For weeks, Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy has been in a standoff with the U.S. government over his refusal to pay fees he owes for grazing his cattle on federal land. As Bundy has denounced what he sees as runaway federal power, many conservatives have rallied to his side.
But on Thursday the focus on Bundy centered around race after The New York Times published a report in which Bundy shared his views on “the Negro,” wondering whether blacks were “better off as slaves” and lamenting that modern-day African-Americans “never learned how to pick cotton.”
Bundy resurfaced those remarks Thursday during a press conference in which he focused on race issues and asked whether “Negros” were happier today than in the past.
“The question is, are they slaves the way they are, where they live as slaves to the charity and government-subsidized homes, and are they slaves when their daughters are having abortions and their sons are in the prisons?” Bundy said after being asked directly if he believed African-Americans would be better off as slaves.
Bundy described his experiences driving through Las Vegas and seeing African-Americans living in what he described as government-subsidized homes, adding that he could see “sadness” on their faces.
The rancher spoke briefly about liberty, an issue he believes is at the core of his ongoing dispute with officials from the Bureau of Land Management.
Bundy’s original comments were captured in a video obtained by Media Matters.
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