...Daniel Banyai, a 47-year-old New Yorker who, attracted by Vermont’s relaxed gun laws, bought 30 acres in this rural town of around 1,400 and transformed it into his dream project, a training camp where visitors could practice shooting as if engaged in armed combat. (Source: NY Times)
Talk about a dream project, we're talking wet dream for militia wannabes who wanna to play soldier and pretend they're the few, the proud, the Marines. We're not just talking about guys getting their rocks off gunning around with assault rifles:
On his land, in facilities he said cost $1.6 million, visitors can re-enact a range of field exercises — a suburban house, for home invasions; a large open space surrounded by berms, for carjacking and vehicle assaults; and shipboard structures, for high-seas piracy. Months of protests, he said, have made such exercises relevant to many Americans.
“People are more believing the hypotheticals with all the rioting,” he said. “People are getting more conscientious of, you know, how do I defend myself?”
There's a war on, don't you know, even if it's just a hypotheticals kind of war, and you never know when you're going to have to climb over a berm and take out a few antifas, libtards, or BLM protesters.
Since white nationalist RWNJs (Right Wing Nut Jobs) are a bigger threat to the security, stability, and sanity of the USA than any other group, us antifa libtard BLM-ers are the ones who ought to be getting more conscientious, errrrrr, make that conscious, about defending ourselves. But Daniel Banyai sees things differently. Hooah! Which, I will note, may well be an army battle cry, but there's only one tiny little letter "h" separating hooah from hoo-hah. Which is what Mr. Banyai is creating up there in Pawlet, Vermont.
All this is making the townspeople - who for the most part are living in ancestral places that have been in their families since the 1700's or who blew in as grownups, drawn to quiet and bucolic - plenty nervous.
Some of them have installed cameras with infrared lights so they could pick up figures that might be moving in the dark around their houses. A few have invested in bulletproof vests.That must make for a nice quiet and bucolic retirement.
None of it makes them feel entirely safe. Michelle Tilander, 63, a retired physical therapist who moved to West Pawlet 10 years ago, said she had written a letter to be opened in case she or her husband should be hurt or killed.
“The police come in, they’ll find that envelope and they’ll know who to question,” she said.
Things are escalating, of course, and many of the towns people feel threatened. This is, of course, because they are being threatened on social media - where truly awful stuff has been posted - not to mention up close and fairly personal. (Someone's truck was fired on.)
“I’m never leaving this land,” he said in an interview. “And I didn’t ask for this war to start, but I’m going to see it through. I want to see through my victory because I bought this land free and clear.”
Looks like things could get about as unquiet and unbucolic as they can get, up there in Vermont.
Maybe my husband was right when he hopped on a bus and got the hell out of town.
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