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The Karuk
Tribe's True
Agenda
By John Martinez
Special Opinion
for the Pioneer
Press
Fort Jones, CA
February 7, 2007
The Karuk
Tribe's true
agenda
represents a
merger between
radicalized
segments from
the American
Indian Movement
(AIM),
ultra-extremist
environmentalists,
anti-war leaders
and powerful
narcotics
trafficking
interests.
The Karuk
political belief
system is
aligned to
anti-western
global jihadists,
the most extreme
of international
indigenous
movements in
Latin America
and certain
jailhouse gang
ethnic
ideologies.
The Karuk
Tribe's regional
objective is the
destruction of
western European
economic
infrastructure
including dams
and water and
land rights of
its neighbors.
Their larger
regional
objective is the
destruction of
western
agricultural
practices across
California.
The Karuk
Tribe's local
goal is to seize
control over law
enforcement,
health services,
ambulance and
emergency
services,
economic
development, and
other human
services related
entities from
Happy Camp to
Orleans.
Background
The Karuk
Tribe's true
agenda was
engineered by
radicalized
segments from
the American
Indian Movement
(AIM),
ultra-extremist
environmentalists,
anti-war leaders
and powerful
narcotics
trafficking
interests.
The common
denominator of
the groups that
helped spawn the
Karuk Tribe
represent an
intense hatred
for the United
States and it's
economic and
social
structures.
The groups or
movements
assisting the
Karuk to gain
federal
recognition
originated
during the
anti-war protest
era of the
mid-1960s. From
UC Davis to DQ
University to
prominent
politicians, the
Karuk have
become an
extremely
powerful
political force
unto themselves.
The anti-war
movement and its
tremendous
political
influence was
threatened in
the mid-70s as
the Vietnam War
was winding
down.
The anti-war
protest
movement's goal
to destroy US
institutions
through mass
uprising was
diminished by
war's end. By
the mid-70s, the
anti-war
insurgency was
all but gone.
During that
period, early to
mid-70s, anti-US
war protest
leaders had
devised a more
elaborate and
instrumental
plan to
undermine
American
political,
economic and
social progress.
The new movement
became what is
known today as
the
environmental
movement. As
with the
international
student movement
and AIM
leadership led
from DQ
University, the
environmental
movement had
global designs
to deconstruct
American and
Western European
economic
structures and
limit our global
reach.
Within this new,
more advanced
anti-American
ideological
mindset was
borne the
federally
recognized
radical front
group known as
the Karuk Tribe
of California.
Today, resulting
from religiously
inspired
environmental
science,
long-time AIM
allies in the
Bureau of Indian
Affairs and the
regional
narcotics trade,
the Karuk serve
as a powerful
tool with direct
consequences far
beyond their
historically
documented
aboriginal
territory.
The goal of
radical
movements in the
60s to undermine
our nation's
economy has been
furthered by the
Karuk's extreme
anti-US agenda.
By promoting dam
removal,
undermining
property rights
and destroying
California
agriculture the
Karuks have
legitimized
radicalized
ideologies.
The emergence of
closely aligned
ideologies and
operational
linkages between
global jihadists,
international
indigenous
movements and
narco-trafficking
networks makes
the Karuk a
potential ally
of America's
most dangerous
enemies. |
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