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0:55

Further Retaliation

Three police officers, who did not identify their agency, arrived at rswfire's work center located behind a federal gate. They told rswfire that they were concerned about things he was posting online, stating he was not in trouble. rswfire identified this as intimidation connected to his posts about his dismissal from Oregon State Parks, occurring approximately one year from the anniversary of that dismissal. He documented the encounter in real time, including recording one of their vehicles. rswfire stated he has done nothing wrong and characterized the officers' presence on federal land as completely inappropriate intimidation for sharing the truth about what happened to him.

Mar 24, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 29% match
Public

Seeking an Attorney

rswfire recorded a transmission on the eve of the one-year anniversary of his dismissal from the Oregon State Parks volunteer program at Honeyman State Park on the Oregon coast. He recounted the sequence of events: after two months at the park, he was given 24 hours to vacate. The following days, a regional coordinator weaponized personal disclosures he had made to his supervisor in trust, characterizing him as unstable and expelling him from the statewide program despite having a full year of placements already lined up. He described a pattern of abuse and retaliation over the two-month period, triggered by his documentation of their treatment. He detailed a specific incident where staff sat him at a picnic table for over an hour, told him to chew glass and swallow it, said he was never given the benefit of the doubt, told him he could leave, and claimed he made everyone uncomfortable — without citing specific incidents beyond an early conflict with a supervisor. He described an intimidation event approximately a week and a half before dismissal, when an out-of-uniform man appeared while all rangers were away at a regional event and pressed him with questions about leadership's treatment of him. He stated that the institution weaponized his sexuality as a gay man, implying he had romantic feelings for his male supervisor. He noted that the formal expulsion letter, issued on state letterhead, cited his protected free speech — specifically a video he made documenting their conduct — as the sole reason, and that the institution then went silent for a full year. rswfire stated he has one year remaining on his statute of limitations and a clean documentary record. He referenced a prior transmission where he discussed future plans and expressed reluctance to sue, but in this signal he clarified his position: he is seeking legal representation specifically from an attorney willing to pursue the case to the Supreme Court to establish rights and protections for volunteers in state park systems. He framed the core issue as the absence of any mechanism protecting volunteers from institutional abuse.

Mar 23, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 26% match
Public
Document
Public

Marking One-Year Anniversary of Surveillance Encounter

rswfire marks the one-year anniversary of an incident at Honeyman State Park in which an unidentified man—carrying no ID, wearing no uniform, and offering no name—was sent by Oregon State Parks to assess and question him while he was working alone as a volunteer and all rangers were away at a regional event. The man asked personal questions about how leadership was treating rswfire. rswfire documented the encounter the same day. He states that Oregon State Parks has never explained the incident, produced no photograph, provided no IT documentation, and offered no operational record. A cover story was offered within hours but has never been substantiated. rswfire characterizes the encounter as a misuse of state resources against an unpaid volunteer whose only action had been documenting his treatment, and asserts it required authorization above park level. He links to the full documentation and archive at oprdvolunteerabuse.org.

Mar 18, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 21% match

Documenting Institutional Abuse and Requesting Help

rswfire records a transmission while hiking during a winter storm on the Oregon coast, approaching his 49th birthday and facing potential homelessness. He identifies himself by full name — Robert Samuel White — and outlines his situation: he has spent the past year volunteering as a caretaker for the U.S. Forest Service, living behind a locked gate on restricted federal land, operating a work truck on a five-day route since October. Prior to that, he was a camp host for the Forest Service, and before that he spent three months volunteering at Oregon State Parks, where he was subjected to two months of abuse by park management. He built a professional online archive documenting everything that occurred, describing it as the cleanest evidentiary record imaginable. Oregon State Parks remained silent for a year until the anniversary of his dismissal, when three armed men — a USFS special agent from Springfield, Oregon and two Oregon State Police officers — arrived behind the locked gate to confront him about his online archive. He refused to speak without an attorney. Twenty minutes later the special agent called him, stating the matter wasn't going away. rswfire has since spoken with the agent's captain, who told him to file a FOIA request to learn the identities of the two state police officers — identities rswfire considers improperly withheld. He captured one license plate on camera. He has been emailing his supervisor and district ranger seeking answers. He suspects someone from Oregon State Parks influenced someone in the Forest Service to sabotage his position. He describes a structural weakness in the country where unpaid volunteers have no institutional protections and are discarded when inconvenient. He has asked to be relocated to another site in the Pacific Northwest outside Oregon. He outlines his legal strategy: suing regional coordinator Allison Watson under Section 1983 for retaliation, citing a signed letter that lists protected speech as the sole reason for his expulsion from all Oregon State Parks. He plans to use that outcome to sue the institution and also sue director Lisa Sumption for abdicated supervisory responsibility. He notes that both Watson and Sumption attempted to pathologize his communications to avoid accountability. He describes his local Forest Service crew as amazing but structurally unable to help or speak on his behalf. He states his goal of eventually bringing the case to the Supreme Court to affirm First Amendment protections and recourse for volunteers, especially those living on institutional land. He describes reaching out to dozens of journalists and university professors. He references his broader trajectory: two years of rebuilding, financial precarity, freelance work disrupted by AI displacement, building Autonomy Realms as a sovereign platform with 900 videos and features like Atlas Mode for nomads, all constructed from extreme financial constraint. He notes his queerness was weaponized by Oregon State Parks staff. He restarts partway through the video to reframe his request for help, stating that needing help does not indicate weakness. He closes walking toward Highway 101, planning to edit and upload the video, hoping the right people will hear it.

Apr 1, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 20% match
Public
2:05

Declaring Thought Sovereignty Against Epistemic Violation

rswfire delivers a direct transmission on the sacred nature of individual thought and the violation inherent in judging or weaponizing another person's thoughts. He identifies this practice as an **epistemic violation** against sovereign individuals and traces its origin to institutional conditioning. The transmission emphasizes that thoughts belong to the individual and that external judgment of thoughts causes fragmentation and robs people of their wholeness. He connects this pattern to systemic disintegration, noting that continuous fragmentation cannot produce stability. The transmission concludes with a direct question about whether people consider the nature of their own thoughts.

Jan 1, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 20% match
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