61. 34 FAiiay, January 24, 1986 .1111b• THE DETROIT 'JEWI6R WEWS OP-ED Field Day Continued from Page 4 A FABULOUS JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE AT i LTER FURS LTER . INC. DESIGNERS OF FINE FURS OF HARVARD ROW 11 MILE AT LAHSER 21742 W. 11 MILE RD. SOUTHFIELD . PH: 358-0850 meeting of the Populist Party in March 1985, in Chicago, atten- tion was again• focused on plans for specific outreach to farmers. Liberty Lobby's publication, The Spotlight, with a circulation of 142,000, is the principal, public- ity organ for the Populist Party, devoting a marked increase of attention to farm issues in re- cent months. • The National Agricultural Press Association (NAPA), an organization, headed by Colorado resident Roderick (Rick) Elliott, which promoted quasi-legal, self-help responses to farm foreclosures. NAPA has published several periodicals which combine articles on ag- ricultural matters with others containing , thinly-veiled anti- Semitic propaganda. NAPA de- clared bankruptcy in May 1984, and Rick Elliott faces criminal prosecution in Colorado on 20 counts of felony theft involving some $250,000 in fraudulently- obtained loans to NAPA by its members. Barbara Coopersmith, senior association director of ADL's Mountain States Regional Office in Denver, is a witness for the state in the case against Elliott. • The Posse Comitatus, a group of armed vigilantes and bigots classified as a domestic terrorist organization by the FBI. In 1982, ADL documented a series of visits made to groups of farmers in Nebraska and Kansas by William Gale and James Wickstrom, Posse Corn- itatus leaders at that time. Gale was an instructor at a Posse-led survival school on a Kansas farm in 1982, where the attendees, many in camouflage combat fatigues, listened to lec- tures with racial and anti- Semitic overtones and learned how to use explosives. In June 1982, KTTL-FM, a country music station in Dodge City, Kan. began broadcasting Posse tape recordings supplied by Wickstrom and Gale. These tapes promoted intimidation tac- tics and violence: "You better start making dossiers, names, addresses, phone numbers, car license numbers, on every damn Jew rabbi in this land, and every Anti-Defamation League leader ... in this land, and you better start, doing it now. And know where he is. If you have to be told any more than that, you're too damn dumb to bother with. You get these roadblock locations, where you can set up ambushes, and get it all work- ing now." Thus began a long legal con- troversy in which ' ADL petitioned the FCC to forbid these broadcasts. The ADL has argued that the broadcasts con- stituted "incitement to immi- nent lawlessness" in violation of FCC regulations and the First Amendment's free speech pro- tections. The legal controversy continues as ADL recently was- granted permission by the FCC to challenge the station's license renewal application. In a motion filed at the same time, 'ADL asked to enlarge the issues for hearing to include consideration , of the anti-Semitic, racist and violence-inciting content of many KTTL broadcasts. • The bizarre'political and propaganda network of Lyndon LaRouche, the perennial Presidential candidate whose conspiracy theories are laced with anti-Semitism. In recent years, LaRouche and his organ- ization have published wild charges linking Israel, promi- nent Jews and Jewish organiza- tions to underworld conspiracies involving drug trafficking and political assassinations. • There is a clear Consensus among concerned observers that it would be wrong to assume that the extremists will forever be ignored by America's far- mers. Farm analysts are almost There is a clear consensus that it would be wrong to assume that the extremists will forever be ignored by America's farmers. Conditions will get worse before they get better. unanimous in their belief that farm economic conditions will get worse before they get better. But. several important factors have impeded the growth of ex- tremist ideologies among far- - mere: Leaders of mainstream farm organizations recognize the dan- gers of extremist groups and have distanced themselves. They have not shared platforms with extremist group representatives at farm rallies and demonstra- tions and, on occasion, have re- plidiatee - their simplistic solu- tions. • Government and law enforce- ment officials are also well aware of the extremist groups' recruiting activities among far- mers. There has been a high de- gree of cooperation among fed-' eral, state and local officials in confronting extremists. In addition, the recent arrest of a number of extremist group leaders has seriously hindered their outreach efforts. ;The sig- nificant law, enferCement crackdown on members of The Order, an underground network of armed racists and anti- Semites igho were involved in a series of criminal activities on the West Coast, and against leaders of the Covenant, Sword and Arm of the Lord, a pro-Nazi paramilitary survivaliek,group, which operates' to encampment on the Missouri-Arkansas bor- der, sent a strong message to extremist group 'organiz)rs and to those who\ would affiliate with them. ADL regional offices have formulated local responses, in- cluding tightened security at ,