There Is No Compromise To Private Property Rights
I’m a mom on a mission to fight for faith, family, freedom, food, and farming. I’ve committed my life to it — both at home on the ranch in Mitchell, S.D., where my husband Tyler and I raise cattle, forage crops, and our four children.
I also spend a considerable time on the road with that same focus. In the last two years, I’ve been a keynote speaker at 110+ agricultural conferences across the nation, advocating for farming, ranching, food security, national security, and maintaining our private property rights and local government leadership.
I’ve seen the effects of overreaching government and the tangled web of public-private partnerships, that connect tax payer dollars to big businesses — squeezing out the little guy and bulldozing over the citizens along the way.
It’s happening in blue states like Michigan, New York, California, and Illinois. But never in a million years did I think this same agenda — with so much of it tied to the Green New Deal — would come to roost in my freedom-loving home state of South Dakota.
Yet, right now a bad actor has slapped condemnation papers, lawsuits, and threats of eminent domain on the very citizens who have built their communities and called this place home for 100+ years. This bad actor is a privately-owned, out-of-state, foreign-backed company that has its eyes squarely locked on your property.
And if they have their way, they’ll use your taxpayers to take what is not theirs.
Under our Constitution, we hold inherent God-given rights that, “All men are born equally free and independent, and have certain inherent rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring and protecting property and the pursuit of happiness. To secure these rights are instituted among men, serving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”
Our legislators placed their hand on a Bible and took an oath to protect and preserve the Constitution and our rights as citizens.
These rights are not theirs to give or take away. And no matter the project; no matter the economic drivers; no matter the money that could be made; no matter the incentives to build business; there is one thing in all of this that is a fact — the truth does not bend to fit our will, and neither does the Constitution.
There is no compromise bill that protects landowners, because “no” should always be an option when it comes to doing business, giving access, and creating relationships for economic agricultural development projects.
If I cannot say “no” as a landowner, is the property I own really even mine?
You know, my 9-year old daughter, Scarlett, said something absolutely prolific last week, while speaking on the Sutton Rodeo Zone Stage as part of Rodeo Rapid City. She was invited to present and share the story of her bottle calf, “Lucky,” the social media sensation who inspired her first children’s book, “Scarlett and Lucky.”
While on stage, Garrison Allen asked her two things. First, he asked her, “Do you think you’ll be the next governor of South Dakota one day?” She smiled and said, “Only if I can do the job where my cows are.”
And the second question he asked was, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” She answered, “I want to be exactly where my feet are; on the ranch raising cattle.”
Scarlett, at age nine, understands what many of our elected officials have forgotten or do not understand. There is blood, sweat, tears, and generations of tradition and sacrifice into the land we call “home.”
There is no amount of money that makes it okay for a private company to seize control of what is not theirs. No $500 bill left on the table after they’ve walked onto land where they are not welcome is going to work. And there’s simply no compromise to our private property rights. We either have them or we don’t.
Our fearless Governor Kristi Noem is on the road right now talking about the border crisis we face in this country. I absolutely agree with her that good fences make good neighbors.
Back at home in South Dakota, our fences are currently under attack. We are either free in South Dakota or we are not. And the history books will reflect which of our elected officials sold our freedom down the river to the highest bidder, and which ones stood firm as patriots — standing in the truth, protecting our private property rights, and conserving the Constitution along the way.
May God bless South Dakotans in this fight. If we hold our ground, kids like Scarlett will have the chance to pursue their dreams — to keep their feet squarely where they are planted, right here at home in South Dakota.
To Donny Boy,
I most definitely meant prolific and not prophetic.
What is a prolific thinker?
Definition: Intellectually inventive and fruitful; producing many ideas or creating many things.
Thanks for your feedback.
Amanda
Hey Amanda, you might want to check a dictionary as you opine. Your daughter said something “prophetic.” She did not say something " prolific. "
Great comments
I was one of the early founders of the community owned ethanol plants.
Neighbors working together. Which evolved into our neighbors becoming competitors due to better prices and larger equipment. Now that money (root of all evil) is more important than neighbors…..neighbors are enemies. The fabric of rural America currently is torn but if the insane amount of money from the pipeline happens, I’m afraid the culture of rural America will never return.