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Rogers Plans Talk to Group Termed Racist : Legislators: Conservative state senator has drawn criticism for his offer to address an organization that some people say preaches white supremacy.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

The heat is on, but state Sen. Don Rogers, the self-proclaimed “captain of my ship,” is cool and unbending--even amid charges that he is planning to address a group of suspected white supremacists tonight.

Reports of his scheduled appearance before an organization that allegedly embraces racists beliefs have evoked such strong reactions as “reprehensible” and “irresponsible.”

And that’s just from the state Senate, where Rogers represents one of California’s most conservative districts, encompassing the Santa Clarita and Antelope valleys and beyond into oil and farming country.

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Watchdog groups that track extremist organizations blasted Rogers’ planned dinner-hour talk at the fourth annual Jubilation Celebration and Conference in Bakersfield, with the Anti-Defamation League calling it “outrageous and shocking.”

And the phone in Rogers’ Capitol office Friday brought at least two queries during the lunch break from fellow Republican officeholders.

Not to worry, Rogers told a U. S. congressman and an assemblyman. All he planned to talk about, he said, was his Senate resolution reiterating states’ rights and putting Washington on notice that California wants no more of its costly federal mandates.

According to the Coalition for Human Dignity, a watchdog group in Oregon, the conference is sponsored by a California-based newspaper called The Jubilee. The paper is a national publication for the Christian Identity movement, whose followers believe Northern European descendants are superior to those of other races. People of color are derided as “mud people.”

In the face of criticism, Colorado state Rep. Charles Duke backed out of his scheduled speech tonight before Jubilee followers. But Rogers has not. He has given his word that he does not share in any racist beliefs and feels that should be enough to satisfy critics.

Such willfulness is typical of a man who entered politics 20 years ago because he was appalled at the size of his tax bill. Back then, in the pre-Proposition 13 era, it jumped 45% in one year.

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“I’m a businessman who got into politics for all the right reasons--to reduce the role of government,” said Rogers, 66, an oil geologist and partner in a drilling firm called Success Petroleum. “I did it to try to keep government from destroying us, from over-regulating and excessively intruding into our lives.”

In conversation, Rogers at times catches himself when his message grows strident. “Unlawful” federal mandates--upon quick reflection--become mandates that are “probably not constitutionally authorized.”

On the Senate floor, however, Rogers will often allow himself to be baited by liberal Democrats into heated debates against gun control, environmental protection and any perceived challenge to the protections of U. S. Constitution.

“He’s our most staunch constitutionalist,” said fellow conservative state state Sen. Rob Hurtt (R-Garden Grove).

On the subject of the environment, Rogers is adamant. Global warming is a hoax. A thinning ozone layer is a lie. Oil spills have minimal impact.

“I like clean air, clean water and clean food as much as anybody,” Rogers said in an interview. “But I think we’ve allowed the pendulum to swing too far, and we need some common sense brought back into the mix.”

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Though Rogers has a seemingly blind devotion to the tenets of the conservative wing of the Republican Party, he is not without a sense of humor. He once greeted state Sen. Ralph C. Dills (D-Gardena) with a demand for an environmental impact report on the bright green jacket Dills was wearing.

But there were no wisecracks circulating on the Senate floor Friday as Rogers’ colleagues contemplated the impact tonight’s appearance could have on the upper house.

“I think it’s irresponsible--and not even clever--to say you’re going before a group like this to only talk about states’ rights and ignore the associations with the Aryan Nation types,” said state Sen. Tom Hayden (D-Santa Monica). “This is a group whose message is anti-Semite, anti-black, anti-minority. And they’re the sort of group that one ought not talk to unless you’re there to deliver a strong message of criticism.”

State Sen. Diane Watson (D-Los Angeles) noted that Rogers has acted as chair of the Senate’s Veteran Affairs Committee since his appointment to the leadership post at the start of the two-year session.

“I am just really upset,” Watson said. “Veterans come in all colors. They aren’t only Northern Europeans. And for him to dignify this group with his presence is reprehensible.”

Still, there was no formal move to censure Rogers, and the senator repeated that he was “the captain of my ship” and that he would not be swayed into supporting the views of white supremacists.

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The first time Rogers spoke before Jubilee followers, many of whom share his passion for a movement to keep the federal government at bay, was just months before the senator himself tangled with the Internal Revenue Service.

In July, 1992, federal authorities seized Rogers’ private plane to cover payment of back taxes that he owed on investments. Rogers fought back by filing for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection to keep ownership of the plane through a trust he set up while he determined a way to pay the IRS.

Rogers said his biggest accomplishment in government came 12 years ago when he sponsored a successful citizen-backed initiative to abolish the California inheritance tax.

Today, he points to his states’ rights resolution (SJR 44) as a high point of the legislative session now winding down. Four other states have passed measures similar to Rogers’, which “informs the President and Congress that California is claiming sovereignty under the 10th Amendment.”

The measure--and its demands that the federal government immediately end imposing any mandates that are beyond its constitutional powers--has a certain appeal to the participants of today’s Jubilee conference.

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