A close-up look at the militia movement in America provides an intimate portrait of John Pitner, the commander-in-chief of a would-be patriot army called the Washington State Militia, his neighbors, and fellow veterans of the movement and explores the conspiracy theorists, white supremacists, secessionists, and others who make up these rural communities in the Pacific Northwest. 35,000 first printing.
Read More
In Lone Patriot, Kramer, who covers Europe for The New Yorker, now turns to America with a portrait of the commander-in-chief of an erstwhile Patriot army called the Washington State Militia.In 1996 Kramer made the first of what would be many trips to Whatcom County, Washington, to talk to John Pitner and some of the veterans of Alpha One, his "leadership" squad. Through their voices, Pitner's in particular, Kramer tells the story of a movement that surfaced in America in the nineties, as the millennium approached, and has continued - its resolve, if anything, strengthened by the events of the past year - into the new century. Her powerful evocations of Whatcom County could easily describe any number of rural communities in the Pacific Northwest today - a place of refuge to a strange assortment of conspiracy theorists, armed "constitutionalists," white supremacists, county secessionists, Freemen, and Christian fanatics, and to the kind of groups that survive on their discontent.
Read Less