Brent Douglass Cole has described himself as a “sovereign American Citizen attempting to thwart the obvious conspiracy
and subterfuges of powers inimical to the United States.” Yes,
these Sovereign Citizen folks are few and deliberately far between but
they're like an appendage of something large and pervasive and
disturbing. Cole for some reason fancies himself “a statutory Attorney
General of the United States”which he'd have a hard time explaining, at
least to me, since if each man is sovereign, the entire concept of a
United States and a government with elected officials with any power to
do anything is suspiciously self-contradictory.What he's saying is that
all which makes the United States United and comprised of states is
sinister and inimical to statehood and unity.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. The Sovereign Mr. Cole shot a Bureau of Land Management ranger and
a California Highway Patrol officer who were investigating some
vehicles at a campsite. Predictably, he got shot himself although not
fatally. I'm not sure why but of course when one is sovereign, one
rules, by definition which makes for problems when someone else rules
too and everyone is armed. Perhaps that explains the universal and
ancient need for rules that modify and limit and define sovereignty.
It's why we need some form of elections or some form of ruler to replace
that personal sovereignty, it being a mess if every voter votes for
himself. Short of being totally bonkers, anyone has to admit that
personal sovereignty has to be strictly limited in scope and power if
anyone is to survive long enough to enjoy the wild and free life of the
animals.
Now of course we'd like to portray Cole as
being just plain nuts, and indeed articles about him list his
preoccupation with conspiracy theories most of us don't hold. I have to
defend him on that if I want to defend my own opinions and my right to
have them -- and who knows? Conspiracies abound and even wars have been
started and prolonged by real, genuine conspiracies, as you may know.
No, that's not the nuts part, or at least not the dangerously nutty
part: it's the notion that one is not subject to laws, that any piece of
ground is mine to rule and no one else's, and all by some nebulous
right that can be defended with lethal force. Mr. Cole seems to believe
that his right to declare sovereignty the way some kid might call
'dibs' makes law enforcement illegal and laws inapplicable unless he
approves of them and unless he makes them. It's the law of the jungle,
in essence. The law of tooth and claw if you've got them and guns if
you don't. It's the law of the brat and the law of the bully and a law
individuals rarely enforce successfully, thank God.
Now
Civilization has a price and a price that may seem excessive to some
and nay well be excessive to all but doing something about it is only
possible without that odd notion of the "sovereign citizen" and the
individual's right to make or ignore laws ad libidum. A paradox,
isn't it? But in today's ultra polarized America everything we do to
deal with the fringe enrages the more mainstream and the cynical Right,
the Corporate Right, the Religious Right are sure to make use of it.
Cole is now a cause and another one of many and I don't know what the
hell we're going to do about it.