By Larry Klayman
WND
December 29, 2017
About four years ago, in the spring of 2014, shortly after the successful Bunkerville standoff (see ClivenBundyDefenseFund.org) — where Cliven Bundy, his wife, sons and family, along with hundreds of peaceful protesters, stood down a tyrannical Bureau of Land Management — I traveled to the ranch to meet Cliven.
At the time, Cliven was in the midst of a firestorm over his comments that he and his loved ones had been treated by the federal government — which falsely claimed to own the land that the Bundy family had grazed cattle on and ranched for about 150 years — like the Negro in the Old South.