“There was no civilization before private property”
Cultural Genocide in Lake County, CA
by WILL PARRISH
As you read these words, one of the Northern California East Bay 
Area’s wealthiest men is getting away with an act of cultural genocide.  
Construction crews employed by wireless technology magnate John Nady 
began trenching grading, excavating, and building atop Rattlesnake 
Island in Lake County, California last week, in the latest phase of 
Nady’s seven-year-long effort to build two houses on the sacred grounds 
of the Elem Pomo tribe. Reportedly, private security guards flank the 
construction area in case of any attempt by the Elem and their 
supporters to occupy the island, as occurred during a previous 
developer’s attempt to build there in the early-’70s.
Rattlesnake Island is a lush 56-acre expanse in Clear Lake – 
California’s largest freshwater lake – located just outside the sleepy 
Highway 20 town of Clearlake Oaks.  For more than 14,000 years, the 
Elem’s home has encompassed an area in and around southeastern Clear 
Lake.  For more than 6,000 of those years, Rattlesnake Island has been 
the Elem’s cultural and religious center.
Elem cultural leader Jim Browneagle best summed up the significance 
of Nady’s project to his people in a Free Speech Radio documentary that 
aired on 140 stations across the country on Thanksgiving.  The 
documentary borrowed its title from a previous piece I published here at 
counterpunch.org, “The Struggle for Rattlesnake Island.”  The radio piece is 
available online. “If there’s a home built right there, it’s gone — the 
sacredness of 
it,” Browneagle said.  “We’re going to do the best we can to prevent 
that. We want to preserve it as it is, without homes.  It’s really the 
last sanctuary of our nation.”
Nobody is stopping Nady yet, least of all officials at the County of 
Lake.  The message rolls out from the county’s Lakeport offices that 
wealthy outsiders are permitted special exemptions from the law, for no 
other reason than that they are wealthy and aggressive.  The 
construction proceeds only because the Bay Area mogul received a special 
extension of Lake County’s normal grading season from County Community 
Development Director Rick Coel.
According to Lake County Supervisor Denise Rushing, Coel granted the 
extension after Nady threatened to sue if he didn’t get his way.  The 
section of the county’s grading code that Coel invoked, which may 
henceforth be known as the One Percent Exempt Provision, has rarely been used 
in the County and must be based on some sort of necessity.
The necessity in this case, from the perspective of Nady and his 
supporters in Lake County’s decision-making apparatus (cronies is a less kind 
way of putting it), seems to be that a new organization called 
Friends of Rattlesnake Island sued the County in November to try to 
force Nady to file an Environmental Impact Report (EIR).  The lawsuit is 
scheduled to be heard in Lake County Superior Court in January.  Nady 
apparently would like to complete the project prior that first hearing, 
thereby rendering the entire lawsuit moot.
Supporters of Rattlesnake Island attempted to secure an injunction on Monday 
against any further construction activity by Nady, but the judge at Lake County 
Superior Court struck down the motion on the grounds 
that Nady’s legal team did not have adequate notice to contest it.  A 
similar motion may be brought again in the coming days.
In the meantime, the pillage is ongoing.  As of this writing, Nady’s 
team has poured a concrete pad for an outdoor bathroom.  They also 
conducted trenching associated with a septic system, which Nady had 
previously started to build in 2005, even though the County had not yet 
granted him a permit.  The LakeCo Supes ordered him to halt the project 
at that time.  Nady ignored the order and continued developing the 
septic system. The Supervisors promptly obtained a restraining order, 
and Nady halted the construction.
In September, the LakeCo Supes had just overturned a unanimous 
Planning Commission decision requiring that Nady file an EIR related to 
his project.  The vote was 3-2 in favor of overturning the Planning 
Commision ruling, thereby granting Nady a grading permit.  All three 
Supervisors who voted in Nady’s favor cited his “private property 
rights,” which they maintain supersede all other considerations in this 
case.
Yet, Jim Browneagle had just provided a detailed Power Point 
presentation at the Supervisors’ meeting three weeks prior, in which he 
authoritatively demonstrated that the Elem are the island’s rightful 
owners, even under strictest application of the US government’s own 
property laws. I published a piece on that Supervisors meeting in the 
Anderson Valley Advertiser here: Moreover, Nady had prevented the county’s own 
archaeologist, Tom Gates, from taking any materials off the island for lab 
analysis, as is 
required under the California Environmental Quality Act. Thus, the 
county has been was unable to determine the “significance” of the lithic 
scatter Gates found at the site.  Elem traditionalists, who of course 
have extensive oral knowledge of the island, maintain that Nady’s 
building site.
CEQA also mandates that tribal monitors be present when their 
cultural artifacts are at risk of being disturbed by a development.  
Yet, at the time of the examination of the island by Gates, the county 
archeologist, Nady specifically forbade any member of the Elem Pomo to 
be present as a tribal monitor, and the County went along, according to 
Elem traditionalist and former tribal vice chairman Batsulwin Brown.
“I was told by Tom Gates that [Nady] did not want any Indian from Elem 
on his land,” Brown said. “I requested a monitor during the 10-minute 
meeting the tribe held with Tom Gates. He said Nady would not allow 
anybody from elem to be present.”
Yet, in the case of his construction activities last week, Nady did have
 a monitor present: a member of the Wappo of Napa County, who are not a 
federally recognized tribe and whose people have no significant 
historical knowledge of Rattlesnake Island.  The move was clearly 
calculated to give a fig leaf of legal propriety to Nady’s project, even
 though it entirely violated the spirit of the law.
The Wappo member’s participation in Nady’s project, coupled with the 
County’s failure to consult the Elem prior to beginning grading 
activities, has deeply upset Pomo people throughout Lake County.  
Members of each individual tribe were contacted by Browneagle, and they 
are all drafting letters of complaint to Rick Coel and to the County 
Supervisors.
“I actually got ahold of the [Wappo] monitor and pretty much gave him a 
piece of my mind,” Jim Browneagle says.  “When I told him I’m the Elem’s
 Historic Preservation Officer, and that nobody contacted me, he turned 
completely around and started apologizing and saying, ‘Well, what can we
 do?’ I’m going, ‘You’ve already done the worst damage you can ever do. 
You didn’t even ask us, didn’t even come to us.’”
The Elem do have allies in the Lake County decision-making apparatus, 
among them the aforementioned Supervisor Denise Rushing, who wasn’t even
 informed that development of the hotly-contested project was about to 
commence, even though Rattlesnake Island is in her district.  Rushing 
pointed toward a possible resolution to the ongoing dispute involving 
Elem, Nady, and the County in an e-mail to Haji Warf, a resident of and 
member of Friends of Rattlesnake Island:
“Personally, I believe that government should purchase (and should 
have purchased) this site to preserve it. The state or federal 
government should have stepped in by now as the amount is out of the 
county’s capabilities to buy.  At this moment, the tribe needs to ask 
that no further desecration be allowed and that the government at the 
state or federal level step in.
“At minimum an EIR needs to happen. But the best result of the EIR 
(saying the island itself is sacred and developing it cannot be 
mitigated) would still leave us with the only remedy being a suit from 
Nady or a negotiated agreement whereby the island gets preserved by 
public purchase.  The tribe needs to contact the state in my 
opinion–they do have a real case for negotiation given that the county 
hasn’t done the EIR.”
Historically, a thick layer of ideology coats each official legal 
decision vis-a-vis Rattlesnake Island, this one being no exception.  One
 of the intellectual rationales for Nady’s comes courtesy of Lake County
 Supervisor Rob Brown, who stated in the Free Speech Radio News piece 
that aired on Thanksgiving, which may well have come from someone living
 in Lake County during the more openly genocidal period of the 1860s:
“Without private property rights, we have no civilization.  There was no 
civilization before private property. There wasn’t! There were 
people that lived. And they operated under certain rules in everything 
that they did. But they did not have incentive to do things, because 
private property is the formation of a civilized country.”
Jim Browneagle and others have already attempted to do as Denise 
Rushing suggested, meeting with  Congressman Mike Thompson to try to 
convince him to sponsor legislation bringing the federal government in 
to perform eminent domain on Nady’s paper title, thus granting 
Rattlesnake Island back to the Elem. The “grape-obsessed” Thompson, as 
the New York Times has called him, wavered at the possibility 
given that such a course might lead to a new casino being constructed 
“in Wine Country” (which leaders of the Elem say will never happen on 
Rattlesnake Island).  Thompson then indicated he might be inclined to 
support such legislation if the Lake County Supervisors first approve of it.
Rushing’s e-mail marked the first time a Lake County Supervisor has 
openly suggested the same course.  As attorney Liam Griffin, a Lake 
County native, noted in his dissertation: “Application of the federal 
power of eminent domain is the most practical and equitable solution, 
and the time to do so is now, before this ancient sacred homeland and 
sacred tribal landscape is destroyed and lost forever. “We are 
requesting tribal and public support to prevent the outright destruction
 of Elem’s 6,000 year old homeland village on Rattlesnake Island.”
Regaining Rattlesnake Island is a matter of far greater urgency for 
the Elem in light of their present living conditions.  Adjacent to the 
reservation is a small lake of sulphur-infested waters left by a mercury mining 
company, which practiced open-pit mining for several decades.  
Six years ago, the US Environmental Protection Agency rated the Elem 
Pomo rancheria as the third most toxic site in the United States, before it 
undertook an insufficient clean-up effort.  Many who live on the 
reservation are sickening and dying.
In the meantime, supporters of the Elem have called for an emergency 
demonstration at Nady’s opulent home in Oakland’s Piedmont district this 
Saturday, December 17th, which will originate at noon at Oakland’s 
Grand Lake Theatre.
More information on how to support the Elem is at www.elemmodun.org.
Supporters have also created a Call to Action, available at 
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1YWTppsLU8910pvnoBqlb78qYfF6xVgXuSf_9e0bPJQA/edit?hl=en_US.
To read past AVA coverage of this issue, visit http://theava.com/archives/12178 
and http://theava.com/archives/11866.
Will Parrish can be reached at wparr...@riseup.net.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/12/19/cultural-genocide-in-lake-county-ca/


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