How do small groups take outsized control of the political discourse? I was inspired by @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755’s Now & Then convo on false majorities to research the late-1970s Sagebrush Rebellion. Check out the latest Time Machine article:

cafe.com/article/the-pe…
On the morning of Ronald Reagan’s first inauguration, Jan. 20, 1981, writer Wallace Stegner published a long & lyrical op-ed in the @washingtonpost about Reagan’s views on federal land control in the West:

washingtonpost.com/archive/1981/0…
Stegner animated the struggle between conservationists and believers in federal stewardship on one side–himself included–and pro-business forces that he claimed “plan turning the West’s resources over to corporate exploitation.”
At Stegner’s writing, the Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Military, and other federal groups owned 96% of Alaska, 87% of Nevada, and 64% of Idaho. This map appeared in the Fall 1980 Utah Science Magazine (@USULibraries): Image
In 1976, Congress passed the Federal Land Policy Management Act, which made it difficult for private enterprise—from ranchers to developers—to acquire these lands. State gov’ts, particularly in Nevada, fought the ruling & tried to sell off lands (@csmonitor, Nov. 11, 1977): Image
In 1979, tenses rose over the Carter admin’s $33 million MX (“Peacekeeper”) missile project, to be centered in the Nevada and Utah deserts. Here is a Peacekeeper, which can carry 10 nuclear warheads (@usairforce, 1980s): Image
The plan called for the warheads to be stored in partially-underground “parking garages” connected by 10,000 miles of “racetrack” roadways. Here’s a schematic (@usairforce, 1981): Image
State legislators and local activists mobilized against the MX plan and the enlargement of conservation areas. Many wore rebellious buttons (@Newsweek, Sept. 17, 1979): Image
Elko, Nevada-based State Senator Norm Glaser summed up the mood to the @washingtonpost in November 1979: “We’re tired of being pistol-whipped by the bureaucrats and ambushed and dry-gulched by federal regulations.” Here’s the full article:

washingtonpost.com/archive/politi…
The fledgling political movement—dubbed the “Sagebrush Rebellion” after the region’s ubiquitous mountain plants—soon picked up steam. Here’s the cover of the Fall 1980 Utah Science magazine (PC: Carol Grundmann, @USULibraries): Image
And here’s a cartoon from a 1980 Field & Stream magazine feature showcasing the predatory nature of corporate developers gunning for release of federal control (@USULibraries): Image
And a @DesertNews sketch by legendary cartoonist @CalGrondahl showing how greedy developers could swoop in behind the rebels if the federal gov’t really did give up the land (via @USULibraries, Sept. 8, 1980): Image
Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch told a Sept. 1979 governor’s conference that the rebellion was “destined to lead the Western states to the most dramatic development in our history toward entering the Union.” Here are Reagan & Hatch (PC: Michael Evans, @reaganlibrary, Oct. 16, 1981): Image
Nevada Senator Paul Laxalt, a close personal Reagan friend, put a Sagebrush Rebellion bumper sticker on his Washington office door (PC: Paul Laxalt Group, May 16, 1980): Image
Reagan came aboard, telling a crowd in Salt Lake City in July 1980: “I happen to be one who cheers on and supports the Sagebrush Rebellion,” he told the crowd. “Count me in as a rebel.”
Yet even as the movement went national, the rebels’ position did not, by most accounts, represent the majority. A 1979 poll by the Behavior Research Center found that only about 30% of residents in eight Western states supported seizure of federal lands.
After Reagan was elected, Hatch and Nevada Senator Jim Santini pushed a bill that would have ceded federal Western lands to states. Here’s their info packet (@internetarchive, 1981): Image
Reagan appointed a Sagebrush ally, James Watt, as Secretary of the Interior. Watt pushed for deregulation in California offshore drilling and Montanan gas exploration. Here he is talking through land control with Reagan & economist David Linowes (@reaganlibrary, Jan. 21, 1982): Image
Check out the full piece to learn more about how the Sagebrush Rebellion. And listen to @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 on Now & Then to grasp how other potent (and often dangerous) limited anti-government movements went mainstream:

cafe.com/now-and-then/b…

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More from @DavidKurlander

Dec 2, 2021
On Now & Then this week, we encored our July ep on the history of federal holidays, in which @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 explained the development of July 4th, Election Day, & Columbus Day. In the Time Machine, I looked at the battle over MLK Day:

cafe.com/article/to-tho…
On January 15th, 1969, nine months after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated, millions marked what would have been his 40th birthday. In Atlanta, singer @harrybelafonte and Rosa Parks joined King's family and thousands in a solemn parade ( Irving Philips for @afronews)
Coretta Scott King, @OfficialMLK3, Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen Jr., and other King family members also broke ground on the 192-unit low-income MLK Jr. Village housing project (Irving Phillips for @afronews).
Read 16 tweets

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