It can happen to anyone, right? You rally behind a guy and his anti-government cause, and suddenly he's spewing racist bile and boy, does it splash on your face. Well, actually, it can't happen to just anyone. It didn't even
Armed U.S. rangers are rounding up cattle on federal land in Nevada in a rare showdown with Cliven Bundy, a rancher who has illegally grazed his herd on public lands for decades, as conflict over land use simmers in western states. The standoff with
Cliven Bundy, everybody's favorite Nevada land-fee delinquent, took it to another level this week by questioning whether black people were better off as slaves. Bundy insists his comments weren't racist, just that he's
Cliven Bundy, the Nevada rancher and federal antagonist, is defending his remarks that “the Negro” may have been better off in slavery than in the modern welfare system, in the process drawing an unusual series of dots between ranching, race, and the
Armed U.S. rangers are rounding up cattle on federal land in Nevada in a rare showdown with Cliven Bundy, a rancher who has illegally grazed his herd on public lands for decades, as conflict over land use simmers in western states. The standoff with
Cliven Bundy saga forces Republicans into awkward U-turn from far right