By Michelle Malkin • October 9, 2013 10:06
AM
Occupy
America! Citizens storm the Barrycades
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2013
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2013
Could this be the end of Monument Syndrome? Across the
country, ordinary Americans are rising up in revolt against the old Washington
tactic of closing public parks and memorials during selective government
“shutdowns” to score political points. Tax-paying tourists are tossing off the orange
traffic cones and “Barrycades.” Enough is enough.
The movement started with waves of World War II veterans
who flew to D.C. last week as part of the Honor Flight Network.
(The nonprofit group brings our surviving heroes to visit the memorials that
honor their service and sacrifice.) The vets and volunteers breached the fences
last week, exposing the tone-deaf tactics of President Obama’s Spite House.
Honor Flight visits continue this week,
and more vets vowed to defy the cynical closures.
They are not alone. At Gettysburg
National Military Park, tourists broke through barriers and
posed for pictures on the battlefields with notes reading, “Catch us if you
can.” One visitor reported that motorists formed impromptu caravans as rangers
chased them. “Strength in numbers,” they tweeted.
At Mount
Rushmore and
in the Badlands of South Dakota, families barreled over
hazard cones. Their photos went viral on Facebook. In Wisconsin, GOP Gov. Scott
Walker defied the National Park Service and opened state parks that Obama-crats
wanted closed because they receive some federal dollars. At the Mingo
National Wildlife Refuge in
southeast Missouri, a group of 20 protesters defied threats of arrest to enter
the park.
“This is to get some knowledge out there that the federal
government has its fingers in everything, including our own land in our own
states, and, out of spite, they’ll shut it all down,” Jackson resident Brian
Bollmann told the local press.
In Michigan, tourists crossed police-style yellow tape
and construction barrels to get to Munising
Falls in the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. Twitter users
posted photos of the broken barriers over the weekend. The Mining Journal
reported on one visitor who simply stepped over the tape: “Well, that
worked, huh?’ she
asked rhetorically.” Take that, manipulative federal overlords.
At Zion
National Park in Utah, hikers
scaled the fences and wondered why so many supposedly furloughed workers were
working to keep them out. One visitor, highlighted at my Twitter aggregator
Twitchy.com, described her experience to me last week at the scenic tourist
spot:
“(W)e were advised by the park ranger at the gate that we
couldn’t stop our car at any time in the next 12 miles. To ensure that we
didn’t pull over at any of the scenic viewpoints, cones were placed at every
turnoff. That didn’t stop people, however, as many were getting out, moving
cones and quickly taking pictures. People were incredulous at that restriction,
as if they could somehow shut down our ability to enjoy our surroundings. … I
did enjoy seeing an elderly couple, in a display of civil disobedience, leave
their car and walk hand in hand on the red rock.”
Welcome to Occupy America. It’s a protest movement for
all ages against Washington business as usual. Thanks to social media, citizens
outside the Beltway are now able to voice their disgust in an unprecedented
way. Through Twitter, Facebook and blogs, they are directly disrupting the
well-worn politics of government parks-and-wreck extortion.
From closing down parts of the ocean around Florida to
booting elderly citizens from their private homes on Lake Mead to shutting down
private restaurants and farms that just happen to sit on federal land, the
Democrats’ overreach has finally backfired.
The explanation for this ridiculous Obama obstructionism
can be summed up in one word: Control. Control of the people. Control of the
partisan narrative. Monument Syndrome, perfected under the Clinton
administration, is about inflicting the most visible pain on citizens to
demonize political opponents. Big-government advocates in the media enabled the
manipulators.
For decades, taxpayers were passive pawns in this
gamesmanship. No more. Monument Syndrome, R.I.P.
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