But the federal government does, because if it loses its power it would... well, lose its power. It makes it harder to keep up the whole united states schtick, which is more or less why the federal government exists in the first place.
Interestingly, the federal government does not actually have that power in the Constitution.
Basically, if you argue that a certain autonomous/sovereign zone is A-OK (or that a response against them would be ”batshit”) then you should also argue that the original holding of that zone is unjustified in itself.
This is false and also, to be honest, mind-numbingly stupid. "I think the original possession was unjustified somehow" and "I just don't care about the change" are different degrees. When land is not owned by anyone (the federal government is not a person and does not deserve rights), nobody lives on it, and nobody is harmed in any way by the adverse use, I just don't care.
On top of that, I also happen to consider settlement a valid form of title. For example, the ownership by settlement of current Americans of American land is entirely valid.
Which is okay, I’m personally of that opinion regarding CHOP, that the police force didn’t deserve the power they exercised, and that keeping them away was thus the right course of action.
This is somehow even dumber than the previous thing. You know the police don't actually own Capitol Hill, right? CHAZ wasn't adversely possessing against the police, they were adversely possessing against local homeowners by seizing their right to the public facilities in their neighbourhood, such as their right to have cops. And of course the cops deserve the power they exercise, it was voluntarily given to them by the property owners. If keeping them away was the right course of action or not, that decision belongs to THE HOMEOWNERS IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD, not you.
For what it's worth, there's a lot of extra baggage in the Bundy situation. As the article notes, the fellow's been illegally grazing cattle on public lands for quite a while without paying.
The funny thing is that by adverse possession laws this gives him a
better claim: the federal government hadn't cared yet, so they have less right to suddenly decide they care. I don't actually agree with this, but most people do... when it applies to people.
On land that's habitat for an endangered species.
(Everywhere is habitat for endangered species and also endangered species should be allowed to go extinct naturally because that's what evolution
is)
There's also the longstanding 'sovereign citizen' stuff going on.
And this is totally irrelevant, being a conspiracy theorist doesn't mean he doesn't still have the same actual rights as everyone else.