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This extreme right-wing group takes its name from the Latin for "power of the county." Its founders, Henry Beach and William Potter Gale, were radical localists who claimed that the county is the highest and only legitimate level of government to which citizens owe allegiance. it is only the county, they argue, headed by a sheriff chosen by the community's white male residents, that possesses the right to enforce the law. According to Posse doctrine, the law itself is derived from the Bible, English common law, the Articles of Confederation, and, more vaguely, the U.S. Constitution. In their minds, no "Jew-dominated" legislature or Congress has the ability to make laws that "real, white Americans" are obliged to follow.
Beach, a member of the pro-Nazi Silver
Shirt movement during the 1930s, and Gale, a
former World War II army officer and a key
figure in the development of the racist and
anti-Semitic Christian Identity ideology, organized
the Posse Comitatus in Portland, Oregon,
in 1969 in the midst of the Vietnam War
and the country's racial tensions. But it was
during the mid-1970s and 1980s, and in the
Great Plains, that this loosely connected organization,
whose members sought to retain
their anonymity, achieved prominence. The
farm crisis of these years created the conditions
necessary for their doctrine to attract significant
support. Such Posse figures as Gordon
Kahl, a North Dakota farmer, James Wickstrom,
the Posse's self-proclaimed "counterinsurgency
director," and Rick Elliot, a Colorado
dairy farmer who became the publisher of the
anti-Semitic Primrose and Cattlemen's Gazette
(its message being that Jews were leading cattlemen
down the primrose path), crisscrossed
the region explaining to farmers and ranchers
why they were under no obligation to repay
overdue loans or peacefully accept the foreclosure
of their property. This appealed to some
indebted and hard-pressed farmers whose entire
way of life was in jeopardy. At "seminars"
and on country music radio stations such as
KTTL-FM in Dodge City, Kansas, Posse spokesmen
explained to their listeners that they were
under no obligation to pay income taxes to a
fraudulent Internal Revenue Service or abide by
the judgments of federal or state courts. According
to a 1976 FBI report, the Posse had seventyeight
chapters located in twenty-three states,
concentrated, for the most part, in the Great
Plains and the Midwest.
Some Posse figures attempted to transform their rhetoric–about resisting the government and cleansing the land–into reality. Violent encounters between law enforcement officers and Posse members attracted widespread attention. The most notorious of these incidents̵it was later made into a television film–involved Kahl, who in 1983 shot and killed two deputies in a dispute over his failure to pay taxes. He fled to Arkansas, where he murdered a local sheriff and was then himself killed in the ensuing conflict. This was the most dramatic, but hardly the only, episode in which Posse members threatened or carried out violent attacks on individuals they defined as their enemies. Although the Posse Comitatus is not as visible today as in the past, it continues to be an intermittently active faction of antigovernment protest.