by the courts is out of hand. Our Bankruptcy and Family Courts are a disgrace. Help us resurrect the voice of the people. Please help us solve our problems in a peaceful and lawful manner.
   Senator Specter, you have a very angry nation on your hands. If you are unwilling to resolve these issues in a peaceful and lawful manner, Mr. James Johnson's statement to the subcommittee on Terrorism, 'Its only a matter of time before an armed confrontation,' is a very serious and likely possibility.

The complete "Petition and Mandate" appeared in the booklet, with a sheet for signatures, with instructions to return completed sheets to CALL. It began:

Under the power and authority of Article [of Amendment] 1 of the Constitution of the United States of America, We, the Sovereign undersigned, in common law, for We the People, of the union of States of the united States of America, do hereby petition the government for a redress of grievances.
WHEREAS:  On November 22, 1994, our nation's sitting Republican Governors declared: "Federal action has exceeded the clear bounds of its jurisdiction under the Constitution and thus violated the rights guaranteed to the People;" and
WHEREAS:  Because Federal action has exceeded its Constitutional powers and authority, the Sovereign People of the united States of America face immediate crisis and undue hardships; and
WHEREAS:  We the People are being denied our unalienable God given Rights, Equal Protection, Equal Access to Justice and Due Process under the Law as guaranteed by the Constitution of the united States of America; and
WHEREAS:  Senate Report 93-549 declares that "Since March the 9th, 1933, the United States has been in a declared state of emergency... For 40 years, the freedoms and governmental procedures guaranteed by the Constitution have, in varying degrees, been abridged;" and
WHEREAS:  All elected officials have taken an oath of office to uphold and defend the Constitution of the united States of America.

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, WE THE PEOPLE, THE
UNDERSIGNED, DEMAND:

A.  THAT the Congress of the United States adopt a Resolution of Redress within thirty (30) days of receipt... to further act responsibly, and to thereupon conduct open hearings and investigations to identify the "Federal action" that has "exceeded the clear bounds of its jurisdiction under the Constitution;"  
    
Again, at the time, this all meant very little to me. I noted, however, that in the Petition, the "united States of America," when referring to "We the People," was written with a lower-case "u," but it was only later that I learned that many patriots distinguished (with some variations) between writing the name of the country as it appeared in the Declaration of Independence—with the lower-case "u"—and in the Preamble to the Constitution, where it was written, "United States of America," to denote the "more perfect Union." Another way to write it was, "United States" (often shortened to U.S.), as it appeared in the body of the Constitution, which, patriots claimed, denoted the federal government and federal citizenry in its early, limited sense, when the states were paramount. Some believed even, that "United States," and especially "U.S.," had been usurped and were being used (for legal purposes) to designate a parallel, "corporate" government (a legal entity due to its incorporation) that had little or nothing to do with the nation, or "Republic," of the Founding Fathers.
The document continued, calling for: a "moratorium on all new laws, rules, codes, regulations," until the hearings and investigations were completed. It also called for a Congressional subcommittee to work with "an independent committee of Sovereigns and public servants," that would include state Senators Don Rogers (R-Calif.) and Charles Duke (R-Colo.), Dr. Eugene Schroder, Byron Dale, Walt Myers (the latter three were on CALL's National Advisory Board), Charlena Alden and Terry Sanders (CALL's executive director). And it called for open hearings on the Trading with the Enemy Act, the Federal Reserve's monetary policy, the role of the United Nations and its treaties in usurping governmental functions and "Sovereign rights", and an investigation of the Department of Justice and the American Bar Association (ABA), and their role also in usurping "Constitutional Rights."
The Petition called also for hearings on the Council on Foreign Relations, which, it noted, had been declared "subversive" by the American Legion in 1962. The American Legion, it explained, had charged the CFR with "One-Worldism and United Nationism," and with putting forward proposals "that our country be disarmed unilaterally or bilaterally, that all individuals in the United States be disarmed," as per State Department Publication Number 7277, Freedom from War: The United States Program for General and Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful World" (issued the year before the American Legion statement). (I was yet to read this Program, initiated by JFK, and it was not included in Char's booklet.) This Petition for redress of grievances ended with a call for "a plan in the plain language to restore to the States and to the People prerogatives and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution as it was envisioned by our forefathers."      

In a press release included in the booklet, Char and CALL's executive director added another subject to be discussed in open Congressional hearing, in Point 6:

The restoring of allodial title and the return of all confiscated property.

While already, most of the charges just didn't make any sense to me, with the sweeping, general statements and accusations, and obscure references, this one left me even more baffled. At that time, I had no idea what "allodial title" meant, and nowhere was it explained.
Listed as a co-sponsor of the Rally was the Constitutionists Networking Center (CNC) in Arizona, whose executive director, Walt Myers, was named as part of the suggested people's committee to help with the hearings. CNC, which appeared in the booklet as the co-sponsor of CALL's proposals, it said, had been created in 1993, with the goal of bringing about "a government operating within the limits of the Constitution." I wrote to CNC, asking for more information on the organization, but never received a response.

In a section of the rally booklet titled, "The Plan," Char explained that during the week of November 5, 1995, a task force had gone to Washington, which had included a recipient of the Congressional Medal of Honor, to hand-deliver notices paving the way for law suits against the President and members of Congress and the Supreme Court for "failure to uphold their oath." Notices, it said, had also gone to the Vice President, the Attorney General, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Secretary of the Treasury and many others. She called on people around the nation to do the same with state and local officials. "We will gun them down with paper," she wrote, explaining that this would not be a class action lawsuit, but rather, individual suits, which would make it difficult or impossible to enjoin them.
The collection of lawsuits, she said, would be taken from San Diego (where CALL's office was) at the finish of the Republican Convention in August, as part of "Operation Accountability," by way of a "Constitutional Caravan" to Washington, and culminate in a Labor-Day weekend "Bill of Rights Rally." The lawsuits would then be filed at the Common Law Court in the nation's capital on the first business day following the rally.
Then, if the officials who had been served with an "Actual Constructive Notice and Demand," and "evidence package," failed to carry out the demands of We the People, there would be criminal charges—among them, treason. The argument went that these officials had sworn to uphold the Constitution, and by going along with the unconstitutional system that was in place, if they continued to do so after they were put on notice, they would be willfully failing to uphold their oaths of office, thereby committing treason.
Included in the booklet was a packet of blank services, with instructions for "We the The People" on how to deliver them to as many remaining public officials as possible before the summer. If the office holders in question failed to initiate corrective action, it said, this would be the basis for bringing lawsuits against these officials, with Grand Juries around the country bringing charges of sedition, insurrection, rebellion and treason. CALL, it said, was seeking ten million signatures around the country for Congressional hearings to be held, and investigations.
Under Grand Jury Code 22-3001, it was explained, a grand jury could be summoned by the people for an investigation whenever official action was considered deficient. This could be done with a petition to the district court bearing the signatures of a hundred plus 2% of the total number of votes cast in the preceding governor's election. A Grand Jury would consist of fifteen jurors, with a quorum of twelve. (The problems of actually doing this, however, were well-illustrated when citizens tried to impanel their own grand jury in Oklahoma, to investigate the bombing a couple of years later.)
On Labor Day weekend, the plan went, immediately after the rally, from the steps of Capitol Hill, "We the People" would proceed to the Common Law Court, carrying the mountain of lawsuits to be filed. The goal, it said, was to have two million individual lawsuits in courts all over the country by the fall. (This was my first encounter with efforts by patriots to restore the U.S. to the earlier system of Common Law, as it had existed through much of the nineteenth century, and in some form, well into the twentieth; it had been replaced with the Uniform Commercial Code, UCC, only in the mid-'60s.) This all sounded terribly ambitious and grand, and I thought Char must have tremendous resources at her disposal. Either she had a lot of money herself, or she had some rich Westerners backing her.

In the "evidence package" in the booklet, it said the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission, and the Rockefellers were running the world, which I had heard ad nauseum  from the left in the '70s and '80s, and from rebellious Nicaraguans and Salvadorans, as well as from anti-Shah Iranians. I, myself, had participated in study groups at the CFR, and I had once worked across the street from the Council at a fellow Rockefeller organization, now the Americas Society. Thus, by Char's logic, I would myself have been one of those people planning for a world police state and government.
The idea that the United Nations was to be the seat of that world government, I found especially ridiculous. For one, as I well knew—living in New York where the UN was headquartered—the UN was one of the most inept organizations in the world. And two, I knew many of the people who had held, or continued to hold, key jobs, especially in the disarmament section, which, I would find, was the agency that patriots believed was meant to preside over the dismantling of national armies, establishing a single world peacekeeping force, and enforcing universal gun control (under the JFK Program). The UN people I knew were idealists; they were good people. 
What did give me pause, however, was what had been done to Iraq under the auspices of the UN during the Persian Gulf War (1990-’91) and afterwards, with the continuing, devastating sanctions. Long after the war, the UN was continuing to kill and damage Iraqi children, systematically; it was estimated that some 50,000 children a month were dying because of the sanctions. Another five children for every one that died, were growing up with brain damage and stunted growth due to malnutrition, which, according to health experts, would take several generations to reverse.
It was being said by some that "sanctions" were the "new weapon of mass destruction"—a UN weapon.
Although I knew full well that it was the U.S. and Britain that had initiated the Iraq action, I also knew that they had done it under UN Security Council authority, using this institution to launch the war—in other words, to make it "legal." In the end, all but a handful of member states of the UN had gone along with the war, with those few states remaining officially neutral. Only Jordan had stood up to the action, publicly criticizing the war against Iraq. No matter how much UN supporters argued that the UN itself hadn't done any of this, it was clear that it couldn't have happened without the UN. Not that degree of international coordination! The U.S. and Britain, without the UN, would have been hard pressed to get anyone other than Israel to join in the attack, which they had wanted to avoid, or in the sanctions afterwards. It was highly doubtful that the Soviet Union or France, Turkey or any Arab country, would have taken part, or that Saudi Arabia would have allowed the attack to be staged on its territory, if there had not been the UN umbrella (of respectability).
There was no doubt that the United Nations, with the acquisition of this major peacekeeping capability, had become a decidedly dangerous organization, in much the same way that any weapon would be in the wrong hands. Only here, it was a global army in the wrong hands. I would learn a great deal from the Militias about the difference between the individual right to bear arms and form a Militia, and the dangers of tyranny when arms were borne only by the "collective," or government. Living in a big city, and having learned over a period of many years to associate weapons in individual hands with crime, I did not yet understand this.

The one issue, at that point, that I was willing to dig my teeth into in Char's booklet, was the matter of the Federal Reserve System. I had already learned that it was privately owned, or perhaps I would have turned away even from that. And it would have been the end of the matter. I might have decided to go about my business with little thought of the Militias, trying in my own way to understand what had gone so wrong in the country (and, for that matter, in the world), especially since the 1980s, with the rise of such things as widespread homelessness in the U.S. while the rich got richer, with the rise of outright police abuse even as crime decreased, and with the loss, for a large segment of the population, of the ability to continue to earn a decent living.
All this, while at the same time, we had seen the transformation of a relatively free press into a fully-managed media, controlled by the big corporations and a government that more and more existed to do the corporations' bidding. As a journalist, I had seen this total managing of the media (although the process had started much earlier) come about almost overnight during the Persian Gulf War and its aftermath.
It seemed to me, as I read through Char's booklet several more times, that the crux of the matter, for patriots, was in the creation, on the eve of World War I, in late 1913, of the Federal Reserve (it had been followed by the Trading with the Enemy Act once the U.S. formally entered the war, in 1917).  Char sent me a few pages on the creation of the Federal Reserve and its effects, from a book that was popular with patriots, titled, Vultures in Eagle's Clothing, by Lynne Meredith. The author explained that in 1913, "Congress sank America into eternal debt by giving the powers to issue currency and control the American monetary system" to the Federal Reserve and its shareholders, the owner banks. The Federal Reserve, moreover, she explained, could not really be considered a federal agency because it was owned by "a group of primarily foreign bankers."
The largest of the original shareholders, researchers agreed, had been the Rockefeller and J.P. Morgan banks. Meredith included lists from two different sources, which were similar, with other owners listed as: the Rothschild Banks of London and Berlin; Lazard Brothers of Paris; Israel Moses Sieff Banks of Italy; Warburg Bank of Hamburg and Amsterdam; and Wall Street's Kuhn Loeb & Company and Goldman Sachs.

According to Eustace Mullins, a widely-read author on the origins of the Federal Reserve (about whom I was to learn a great deal more later), who claimed to have copies of the original organization certificates of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks, the principal shareholders of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, at the outset, were: (Kuhn Loeb, Rockefeller-controlled) National City Bank, 30,000; (J.P. Morgan-controlled) First National Bank, 15,000 (National City and First National merged in 1955); Chase National Bank (which became the Rockefellers' Chase Manhattan Bank), 6,000; Marine National Bank of Buffalo (which became Marine Midland), 6,000; and National Bank of Commerce, 21,000.

Meredith said that the same original banks continued to be the owners. The best I was able to get was a list of current member banks from the New York Federal Reserve Bank—the lead bank in the Federal Reserve System—and found that, whatever the list might have included originally (if it was indeed these particular banks), it had been greatly expanded—assuming that all the shareholders were member banks. Most of the banks that Meredith and Mullins had listed, in any case, no longer figured.
Although it was impossible to get a list of the original owners from the Federal Reserve, it stood to reason that the J.P Morgan and Rockefeller banks would have been prominent, and Meredith's point was well taken that there were foreign banks among them. Although the Federal Reserve claimed that all the member banks were American, many of the banks on the current list, such as I.B.J. Schroder, Barclay's and Safra National Bank—to mention a few of the obvious ones—were clearly foreign-owned. The way the Federal Reserve got around this was by saying they were U.S. subsidiaries. Most if not all of the so-called American banks, furthermore, such as Chase and Citicorp, had interlocking directorates with foreign banks and corporations, and they owned large chunks of each other's stock.
Although many of the original stockholders, in any event, would no longer have appeared on the list—some of them no longer existed, or had changed their names or merged with other banks—undoubtedly, many of the same banking interests did continue to hold stock in the Federal Reserve Banks, under different names. The largest current members, I found, continued to be the original-owner J.P. Morgan and Rockefeller banks, with Citibank and Chase in the lead. On the New York Federal Reserve Bank's list at the end of 1995, I found that Chase was listed as having assets worth 100,451,999, and Citibank 220,110,000, making it the largest. (Interestingly, Chase's merger with Chemical in 1997 would bring Chase's assets to 255,059,400, making Chase Manhattan Bank—the Rockefeller flagship—the largest member. In 1999, there was a new addition, the British-owned HSBC, or Hong Kong Shanghai Bank Corporation, listed as the fourth largest, after J.P. Morgan; as if to state its position, this British bank erected an enormous tower directly across the street from the New York Federal Reserve Bank.)

Stating that the foreign banking interests that owned the Federal Reserve stock were the same ones that "have corrupted economies since the beginning of world banking history," Meredith went on to cite a famous quote of Mayer Amschel Rothschild, the original, late-18th-century scion of this Frankfurt banking family, who had once said: "Permit me to control the currency of a nation and I care not who makes its laws."

I well knew that any allegation that Jews were prominent in or controlled international banking today, as the Rothschilds and their cohorts had done openly in Europe throughout the nineteenth century, would immediately bring charges of anti-Semitism, and I supposed, reading this, that this must be the main reason the patriots and Militias had been labeled anti-Semitic. The Militias' prolific dissemination of information on the origins of the Federal Reserve, and the frequent references to the "international banking cartel," and especially the Rothschilds, had made them prime targets of the ADL, which lumped them together in its reports, with the Ku Klux Klan and the Neo-Nazis, labeling the Militias, "Hate Groups."
I asked Char about this over the phone, and she replied angrily that she herself was Jewish, and that, "Facts are facts." "Lynne Meredith," she said, "is my friend, and she is certainly not anti-Semitic. And neither are the other patriots I know. It happens to be true that many of the 'banksters' are Jewish. What is true is true." The use of the term "banksters," which I was hearing for the first time, I found, was widespread among patriots.

Meredith also quoted one of the Federal Reserve Act's most outspoken opponents in 1913, Congressman Charles Lindbergh, Sr. (the father of the famous aviator of that name). The day before the Federal Reserve Act passed, he had stated:

The money trust deliberately caused the 1907 money panic and thereby forced Congress to create a National Monetary Commission which led to the ultimate creation of the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve Act establishes the most gigantic monetary trust on earth. When the President signs the bill, the invisible government of the Monetary Powers will be legalized. The people must make a declaration of independence to relieve themselves from the Monetary Powers by taking control of Congress!... The worst legislative crime of the ages is perpetrated by this banking bill. The caucus and the party bosses have again operated and prevented the people from getting the benefit of their own government!

Meredith proceeded to explain in a section titled, "The Invisible Government," how the Federal Reserve Act had come into being. The chairman of the Monetary Commission, which had put together the Federal Reserve Act, she explained, had been Senator Nelson Aldrich. His daughter Abigail had married John D. Rockefeller, Jr. (of Standard Oil and Chase Manhattan Bank), and so, the Rockefellers had been among the largest beneficiaries of the Federal Reserve. Also, a member of the Monetary Commission had been Jacob Schiff of Kuhn Loeb & Company of New York, who, interestingly, had been born in the Rothschild home in Germany. Interestingly, said Meredith, he and William B. Thompson, who was none other than a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (which set Federal Reserve policy), had helped finance the Bolshevik Revolution. Thompson had traveled to Moscow in 1917. Schiff had made a contribution of $20 million. (Interestingly, Schiff, I learned elsewhere, had also been the chief financial strategist for the Rockefellers' Standard Oil before it had been broken up by the government in an anti-trust suit in 1911.)
The Federal Reserve Act had been passed on December 23 of 1913, Meredith related, when many in the Congress had already left for the Christmas holidays. It was immediately signed by President Woodrow Wilson, whose campaign had been financed by the banks. Within months, individual income taxes began to be collected for the first time (the amendment on the income tax had been passed earlier in the year), to pay interest to the Federal Reserve.
In a section titled, "Money From Nothing," Meredith explained what, exactly, had been put into effect by this Act, likening the newly-created Federal Reserve's powers to a person having a printing press for producing currency, and giving it away to a banker, then agreeing to borrow all your money from him and repay it with interest. This, she explained, was what Congress had done, giving away the power to print unlimited amounts of money to a group of self-serving bankers—the shareholders of the Federal Reserve. Moreover, she pointed out, this had been in violation of the law, as was evident reading the 1935 Supreme Court ruling in Schechter Poultry v. U.S., which clearly stated:

Congress may not abdicate or transfer to others its legitimate functions.  

She explained in simplified form how money was created, with the process beginning with, the U.S. government, say, informing the Federal Reserve that it needed $300 billion in credit and $100 million in currency. At the request of the Federal Reserve, the Treasury Department would then instruct the Bureau of Printing and Engraving to print $300 billion worth of Treasury Bonds and $100 million of Federal Reserve notes, at a cost to the Federal Reserve of only $20.60 per thousand notes. At the same time, the Federal Reserve would place an order to purchase Treasury Bonds in the amount of $300,100,000,000, using the $100 million currency (for which it had paid only some two and a half cents per note), transferring, with a simple computer entry, the remaining $300 billion as a credit, to the U.S. Treasury.
For this loan to the U.S. Treasury, the Federal Reserve would receive continuously compounding interest, forever, which could never be repaid in its entirety. Contrary to what most people believed, the Federal Reserve assets were, not gold or silver, but these same Treasury Bonds, for which, in this case, the Federal Reserve had spent some $26,000 only, in printing costs. And so, the Federal Reserve created money from thin air. In this way, Meredith explained, the Federal Reserve had imposed on the country a debt-based economy, where "every Federal Reserve Note... is nothing more than a debt certificate." America's greatest power, the creation of money, had been given to the Federal Reserve. She noted that the Boston Federal Reserve Bank had summed it up in a booklet for the public, saying:

When you or I write a check there must be sufficient funds in our account to cover that check, but when the Federal Reserve writes a check, it is creating money. 

She quoted the House Banking and Currency Committee's 1964 publication, Money Facts, which explained it as follows:

The Federal Reserve Banks create... Federal Reserve Notes out of thin air to buy government bonds from the United States Treasury by lending into circulation at interest and by bookkeeping entries of checkbook credit to the United States Treasury. The Treasury writes up an interest bearing bond for one billion dollars. The Federal Reserve gives the Treasury a one billion dollar credit for the bond, it has created out of nothing. This is a one billion dollar debt which the American people are obligated to pay, in full, with interest.

In regards to the chartering of the first Bank of the United States, the country's first central bank and forerunner of the Federal Reserve System, in 1791, Thomas Jefferson had said:

I consider the foundation of the Constitution as laid on this ground that "all powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are preserved to the states or to the people... To take a single step beyond the boundaries thus specially drawn around the powers of Congress is to take possession of a boundless field of power, no longer susceptible of any definition. The incorporation of a bank [the first Bank of the United States], and the powers assumed by this bill, have not been delegated to the United States by the Constitution.

At the bottom of the last of the four pages that she sent me, Char had put a big exclamation mark, and brackets around Meredith's statement that: "The Congress should immediately take back the power of legislative monetary and credit creation, with safeguards, for the benefit and prosperity of the American people!"

Char's booklet contained model legislation for amending the Federal Reserve Act, titled, "The Money Reform Act"—authored by Byron Dale, a member of her advisory board—which called for returning the function of the issue of currency to the U.S. Treasury, under the control of Congress. The new currency, it stated, would be backed by silver and gold, and by labor. The proposed legislation also called for abolishing the IRS and the income tax.
The creation of the Federal Reserve, I was fast learning from patriots, was what had led to World War I, and to the "Trading with the Enemy Act" in 1917, under the "War Powers" that the Founders had meant to reside in the Congress. The Constitution, in Article I, Section 8, said:

The Congress shall have the Power... To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water.

 A seemingly innocuous war measure at the time, passed by the Congress on the eve of the U.S. entry into the war (to accord the president "War Powers," enabling him to control all the assets and commercial transactions in the U.S. of the Germans and their allies), this "War Powers act"—the Trading with the Enemy Act—was often called by patriots—would lead to a continuing state of emergency in the U.S., which only the president had the power to end. (In the mainstream media, the "War Powers" act generally referred to the 1973 "War Powers Resolution," passed in connection with the Viet Nam war, requiring a formal declaration of war by the Congress 60 days after the president's deployment of troops abroad in an offensive action, with a possible extension, upon request, of another 30 days.)
Char told me over the phone that the most important person for me to interview on this subject was a man from Colorado named Eugene Schroder, who was also on her advisory board. He had researched it in depth, she said, and had written a couple of books. And indeed, it was only after I read one of his books that I understood the impact of the Trading with the Enemy Act on the current situation, and learned more about Senate Report 93-549, cited in the preamble to CALL's Petition. This Senate Report had been issued in 1976 by the Senate Special Committee on the Termination of the National Emergency, chaired by the widely-admired Senator Frank Church. If I had had any doubts about the truth of patriots' claims that the U.S., technically, had been under "War Powers," or emergency rule, ever since the Trading with the Enemy Act had been amended in 1933 to include Americans, this report confirmed that this was so.   
©2000 Nita M. Renfrew

Sunday, November 7, 2010

CHAPTER 5: M.O.M.


PART II
Falling Star


Whenever a people entrust the defense of their country to a regular, standing army, the power of the country will remain under the direction of the most wealthy citizens..., your liberties will be safe as long as you support a well-regulated militia.
                                               Independent Gazeteer, Pennsylvania 1791

Chapter 5
M.O.M.

mi-li-tia   n.  1 a) orig., any militiary force  b) later, any army composed of citizens rather than professional soldiers, called up in time of emergency  
2   in the U.S., all able-bodied male citizens between 18 and 45 years old who are not already members of the regular armed services: Members of the National Guard and of the Reserves (of the Army, Air Force, Coast Guard, Navy, and Marine Corps) constitute the organized militia; all others, the unorganized militia
                                                                                 Webster's New World Dictionary (1991)

In history, it was likely that the Militia of Montana would go down as the grandfather of the present-day Constitutional Militia movement. For among these citizen groups, it was the most visible. The Militia of Montana, or M.O.M., as it liked to call itself, had made, not military preparedness, but a strong educational mission, its primary function, taking the lead in the Militia movement to educate Americans about what had gone wrong in the Founders' Republic, and what their citizen rights were. 
During the summer following the Oklahoma bombing in 1995, there were Senate hearings on the Militias in the Judiciary Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Government Information; they were broadcast on C-SPAN. Like most people, this was my first direct look at Militia members. On the Militia panel were John Trochmann, who, with his brother David and nephew Randy, had founded M.O.M. and was its acknowledged leader. Although he was wearing a gray flannel suit, what struck me about the fifty-year-old Trochmann was that, with his broad, high forehead and dark, piercing eyes, salt-and-pepper hair and full silvery beard and mustache, he seemed to be from another era. It was as though there were another, superimposed reality (something like a double image), where he wore, not a suit, but overalls and held a pitchfork. Trochmann, I would learn much later, indeed, had grown up on a Midwest farm.
He had long been a member of the patriot community before setting out to form the Militia of Montana, and had brought with him to the Militia movement many of his former friends and beliefs. Through M.O.M.'s publications and Trochmann's lectures around the country, he had, in great part, set the tone for the emerging Militia movement. It had been the already-existing patriot community, with its many overlapping beliefs and constituencies, that had been the most receptive at first to John Trochmann's Militia message.
Little did I imagine at the time that one day I would meet with him. Again, one of the first things that struck me about Trochmann when I finally did, at a "Preparedness Expo," was that it didn't matter that he was wearing a gray suit, I could see only a plaid flannel shirt and suspenders. His hands were like rough, dry Idaho potatoes. John was nothing if not an American Gothic character out of a Grant Wood painting, stern and righteous. That day in Pennsylvania, some time later, he seemed never to be at ease as he told me his life story leading up to the Senate hearings. He started, telling me how he had come to live in Montana: 

"It was a childhood dream of mine to be in the Rocky Mountains. When I was in the 2nd or 3rd grade, I came upon an encyclopedia. I looked up the letter 'M,' and found 'mountains' and 'Montana.' I grew up as a farm boy in the northwest corner of Flatland, Minnesota. I was not happy with flat land, and I wanted to go to the mountains. Everybody has to have a dream. If they don't, they don't accomplish much in life. Dreams are gold. I don't see much difference.
"My curiosity was first tweaked by my dad. He was a farmer, carpenter and preacher. He bailed out of the Lutheran Church in the early '50s because they joined the National Council of Churches. He joined the Evangelical Churches of America, and when they joined the World Churches of America, he said, 'That's enough organized religion for us, Johnny.' He called me Johnny.
"At the age of 17, in 1960, I joined the U.S. Navy. I went to Cuba during the Missile Crisis as part of a bomb squadron out of Norfolk, Virginia—for submarine warfare. Part of our job was to take pictures of the Soviet ships leaving with the missiles on the decks. In fact, we discovered it was not missiles but just decoys covered by tarps. We brought this to our superiors and they just told us to shut our mouths. So that tweaked my interest a whole bunch.
"Beyond that point, back in Norfolk, I watched on a military television as our President Kennedy was shot in the face by our own people. It was shown in Life magazine. They printed a few thousand copies and then tried to recall them. They changed the article midstream. They actually showed the footage of the Zapruder tape. I realized something was wrong with this picture. The more we discussed it, the more we realized, something's gone radically wrong here in America. That did it for me. I pretty much questioned people in public service positions ever since.
"So, ever since then, I've really been in the pursuit to find truth, exposing the corrupters to the American people. But I guess the big push came in the mid-'70s when I started getting involved in trying to educate our fellow Americans. We were distributing information to our customers, reduplicating what we came across. People were very receptive. My two brothers and I had two businesses—A&T Motors, which did automobile repairs and built racing engines, and Trochs Enterprise Inc. which dealt with parts for snowmobiles, under the trade label, 'Snowstoff.' We had 5500 wholesale accounts. As a part of the military, I had attended the U.S. Armed Forces Institute in Norfolk—business law and business administration. I never set out to finish. I just wanted to get an education.
"I built myself a Bentwood dome home—thirty-foot domes spaced twenty feet apart. It had about 6,600-and-some square feet, three stories high, a third of it built into the ground, quite self-sufficient. That took a lot of time. I was into self-sufficiency. My electricity was wind powered. The interest in self-sufficiency was something that I acquired by watching our country and observing how those in high places were trying to control the populace based on energy and food. And I wanted to be independent, not 'interdependent.' 
"Eventually, I sold my home. It was valued at $360,000 but I had to sell it for $60,000. Minnesota had become a rearview state where, as far as I could see, most Minnesotans didn't care what happened. Montana has always been a more free-thinking state, based on the way of life. People are few and far between. The economy is much tighter there. The unemployment rate is much higher. In our little community, its about 50% unemployment, and the global grabbers are making sure it continues to grow, by shutting down the sawmills and the mines. And then, the UN Biosphere grabbers, land grabbers, are making sure that the land grazers have no place to run their cattle. Besides, a lot of people who have woke up across the country and are realizing the cities are not a good place to live are moving to Montana.
"I moved to Noxon, Montana in '87. I married a lady from there. My brother David had located there earlier. He took my dream and left with it before I had the opportunity, because I was in the process of building a house at the time. I moved to Montana and occasionally did an engine job for someone, or a transmission job. I'm semi-retired. 
"In Montana, we home-schooled our children—with our children from former marriages, they totaled six. In early 1990, part of the home-schooling was to do a story on the Aryan Nations church, so we sent our children to Aryan Nations in Idaho with some trusted friends, and when we went to pick them up the next day, we found that, being teenagers—of course they didn't ever lie to their parents, ha, ha, ha—we found that they had gotten little or no sleep the night before and had been on alcoholic beverages. And we had trusted our friends and had trusted the church over there, that they would take care of our children properly. While I was there, I was invited to come back and speak in July of that year at the Aryan Nations World Congress, and I did. I spoke about immorality—'their' immorality.
"From that point on, I was branded an Aryan Nations Neo-Nazi. Mainstream media, from that point on, has been slandering me. Never, ever, ever, did I belong to Aryan Nations. Never paid any dues, never signed anything, never received anything in the mail. What does it take to be a member?
"OK, I only brought that up because you needed to see how I connected with the Randy Weaver family. That's how we met them. We pretty much lost touch with them after that, but our children were writing letters back and forth to their children, because our children became friends. In early 1991 Randy Weaver was arrested, as far as I'm concerned, for not cooperating with federal agents to set the Trochmanns up.
"He was arrested because he wouldn't participate in a federal sting operation. The Aryan Nations was part of it, but he came to the Noxon, Montana area that year with the specific purpose of infiltrating the Trochmann family. It came out in the trial in 1993. He went over there to case it out. Apparently, at the time, he had agreed to it. Something changed his mind. Anyhow, he was arrested in '91, and when he got out of jail on bail, he went up into his mountain retreat—what they, the government, called a 'compound.' We call it a clapboard cabin. It was made out of mill ends. It was a little cabin that would sway in the breeze when it blew.
"Why did the government want to set us up? We were outspoken against tyranny in government. Our reach was all over the country, because of our former customers. We were still sending them things. We sent out one book called Billions for the Bankers, Debts for the People, showing the three different methods of takeovers, and the one that we were concentrating on was the financial takeover. I don't even remember who wrote it, but we must have sent out, phew, thirty, forty thousand of them, free." (This 30-page booklet, of which I was given a copy by a patriot during my research, published in 1984, was basically an expose of the Federal Reserve System, a subject dear to the heart of all Militia people, about which I was beginning to learn in the spring of 1996.) 
 
"The snowmobile parts was a very good business, and that's why we have this business, because we took that money and we sunk it into this. But it would be nice to break even some day. The IRS thinks we're making so damn much money, the bastards.
"In '91, when Randy Weaver retreated to his mountain cabin, we brought them food for, probably, sixteen months. At the time I didn't know he had gone there to set me up. And then, on April 19—that date always comes up—of 1992, my nephew Randy Trochmann and I went to visit the Randy Weaver family because we just felt in our spirit that we had a problem someplace with one of our friends—that they were being put in jeopardy of some sort—and the Randy Weaver family is the only ones that we could not call and find out. They didn't have a telephone.
"So we drove up to the Randy Weavers' and we found Vicki Weaver sitting on the rock overlooking the gate with her rifle on her lap, with little Samuel standing to her left side with a rifle—Sara and Rachel were to her right side—looking down at us. I said, 'Good morning Vicki, good morning children,' and all I got for a response was, 'John, what are you doing here?' And I thought, 'How strange. Why should she talk to me like that?' I thought to myself, 'What do I usually do up here? I come up here to visit you.' And she says, 'I don't know who to believe anymore. John, turn around and look.' So I turned around and saw a whole row of federal agents behind us, at least a dozen, and I realized that they were under siege. I didn't know we drove into the middle of a siege and just kinda screwed it up for everybody. And she said, 'John, go home.'
"Now, Randy Weaver was nowhere in sight. Neither was their brand new baby. So, instead of going home, we went down to a pay phone in Naples, Idaho, which we knew was bugged, and called my brother's phone, which we knew was bugged, and made this statement: 'I don't know what these agents are up to, trying to harass the Weaver family, because Randy Weaver was killed two weeks ago when he fell off the cliff.' I mean, if they're masters of deception, why can't we join in? So, from there we went to visit a newspaper man we knew was former CIA and probably still with them, and we gave him still another story. As we sat in the restaurant talking with him, we looked out at the Weaver home, and there was a huge, thick, black cloud that sat right over the home and rained like crazy. And that was the end of the siege at the time. The marshals abandoned their program, apparently." (This incident, interestingly, had taken place a year before Waco, also on the anniversary of Lexington. The question the Militias were asking was, had this date already been selected by the feds for some action?) 
"From that point on, we just didn't have anything more to do with the Weaver family, seeing they had just told us to go home. And then, in August we realized that the Weaver family was under siege again. We didn't know at the time that a marshal had been shot—Marshal Degan—and that Samuel Weaver had been shot and killed. Friends of ours heard about the siege on the news. There were hundreds of people by the time we got there, from all over the countryside—Montana, Washington, Oregon, Idaho. I'm sure there were a few Canadian citizens too. Its close to the border.
"So, from that time on, the Trochmanns—my brother David, my nephew Randy, and myself—maintained a twenty-four-hour vigil, and one of us was awake at all times for the eleven-day siege that followed. At which time we discovered that little Samuel Weaver had been shot in the back by federal agents, coerced into a mortal gunfight, that Marshal Degan had been shot two hours before the Weaver family knew he was there—shot by his own agents. We've got eye witnesses to prove it. Gerry Spence didn't believe it until the trial was well underway, and by that time the witness had had a threat and disappeared.
"Prior to that, however, we had a Los Angeles police chief take an affidavit from the man, which we still hold a copy of, that he actually saw Marshal Degan being shot in the back by his own men. The sheriff up there wants to know how come there's never been an investigation, with seven bullet holes in Mr. Degan's backpack, which was on his back, and no inquest. The man who saw this was in the process of purchasing land in the area, and the marshals apparently didn't know that he was walking the land right below them.
"Marshal Degan was a good marshal, but he was part of a drug bust operation on the East coast, in the Boston area, that netted a $6 million catch and sent a number of federal agents to the pen. And for that, he had to die. So the rogue agents within the agency found a way to sacrifice him, and vilify the Weaver family to boot. You gotta ask yourself, how many point men does a six-man team need? This six-man team already had a point man. Why did they need Degan? If Degan was in front of the rest of them, why?
"At the siege, the three of us tried to keep the peace down below at the barricade, to make sure that the federal agents would have no excuse to remove the public from the area. We felt once the public was hauled away, they could butcher the family very easily, which they tried to do. They tried to burn the house down twice. The first time they tried to do it, the rains came and washed all the diesel fuel off the building, that the choppers had dumped on it. The second time the Huey military choppers did that, we had moved the media into the area, and got them to start taking pictures of what was going on. They swarmed against us, arresting some of the media that didn't hide quick enough, and they never did burn the place, because of our observation and scrutiny of them all the time.
"Bo Gritz got involved, and eventually talked Randy Weaver out, and what was left of the family, after they killed his son, shot his wife in the face, with her infant in her arms. A sick bunch of beasts. But they were just obeying their orders, right? Who would do such a dumb thing as that?"
John was silent for a moment, then said, "It reminds me of a poem I've been taught by an elderly gentleman. It goes like this:

Captain, what do you think, I asked, of the part your soldiers play?
The Captain answered, I do not think, I do not think, I obey!
Do you think you should shoot a patriot down and help a tyrant slay?
The Captain answered, I do not think, I do not think, I obey!
Do you think your conscience was meant to die and your brains to rot away?
The Captain answered, I do not think, I do not think, I obey!
Then if this is your soldiers code, I cried, you're a mean unmanly crew, and for all of your feathers and guilt and braid, I'm more of a man than you.   
For whatever my lot on earth may be and whether I swim or sink, I can say with pride, I do not obey, I do not obey, I think.

"That's what our agents need to do." 

The Paul Bunyan-with-a-blue-ox character stopped talking, and looked at his watch as if he had more important things to do in the wilderness of America than talk to a reporter. Looking back at me warily, after a bit, he continued, "After this happened, we were part of an organization called 'Citizens for Justice.' It was an investigation team that held meetings every week or so. We helped set it up. There were hundreds involved in it. We were investigating and uncovering evidence, and turning it over to Gerry Spence. That was the fall of '92.   
"Then, in April of 1993 came the burning of the Branch Davidians in Waco, including women and children." Trochmann began to sound irritated, saying, "If they wanted David Koresh, why didn't they arrest him while he was jogging? Why didn't they arrest him when he went into town? No, they didn't want it that way. They had a much bigger picture to work on. Why was the military involved, and why did they do the shooting as they did? Why did they kill four agents which were Clinton bodyguards? We have evidence of that—like Marshal Degan. I mean, questions, questions, questions and no answers, still today. And still, all that happened, including the Randy Weaver siege and Waco, and it didn't seem like America was waking up.
"It seemed like they just went on about their lethargic life. So we decided in June of 1993 that Montana was not as remote as we'd like it to be, and we were just going to walk away from our fellow Americans, let'em wallow in their own mire. And we went to Alaska to look for a more remote area. We spent the 4th of July in Wrangell, Alaska. We had found jobs and were all set to move up there, and we came back down and packed a forty-foot high cube, semi-trailer.
"Just before we left, we took a tour around the country and realized, America really is starting to wake up. We can't abandon her now. So we gave up our plans to leave, and decided to start organizing to educate our fellow Americans on an even larger scale than we had before. So, in early 1994, about February—this was after the Brady Bill—we started the Militia of Montana, and all these people are starting to get involved, including little old ladies and doctors and nurses, and everybody in between."
A light came into John Trochmann's stern, black eyes beneath the thin gray eyebrows, and he explained, "We organized the Militia of Montana under the First Article of the Bill of Rights—freedom of speech—and that's what we're doing today, exercising the First Article of the Bill of Rights, to educate our fellow Americans. We started a Militia because we had tried all those other names for many, many years and it didn't seem to get anywhere; Wildwood Fellowship was one of them, and United Citizens for Justice. But the one that seemed to make the most sense was one that would point in the direction of the foundation of our nation, which was the word, 'Militia.' I don't know if anyone thought of it. It was just laying there waiting to be used. It was my nephew Randy that came up with the name, 'Militia of Montana,' based on the acronynm that he'd come up with—'M.O.M.'" John savored his words, saying, "What a nurturing name!" 

M.O.M. had put out a manual on how to form a Militia, which quickly became a blueprint for Militia units around the country, although variations emerged. It could be said that this manual, in a way, had been the cornerstone of the most-recent incarnation of the Militias as a 1990s movement. M.O.M. also put out a monthly publication, Taking Aim: The Militiaman's Newsletter, that was widely-read among the Militias, and a catalogue of related tapes and books, with subjects that ranged from how to survive in the wilderness and U.S. military manuals, to government conspiracies having to do with such things as an imminent New World Order takeover under the UN and Bill Clinton's connection, as governor of Arkansas, through the Mena airport, to Iran-Contra and drug trafficking, that I began learning about also in the spring of 1996. Although there had been groups that called themselves Militias before Ruby Ridge and Waco (in places like Texas and the Midwest), the Militia of Montana was the first to publicly advocate that ordinary citizens organize and network nationwide.
The Militia of Montana Information & Networking Manual, as M.O.M.'s 27-page instruction manual on how to form a Militia was titled, was published in early 1994 when the Trochmanns formed M.O.M. (he couldn't remember what month exactly, but others said it was February). On the cover, in all four corners, was the eagle from the United States coat of arms, wings spread, holding an olive branch in one claw and a sheaf of arrows in the other, and a ribbon in the beak that said, "E PLURIBUS UNUM." The Manual had been written mostly by Randy Trochmann (John's nephew), who also edited the newsletter. The Trochmann family approached writing like a country store that offered the bare essentials along with a few luxury items, everything neatly displayed on rough-hewn shelves and in well-ordered cardboard boxes. Randy Trochmann's writing was the cardboard boxes and rough shelves that held all the necessary Militia accoutrements for survival and for the defense of property and family, as well as a good bit of no-holds-barred advice.
On the first page was the Second Amendment, followed by some world history on the role of "militias," beginning with Britain in 54 B.C. It was noted that Caesar and his Roman army of 23,000 had been routed by the militia, made up of the local landowners. In modern times, after World War II, Finland, it said, due to the militia, had kept free from Russian occupation, and in Afghanistan, the local militias had held Russian troops at bay for eleven years.
The popular saying, "A man's home is his castle," M.O.M. explained, could be traced to England, to the Magna Carta, which King John had been forced to sign in 1215, guaranteeing Englishmen the right to keep and bear arms. It had been understood, said the Manual, that this "meant castles with moats, ramparts, draw bridges, etc, and all of the other paraphernalia of a castle and needs to secure it... meaning that a man had the right to fortify his home against any who may assault it, and likewise, have the right to defend it in like manner." 
The Founding Fathers, many of them fluent in Greek and Latin, the Trochmanns explained, had been well schooled in the historical role of the militias, and "There was much discussion during the constitutional convention as to how the states would secure their sovereignty and liberties from a national government." They had been afraid the government would turn into a monarchy, and for that reason, had established three branches of government, with a clear separation of powers, and "protected the right of the Militia of the several states to keep and bear arms through the Second Amendment."
Although many Americans today believed the primary reason for the Second Amendment was to defend against criminals and for hunting, the Manual explained, the Founding Fathers had written this amendment so that the people could, as Thomas Jefferson had put it, "protect themselves against tyranny in government." Jefferson, M.O.M. noted, had understood that in order to take away their liberty it would be necessary to disarm Americans. In 1775 Jefferson had anticipated the arguments of the anti-gun advocates, that taking guns away from people would lower the crime rate, when he had copied into his Commonplace Book, Italian philosopher Cesare Beccaria's words: 

False is the idea of utility... that would take fire from men because it burns, and water because one may drown in it; that has no remedy for evils except destruction (of liberty). The laws that forbid the carrying of arms are laws of such nature. They disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes, such laws serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man.

Most of the Founding Fathers had served in the Militia at one time or another, explained the Manual, and understood that it was the source of protection for the people's rights. They had also understood that the Constitution, in the future, would need to be interpreted with an understanding of the original intent. Indeed, its primary author, James Madison, had warned:

[D]o not separate text from historical background. If you do, you will have perverted and subverted the Constitution, which can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of illegitimate government.

In earlier times, explained M.O.M., Greece, Rome and Israel had all had militias, and when they had been replaced by standing armies under the complete control of a king or emperor, these nations had "all passed into oblivion." It explained how the National Guard had only been created in 1903 with the Dick Act, and was therefore not the Militia referred to in the state and federal Constitutions. A report by the Senate Judiciary Committee, Subcommitee on the Constitution was quoted, that concurred as recently as in 1982:

That the National Guard is not the "militia" referred to in the Second Amendment is even clearer today. Congress had organized the National Guard under its power to "raise and support armies" and not its power to "Provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia." The modern National Guard was specifically intended to avoid status as the constitutional militia, a distinction recognized by 10 U.S.C. 311(a).

In 1916, during World War I, recalled the M.O.M. Manual, when Teddy Roosevelt had offered to raise a Militia and lead it into battle in Europe, as he had done in Cuba, President Wilson had proceeded to alter the definition of the Militia and who controlled it. The National Guard had been put under the full control of the president, making him its commanding officer, not as president but as senior military officer—an important distinction. In effect, said M.O.M., Wilson had made the National Guard "a private army of the president." And so, Title 32 USC stated:

[T]he President shall prescribe regulations, and issue orders necessary to organize, discipline, and govern the National Guard.

States had soon been forced to comply under threat of loss of federal funding, explained the Manual, and the National Guard units, now federally funded, had been made subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and put under the direct command of the Secretary of the Army (which started under FDR). Massachusetts had been the last state to capitulate, in the 1950s. Montana, however, like many states, M.O.M. explained, in its definition of "Militia" in the state constitution, had retained the distinction between "organized" and "unorganized." It was stated in the legislation that insofar as the National Guard and the Montana Home Guard were concerned, federal regulations governed. But, said M.O.M., the "unorganized" Militia in Montana had remained that of the Second Amendment, with Montana reserving to itself that portion of the Militia provided for in Title 10-1-103, which stated:

[T]he unorganized militia... consists of the members of the militia who are not members of the organized militia.

M.O.M. pointed out that in instances around the world where a "militia" had played an important role in overthrowing a tyrannical government, as in the case of East Timor, or in the ousting of a foreign nation, such as Poland under Nazi Germany, when subsequently that militia had been disbanded and its weapons collected, this had resulted, in East Timor, in annexation by Indonesia, and in Poland, by the Soviet Union. Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania and Yugoslavia, where the militias had also been strong and were disbanded at the close of the Second World War, likewise, had been absorbed by the Soviet Union. Although it had remained legal In the Soviet Union to own a shotgun or a hunting rifle, the ability to organize and bear arms had been eliminated, along with the leadership and organizations that would have allowed for training and preparation of militias.
M.O.M. explained that taking the "lead in the legislation of the disarming of America" was the organization Handgun Inc., and its founder Sarah Brady, who, the Militias believed, had showed her true intentions when she once stated:

Our task of creating a Socialist America can only succeed when those who would resist us have been totally disarmed.

It was Sarah Brady, readers of the Manual in early 1994 would have known, who was responsible for the Brady Bill, named after her husband, James Brady, the White House Press Secretary who had been wounded in 1981 in an assassination attempt against President Reagan, and left a paraplegic. The Brady Bill, passed in late 1993 (which had precipitated the forming of the Militia of Montana early the following year), required a five-day waiting period to buy a handgun, during which time a background check was to be performed, leaving a computer trail of information, that many already believed was the first step towards a national firearms registry. 
The Manual went on to explain that Militias were not out of date, as some would argue, and this could be seen in places like the Kurdish territories, Croatia and Bosnia, where minority groups had recently been able to protect themselves with militias from majority oppression. In plain-carboard-box language, M.O.M. put it thus:

The militia, under the second amendment, is to be able to bare [sic] arms, meaning to use them in a military confrontation... The security of a free state is not found in the citizen having guns in the closet. It is found in the citizenry being trained, prepared, organized, equipped and led properly, so that if the government uses its force against the citizens, the people can respond with a superior amount of arms, and appropriately defend their rights.
   The framers had learned that the regular Army would not protect the rights of the people under the bureaucracy or [if] a tyrant went mad with power. It was not the army, or the bureaucratic officials, members of parliament or Governors who made up the Revolutionary militia, Continental Congress, or committees of Correspondence that started the war to protect the rights of man. It was John Q. Public—the common man... Our government by passing these Crime Bills and the Brady Bill have shown us that they are attempting to disarm the militias of the several states... It is not enough to have a gun, it takes knowing how to use it, when, and who you can trust and rely upon.
   The lessons of history... If the army has control of the militia, then the militias will be obedient to the command of the army, which is in the command of the government. If the militia is independent and viable, then only laws which are right and just will come forth from the government, keeping the populace supportive and loyal to the government. To balance the military power of the nation, with the might of the militia, will put at odds any scheme by government officials to use the force of the government against the people. Therefore, when the codes and statutes are unjust for the majority of the people, the people will rightly revolt, and the government will have to acquiesce without a shot being fired.

Following this in the Manual was a modern-day "Declaration" by the Militia of Montana, modeled on the 1776 Declaration of Independence:

When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for the Citizen's of this State, to exercise their right to protect and defend their lives, families, property and the right of this State to be free and independent, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to exercise their 2nd Amendment rights, which are guaranteed and protected by the Constitution of the United States of America.

We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (property). That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. The history of the present federal government is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of absolute power and control over the citizen's of the State of Montana, and likewise, the rest of the several states of the union. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world.

Following this were enumerated the current "Train of Abuses" that M.O.M. charged the government with, which began, "The present federal government has bribed the several states and their local governments into obeying their rules and regulations," which is "contrary to" the federal and state constitutions, through threats to "withhold... grants and/or funds." It continued with a long list: "federal intervention, manipulation and control" of trade; deprivation of trial by jury (tax foreclosures) and deprivation of the disadvantaged of a proper defense; "quartering large bodies of armed foreign troops among us and protecting them, by mock trials, from punishment for any murders which they have committed on the innocent inhabitants (Weaver, Waco, etc.)"; for erecting "a multitude of new offices," and sending "hither swarms of officers to harass our people and eat out their substance, often these officers being under foreign control and finance"; giving its consent to agencies that "have unconstitutionally plundered our homes, ravaged our property, burned our homes, and destroyed the lives of our people as well as murdering innocent citizen's"; "altering fundamentally our forms of government, which our Founding Fathers bled and died for, without the consent of the governed"; and rendering the states defenseless "by taking away their organized militia... " and "disarming the unorganized militia by laws which are unconstitutional." (The reference to "foreign troops," as I was learning, meant "federal," as opposed to state or local law enforcement, a qualification that at first had sounded totally off the wall to me, but was indeed backed by a cogent argument.)
The M.O.M. Declaration, continuing its imitation of the Declaration of Independence, concluded:

In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms; to the judiciary, the legislative and the executive branches of this present government; our repeated petitions have been answered only by repeated injury.

Nor have we remained silent to our fellow citizen's. We have warned them from time to time of the usurpations and travesties that this present government has done to them and continues to do to them; Some have listened; Some have not;

This present federal government has, by it's actions, declared war upon it's citzen's;

As our fellow citizen's have not consented to altering or abolishing the form of government guaranteed to us through the Constitution of the United States of America and the Constitution of the State of Montana, we, therefore, the able-bodied citizen's of the State of Montana, do, by and through the authority of the citizen's of the State of Montana and the citizen's of the several States united, have the right to protect and defend our lives, families, property and the right of the State of Montana to be a free and independent State, in the form our Founding Fathers enacted for our use.

This was followed by a section of quotes from The Federalist Papers, a collection of essays by the Founding Fathers that illustrated, among other things, their thinking on the Militia. These writings had appeared in the various newspapers after the Constitution was drafted, when the Antifederalists were arguing against ratification unless a Bill of Rights was included to protect the newly-won freedoms. The Federalists, arguing that these freedoms were already sufficiently protected because the body of the people constituted an armed Militia, against which no government tyranny could prevail, had included Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, and left no doubt as to their intention that there be a self-regulating citizens Militia. In Number 28 Hamilton had argued:  

The militia is a voluntary force not associated or under the control of the state except when called out; a permanent or long-standing force would be entirely different in make-up and call.


In Number 69 he had said also:


The president, and government, will only control the militia when a part of them is in the actual service of the federal government, else, they are independent and not under the command of the president or the government. The states would control the militia, only when called out into the service of the state, and then the governor would be the commander in chief where enumerated in the respective state constitution.

Madison had written on this, in Number 46:

The highest number to which a standing army can be carried in any country does not exceed one hundredth part of the number of the souls, or one twenty-fifth part of the number able to bear arms. This proportion would not yield, in the United States, an army of more than twenty-five or thirty thousand men. To these would be opposed a militia amounting to near half a million of citizens with arms in their hands, officered by men chosen from among themselves, fighting for their common liberties and united and conducted by governments possessing their affections and confidence. It may well be doubted whether a militia thus circumstanced could ever be conquered by such a proportion of regular troops. Besides the advantage of being armed, [a militia] forms a barrier against the enterprises of ambition, more insurmountable than any which a simple government of any form can admit of. The governments of Europe are afraid to trust the people with arms. If they did, the people would certainly shake off the yoke of tyranny, as America did. Let us not insult the free and gallant citizens of America with the suspicion that they would be less able to defend the rights of which they would be in actual possession than the debased subjects of arbitrary power would be to rescue theirs from the hands of their oppressors.

Next, in the Militia of Montana Manual was a section that cited the passages in the U.S. and Montana constitutions authorizing the Militia. Aside from the Second Amendment, the "Constitution of the United States of America," it noted, made three references to the Militia—two under the powers granted Congress, and one under the executive powers. Together they read:

To provide for calling out the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrection and repel Invasions;
(Article I, Section 8, #15)

To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia to the discipline prescribed by Congress;
(Article I, Section 8, #16)

The President shall be the Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual service of the United States.
(Article II, Section 2, #1)

M.O.M. noted that among the articles pertaining to the Militia in the "Constitution of the State of Montana," Article VI, Section 13 stated:

The militia forces shall consist of all able-bodied citizens of the state except those exempted by law.

This meant, as in most states, that almost everyone not in the armed forces was a member of the Montana Militia. Quoted also were, Daniel Webster, Winston Churchill, John Salter, Edmund Burke, and Thomas Jefferson, who had once stated:

When governments fear the people there is liberty. When the people fear the government there is tyranny.

Following was the Militia of Montana's statement of "Intent" (still in mock-Colonial), which stated:

We, the able-bodied Citizen's of Montana, hold these truths to be self-evident, that when the government is instituted among men for the purpose of protecting their rights and liberties, it is the DUTY of man to put on the cloak of liberty for the sake of protecting man-kind from government that is out of control and that has transformed itself into a Tyrant. Just as our Founding Fathers of this Country shook off their shackles of bondage, so must we.

THEREFORE, we, hereby solemnly publish and declare that as free, able-bodied Citizen's of the State of Montana [we] do hereby pledge to exercise our right to protect and defend our lives, families and properties, by and through the authority of the free people of this state and of this nation, and to further this protection, we hereby form as members of the unorganized militia of the State of Montana, a volunteer organization to be known as the "Militia of Montana, ________ County, Unit ________"

This had been the model for statements by Militias around the country. It was followed by the section, "Rules and Regulations," with the chapters: "Rank and Structure," "Taking Up Arms," "Officers and Members," "Funding and Property," "Association," "Law and Justice," and "General Provisions." Each unit commander, it explained, was to be chosen by the unanimous vote of the members for a two-year term. Officers were to be chosen by the commander, supported by a members vote of two thirds. The uniform would consist of bluejeans and a gray shirt. Dissatisfied members were encouraged to break off and form new units.
The rank and structure, it said, should mirror that of the "organized" state Militia (the National Guard), without violating the military code. When engaged in the active service of the state, the unit was to be organized according to that branch it was in service with.
All able-bodied state citizens over twenty, in no case under eighteen, were eligible for membership. A new member was to have the Declaration read to him by an officer, and be voted in by a three quarters vote. Then, the new member would "be enlisted" by reading "the covenant of service":

I (state name) shall faithfully execute the Constitutional laws of the Union and the United States of America and the State of Montana, to the best of my ability; to protect, defend and uphold the Constitution of the United States of America and the State of Montana against all enemies foreign and domestic.

The M.O.M. Manual called for every unit to send a representative to the sheriff and county commissioners "with a letter of greetings and notice of the ability to serve." However, the Militia could only be called into service with a unanimous vote during roll call, and could not be used against unarmed citizens, "nor," Most importantly, "against armed Citizen's" defending "the constitutions of the State of Montana and of the United States of America" (meaning Constitutional Militias. A unit could only be called into service by the governor, the county commissioners, the sheriff, or the unit commander (of a Constitutional Militia). It could be called up to exercise the right of defense, only for the protection of lives and property of state citizens and the state and U.S. constitutions, "against all enemies foreign and domestic."
The Militia unit could not be used against the police or governmental authority within the state, "except by call out by the representative authority of the government, with the sustaining vote of the Unit," and only when there existed "crimes of violation of their oath of office." It was to be used outside the state only in times of invasion and with the unanimous approval of all the members, as well as permission from the governor and a majority vote of the county commissioners. ("Invasion," as I was learning, for the Militias, could consist of federal troops entering any state of the Union.)
No member received pay, and all were responsible for their own uniforms and equipment. It advised collecting dues, with a suggested $20 application fee and $5 a month, and stipulated that donations could be accepted only without any strings attached. Funding was not to be accepted from any political entity except in times of a general call-out. Interference by the federal government would not be tolerated.
Disobedience of the lawful orders of a superior and the commission of a crime were grounds for dismissal. A member could also be dismissed by a two-thirds vote. But members were guaranteed a fair hearing in all cases.
Members were to support all laws not in contravention of the "Constitution of the United States of America" as well as the state constitution. The Manual referred to the (federal) Constitution's Article VI, paragraph 2, which said:

This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States, which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; ...shall be the supreme Law of the Land, and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.

Members were to be subject to the highest moral standards. They would at all times be respectful of civil authorities and the rights of citizens, and were to suppress insurrections against laws "held to be Constitutional." Units, however, could be called into service for use against any armed force not authorized to assemble in the state by the federal and state constitutions. (Those familiar with Militia thinking would know that this could be interpreted to include the ATF, FBI and other federal police forces, as well as the regular army, on the grounds that there were no federal police powers in the Constitution—which was why the government was seeing red regarding the Militias.) Units could also be called into service to assist in time of natural or manmade disasters. 

In the Manual was a grammatical diagram of the Second Amendment:

A well-regulated Militia being necessary to the security of the state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

 The diagram, prepared by a woman named Bernadine Smith (of the Second Amendment Committee in Hanford, California), showed that the words, "shall not be infringed," constituted the "predicate" in the sentence, therefore meant to be a "restrictive" clause. These same four words, showed the diagram, contained as they were in the "declaratory," latter part of the sentence, applied equally to both subjects, the "militia" in the first clause, and the "right" (of the people) in the second clause—meaning, to the Militia "collectively" and to (the right of) the people "individually." Accordingly, Smith explained, there was another grammatically-correct way to phrase the Second Amendment (without changing the meaning), which was:

Because a well-regulated Militia is necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. 

Next to the diagram was quoted a man by the name of A.C. Brocki, who was described as a "teacher of Advanced English, a foremost expert in grammar, former Senior Editor for Houghton Mifflin," who concurred, saying that in the Second Amendment, what was meant was "that the people have the right that is mentioned"—to "keep and bear arms."

On the subject of grammar, in fact, one of the foremost experts on the English language, Roy Copperud, author of American Usage and Style: The Consensus, a member of the usage panel of the American Heritage Dictionary and expert frequently cited in Merriam Webster's Usage Dictionary, had the following to say in response to written questions regarding the true meaning of the Second Amendment:

The sentence does not restrict the right to keep and bear arms, nor does it state or imply possession of the right elsewhere or by others than the people; it simply makes a positive statement with respect to the right of the people... [which] right is not granted by the amendment; its existence is assumed. The thrust of the sentence is that the right shall be preserved inviolate for the sake of ensuring a militia... The right to keep and bear arms is deemed unconditional by the entire sentence...
   To the best of my knowledge, there has been no change in the meaning of the words or in usage that would affect the meaning of the amendment. If it were written today, it might be put: "Since a well-regulated militia is necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be abridged."

Underneath Smith's Second Amendment sentence diagram in the M.O.M. Manual was the Preamble to the Bill of Rights, which stated, as I now knew, that the ten Articles were "further declaratory and restrictive clauses" added "in order to prevent misconstruction or abuse of [the Constitution's] powers."
On the back cover of the Manual was an essay by Smith, titled, "Interpreting the Meaning & Purpose of the Second Amendment." Contrary to much contemporary opinion, she explained, the reason the Framers had put the Militia first in the sentence, "A well-regulated Militia being necessary to the security of the State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed," had been in order to stress both the importance of "the collective use of the right to arms," and that the individual right had "equal status."
Smith recalled that when the Constitution had been submitted to Virginia in 1787 for ratification, for three weeks, Patrick Henry (who had made the "give me liberty or give me death" speech) had railed against it every day, warning that it had been written "as if only good men will take office!" The main reason for objecting to the Constitution, he had argued, was that "it does not leave us the means for defending our rights or waging war against tyrants." Already, he warned that the federal government was being given too much money and power and that it would end up converting the states "into one solid empire."
Another area that Patrick Henry had believed needed greater limitations, noted Smith, was treaty power. He had argued for another Constitutional Convention, but had agreed to settle for a Bill of Rights. Over the protestations, the secretary of the Constitutional Convention, future-President James Madison, argued that a Bill of Rights was not necessary because the government would exercise only those powers delegated it, with Patrick Henry replying, "Let Mr. Madison tell me, when did liberty ever exist when the sword and the purse were given up from the people?" It was only after Madison was blocked from the first Senate, and he promised to draft a Bill of Rights, that he was able to secure a seat in the House of Representatives. On December 15, 1791, related Smith, man's natural rights, thus, were memorialized in the Bill of Rights, becoming the "unrevokable and superior part of the Constitution."
She ended, quoting Patrick Henry once again:

Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect everyone who approaches that jewel! Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force, and whenever you give up that force, you are inevitably ruined! 

Toward the back of the M.O.M. Manual were diagrams for setting up "Militia Support Groups," as well as Militia "cells." The support groups, it was explained, were to be structured so they could be easily transformed into Militias with a military chain of command. There were sample worksheets for keeping track of the command network and members (these were soon to be discontinued, when it became clear that the authorities were anxious to get their hands on them).
At the back of the Manual, in good country-store manner, was a list of "Materials to Assist You in Your Preparation"—video and audiotapes and publications, available for purchase from M.O.M.—which included a number of government military manuals on subjects such as survival, guerrilla warfare, special forces, unconventional warfare, map reading, booby traps, hand to hand fighting, small arms defense, how to escape from confinement, clothing and equipment, caching, training, and medical care. Highly recommended was the selection, The Art of War, by Sun Tzu, who was quoted:

To win without fighting is best.

John Trochmann grimaced as he continued, explaining to me in the interview, "Then came the problems with infiltrators. By the summer, there were snakes everywhere you turned. We'd come out with this networking program to put people in touch with people. What started the program was a radio show in Detroit, Michigan—the Mark Scott show. He had read part of one of our newsletters on his talk show, and there was such an uproar, with people from Michigan calling Montana for more information, we realized that these people needed a way to get in touch with each other. There were all these people that don't even know the other person exists, so we started a system of putting people in touch with people in Michigan. That was the beginning of our network program. And one of the main people involved in helping us get going on this was a beautiful woman, and I'm not going to give you her name, that still is part of the Detroit Police Department. She's a police officer, and she felt she wanted to find ways to get in touch with people too, and she begged us to get involved in this. She was very concerned about her country.
"When we started putting people together, the provocateurs decided to jump on board. There were many instances of people calling and saying, 'Why are you circulating this person's name and giving our name to him? We know that he has been convicted of a felony and works for a federal agency to keep himself out of the pen.' And we kept getting these reports all over the country as we were networking. These were people who had authorized us to network their name with others; we didn't do any of it without authorization first. But then we began to realize that this is a dangerous program because of all the infiltrators and the inability of our fellow Americans to recognize what could be there. There were a tremendous amount of naive people out there who were too doggone trusting. We, the Trochmanns, had gone through the pits of Hell as it were, and were not very trusting. That's when we came up with the checklist of who to allow into your cell structure system."
    
An insert had been added to the Manual in the summer of 1994, with the heading, "Tips on Networking," with recommendations on how to recognize government infiltrators. It advised that Militia members should "Beware of all strangers," noting that successful resistance groups, historically, had been small groups or cells where members knew and trusted one other from long experience. Someone who said all the right things and supplied money, warned M.O.M., should not be trusted. Nor should someone whose background and interests were different. It advised doing a little investigation of new people, bearing in mind the ruthlessness of tyrants, and that a government that would "mass-murder innocent families" (as at Ruby Ridge and Waco) was "not going to play 'fair.'"
"Be double aware of a stranger who proposes illegal activities," it warned. "You will find him testifying against you in federal court." It advised against handling someone else's weapon, or "you may find your fingerprints showing up at a crime scene." People who received paychecks from the enemy, it warned, could have divided loyalties. And it called for recognizing media tactics and not reacting to buzzwords such as: "religious separatists," "white supremacists," "Nazis," etc.
"We must be committed to spreading the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth," it emphasized, to informing the masses and getting them to be sympathetic. "There is an enormous amount of moral high ground which has been abandoned by our foes. Claim it and use it."
At the bottom of the page, it said in tiny italics, "we are everywhere."

Trochmann continued, "We got on talk shows all over the country. We ended up on the Phil Donohue show, I think, in November of 1994. The staff asked me to recommend other people to be on the panel of Militia people, along with myself and my cohort Bob Fletcher, so I did. And when they found out that the one person I had recommended was a black man, they tried to cancel him out—J.J. Johnson. And I said, 'If you cancel him, you'll cancel all of us. That's the way it is.' The reason, we discovered, was that they had members of the ADL [Anti-Defamation League of the B'Nai B'Rith] on that panel also, and they were going to use this stupid racist thing against us, but it wouldn't work very well if J.J. Johnson was sitting there. Now, would it? 
"They tried to get us to sign a contract that would cause us never to do another show until theirs aired, but we said, 'No, this is not going to work this way. We're gonna give you thirty days to either air it or we're gonna go do other shows.' And they said OK and decided not to air it. So we put out bulletins all over the country to call this number to get our show aired. And NBC had to hire extra people to handle the phone lines, and they finally aired the show, incorrectly. I mean, they did a bad job of it. They showed firearms in front of the screen and made bad statements about us, and across the screen during the breaks they showed the Second Amendment minus the words, 'right of the people.' They took that out of the Second Amendment."

Trochmann's eyes never ceased sizing me up as he spoke, like some Scandinavian villager in an Ingmar Bergman film, always on guard before strangers. He clasped his rough, dry hands together on the table with solemnity, holding tight, as he laid out his life story to a stranger. All the time, I could see him questioning in his mind whether to continue.

"Early '95, a couple of things happened. March second, I kissed my wife goodbye at 6 o'clock in the morning and headed east to rally with a number of other people, to visit the Freemen in eastern Montana, in Roundup. My purpose for going there was to get a mission statement from them. Find out first hand what they were all about. They were not yet under siege; this was a year earlier. They were teaching Common Law trusts, about the Federal Reserve, how corrupt it was. We wanted to put out a mission statement about them in our newsletter, based on what they had to say, themselves.
"So I met up with other people on the way to eastern Montana. Roundup was eleven hours away from us, so its not like a hop, skip and a jump. When we got to the Freemen's, I had a severe headache because I had followed a diesel truck all the way there. The next day, we sat down and they were to give me this mission statement, which ended up being a three-foot stack of paper, with a fist on top of it that said, 'If you want to know our mission, read this. This is our mission statement.'
"I said, 'I have 24 hours to get home. I want your mission statement. I'm a slow reader. That's a year's worth of reading there.' They broke their promise to me right off the bat by not having this mission statement ready. Later that day, we found out that some of the people had gotten arrested. Dale Jacoby and Frank Delano were the first two people to be arrested, in the afternoon of March 3. Supposedly, they were trying to file Freemen papers in the courthouse, which the judge had allegedly passed orders against allowing them to do.
"I was in the ranch house several miles out of town. The Freemen didn't move to the Clark ranch, which is way east of there in Jordan, until the fall. So we're headed home, and we went into town to find out what was going on with these guys. We couldn't get the sheriff's department to admit to having seized these people, yet some of our people saw them being arrested. So we had our Militia of Montana office make an official call to them.
"As one of my passengers went in to confront the sheriff's department and see what was going on, and to retrieve his radio, that the sheriff's department had confiscated from the other two people that were arrested, the next thing I know, two deputies came roaring out, headed in my direction. I wondered, 'What in the world is going on?' And I looked behind my shoulder to see who they were after, and by the time I turned around, there was a twelve-gauge shotgun in my face. And the guy had his eyes rolled back like a mad cow. You couldn't even see his pupils, and he was kicking the fender in the door and he blew the window out, and I ended up being arrested. And I thought this mad person was going to kill me on the spot. So I was incarcerated for thirteen days.
"One of the things they charged me with was criminal syndicalism. Its been declared unconstitutional, but its still on the books in Montana. I was looking at 52 years in prison for sitting in my car waiting for my passenger. We got Senator John DeCamp from Nebraska involved as our attorney, and all the charges were eventually dropped without any adjudication. In the case right now, we are bringing suit against them for what they've done to us. Then, in April, a few weeks later, the bombs went off in Oklahoma City, on the 19th—there's that date again." 

John DeCamp had explained in a second edition of his book, The Franklin Coverup, that the Trochmanns had decided to contact him because they had read his book. In the section on his defense of John Trochmann in early 1995, along with six Freemen, DeCamp described the experience as, "one of the strangest cases in which I had ever been involved." The "Montana Seven," as he called them, he related, were put under bail requirements of hundreds of thousands of dollars, after being "charged with the crime of sedition with mandatory 10- and 20-year prison terms," when "their 'crime' was that they had met with individuals like themselves—not for any actual violation of the law." The arrests, stated DeCamp, had been "unconstitutional," and he had become convinced, irrespective of what he thought of their beliefs, that "these individuals had done nothing wrong, but were classic victims of improper government arrest, harassment, and abuse... under color of law." 
In a written ultimatum to the Montana Attorney General, included in the book, where he requested the dismissal of all the charges and threatened to make it into a "civil rights case," DeCamp had described the arrest and what followed:

A couple of defendants go into the sheriff's office to seek return of the Lopez radio and the others wait in their car properly parked in front of the sheriff's office. None of the Montana Seven defendants does anything improper or illegal. All are polite.
But suddenly, with lightning speed and led by Deputy Jones, the officials assault these individuals. They believe, apparently driven by paranoia, they have a right to capture. Again, led by Deputy Jones, the Montana Seven are trussed up like hogs; handcuffed with their hands behind their backs; forced to lie for six hours in pain on concrete trussed up and handcuffed. They abuse them in a variety of other ways, threaten them with loaded shotguns in their backs and chests, break out car windows, question them in violation of all legal and proper police standards; charge them with felonies of every ilk and description and fabricate allegations to support their charges and their actions. The officials lie to the relatives and friends calling into the sheriff's office and repeatedly deny that the Montana Seven are even in jail or have been arrested.
And these things recited here are the nicest things the local officials do. 

An example of the leaks to the press by the authorities, DeCamp related, was a pending charge of "counterfeiting," which turned out to be based on possession of a $3 bill bought in a novelty store. There was so much media hype, he wrote, with the press repeating the officials' "leaks" in "one sordid wild tale after another," and politicians jumping on the bandwagon, "proclaiming the evils of terrorists and how the state must not be a victim of such terrorists," that "the families and businesses of the Montana Seven are horribly damaged." DeCamp, eventually, was able to get all the charges dismissed. (In a subsequent federal lawsuit against the sheriff's department brought by John Trochmann, the judge ruled that Trochmann's civil rights had not been violated, but nevertheless awarded him his legal expenses plus $200 for damage to his pistol, which a deputy sheriff had confiscated and inscribed with his initials.) 
DeCamp explained that at the same time as the lawsuit, he was dealing assiduously with the offices of the Montana governor and attorney general, and officials in Washington, as well as the national press, "trying to prevent an outbreak of violence spawned by either the militias or by the government." From the time of Trochmann's arrest in early February, DeCamp said, and all through March and early April, the April 19 date was a hot issue among the patriots. He wrote:

[R]umors were flying through the entire Militia and Patriot community on almost an hourly basis, warning of imminent raids by federal officials against militia compounds. Nationwide, militias were circulating reports in all their fax, press and phone networks that these raids were coming, and that militia members had better be prepared.
The militias specified in their written and oral communications, the date April 19, 1995, as the date of the impending onslaught...
Federal officials advised us that no attack was planned, information we relayed to militia leaders... working non stop to defuse the extremely volatile situation... [I]t was inevitable that the Feds showed up on my doorstep right after the Oklahoma bombing.

It seemed that the Militias had had information that "something" was going to happen on the second anniversary of the Waco massacre in 1995. But they had not known what, exactly. What had happened, was the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City.  

John Trochmann continued, "Right as soon as that happened, we contacted John DeCamp to get a court injunction to stop the demolition of the evidence, of what was left of the building. But the harder we pushed, the faster the building came down. And McVeigh's attorney, Stephen Jones, was at the head of the class to bring it down. How would you like to have him for an attorney to defend you? A scary thought, isn't it? He went out to look at the building for half an hour and says, 'Yeah, bring it down. We don't need it as evidence.' What kind of an attorney would do that? Not one that's looking out for the defense of his client, for sure. Apparently, McVeigh had total trust in him." (In fact, Jones, who had no explosives expertise, later said that he did not agree with General Partin's analysis, but gave no explanation.)
"Just after the 'bombs' went off—that's plural—," continued Trochmann, "we ended up with an avalanche of media personnel at our doorstep because the U.S. Attorney in Oklahoma City said there were Militia ties. It was about two days later. At that time, which was a Friday, the media went right off the scale on us, and for the following three weeks we had approximately 360 different media at our doorstep. The population of Noxon, Montana, which is about 300, more than doubled. It was an absolute circus. About 300 of them were U.S. media, and 90% of them had the same questions, in the same order. I could look them in the eye and tell them what their next question would be. It was just ridiculous.
"As a result of how we were treated by much of mainstream media, and their twisted stories that they told of the interviews there, we have since banned the media from our offices. We found six bugs planted in our office. We found merchandise missing, and we just drew the line and said, 'No more. If they want to interview us, it'll have to be off the property.'
"This lasted several weeks, and we contacted John DeCamp—my nephew Randy did—and said, 'You know, it doesn't seem fair, John, that we should bear the brunt of this entire storm, and the Senate trying to pass bills against us,' meaning the Militia, 'that we not have our day before the Senate. Why don't you get us an invitation to sit down in front of Senator Specter's office on the Anti-terrorism bill?' So he acquired an invitation for us to bring the Militia to Washington on May 25th. Late the 24th, we landed in Washington, only to find that the meetings had been canceled. We broke our piggy banks, we took every last dime we could to get the airline tickets to get there. Senator Specter's reason for canceling was because Senator Dole pulled rank on him and said that there'd be no Militia hearings, that they were going to have budget hearings.
"So the 25th, we scheduled a press conference at this hotel we were staying at. Acquaintances within the CIA says, 'You might as well forget about it. You're not going to have anybody from the press show up. They're going to stay and cover the budget.' We said, 'Well you don't mind if we have the press conference, do you?' And they said, 'Well we can't really say anything about it,' and I said, 'That's right, you can't.'
"We held the press conference, and we took all the media off Capitol Hill. The place was absolutely packed, including C-SPAN, CNN, the major networks, etc. And we ran that press conference for one hour. C-SPAN aired it several times. And then, right after that, Time magazine came out with this little article about, the Militia comes to Washington, their meeting is canceled, and they're left here with time on their hands in all these federal buildings. Talk about sick yellow journalism!
"So, we visited with Senator Specter, and we told him, 'If you want us to come back to Washington, D.C., the bill will have to be on you next time. We can't afford it. You broke our bank.' So it was rescheduled for June 15, and they purchased the tickets and sent them."

As I listened to him, I was slowly coming to understand that John Trochmann, in his own way, was a visionary—a dark visionary who painted a stark present and a bleak future. I felt that, somewhere, he inhabited still an ancient northern Scandinavian landscape of trolls and orcs, under the unrelenting glare of the midnight sun, and the multi-color Northern Lights. What I had before me was a character out of Ingmar Bergman's black and white film, The Seventh Seal, about Sweden in the Middle Ages, grappling with the Black Plague, and why God had abandoned them.
I was certain that John had seen the face of his God. And He was a wrathful God.

On June 15, 1995, when the C-SPAN cameras zoomed in on the two panels at the Senate hearings—one, of senators, the other, of Militia leaders—John Trochmann sat there, bristly and straight as a pine tree in the northern snow.