Author Topic: Loon Launching Loving Lasso Lacks Legitimacy, Lands Litigation  (Read 78 times)

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Offline Elderberry

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Loon Launching Loving Lasso Lacks Legitimacy, Lands Litigation
« on: October 15, 2025, 09:26:29 am »
Lawrence Person's BattleSwarm Blog 10/14/2025

Loving County is not only the least populated county in Texas, but with 64 official inhabitants as of the 2020 census, it’s also the least populated county in the entire nation. (Kalawao County, Hawaii, on an island that was formerly a leper colony, comes in second.) Flat desert land up along the New Mexico border, Loving doesn’t have much to recommend it except splendid isolation.

And oil.

It’s that last little bit, Loving’s notable oil wealth, that probably inspired a carpetbagger gadfly from Indiana to try to take over Loving County.

    Malcolm Tanner, a political activist from Indiana who has filed to run for president of the United States, has drawn widespread attention after the Houston Chronicle first reported on his plan to recruit new residents to Loving County by offering them free homes. Tanner purchased and subdivided land in the remote county, promising a title to anyone willing to move there, register to vote, and join his effort to remake the community’s government.

Tanner evidently ran for President in 2024, and made so little an impression that he failed to register the low four-digit totals of Vermin Supreme and “Lucifer Everylove.” Tanner’s platform (“an executive order that would provide African Americans with a $5,000 monthly settlement”) and naming his group “Melanated People of Power” does rather suggest a social justice bent to his politics.

Back to The Texan:

    The plan’s implications are significant, given two defining features of Loving County: its minuscule population and its oil-rich tax base. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates only about 64 residents live within its boundaries, yet the county government takes in roughly $60 million annually in property tax revenue from the surrounding Permian Basin oilfields.

    With the Chronicle reporting that Tanner has already relocated some 30 people to the area, an unprecedented political takeover has gone from just another viral social media post to a very serious reality.

    “This woman right here is in the running to be the next county judge right here in Loving County,” Tanner said in one video, referring to a new resident while jokingly calling the area “Tanner County.”

    In the footage, Tanner stands on a patch of dry, windswept land he claims as his future subdivision, surrounded by recruits who have accepted his offer of free homes and, according to his plan, will soon register to vote and run for local office.

More: https://www.battleswarmblog.com/?p=68167