Mark Pitcavage Profile picture
Jan 30 24 tweets 17 min read
Time for yet another Show and Tell thread about sovereign citizens. In these threads I show artifacts and ideas from this unusual movement, along with some explanation and context, and maybe a bit of snark.

Okay, let's get going!
The above ID card has several postal hallmarks of sovereign citizen, including "zipcode exempt," "near 78767," "general delivery," & "Texas Republic."

Below we see documents a sovereign is preparing to mail. I am half convinced sovereigns are the ones keeping the USPS running.
Sovereign citizen license plates are always fascinating--one could collect these as a hobby and never run out of variations.
As I've mentioned before, some are designed a lot like real license plates, and are intended to pass as legit, but most are far more "in your face."
Sovereign citizens do not always call themselves that; in fact, sometimes they deny they are sovereigns. They have a lot of names for themselves. One that has picked up in popularity in recent years is "American State National."
Some more "American State National" sovereign citizen stuff.
The largest U.S. variant within the sovereign citizen movement--a variant now appearing in some other countries--is the "Moorish sovereign citizen" variant.
For a good 25 years at least, the Hawaiian independence movement has been rife with sovereign citizens.
Of course, by now, the sovereign citizen movement has spread across much of the world. Australia has one of the most active sovereign citizen movements, which has exploited paranoia over vaccines and covid countermeasures. This group is the Gumbaynggirr Government.
The Gumbaynggir group provides here a great example of sovereign citizen logical argument:
One sovereign citizen group, at least, has been started in Jamaica, the Sovereign Maroon Global Tribal Nation.
There's one group in the Philippines that had seeming sovereign citizen hallmarks, but I wasn't quite sure.
But it was this story, about one of them getting in trouble while in Singapore, that seems to confirm there's at least a sovereign influence here. This guy's not the first sovereign to get in trouble in Singapore.
roadkillandotherobservations.com/2021/08/07/mr-…
I've talked before about "sovereign citizen doublespeak," which is when a sovereign deliberately chooses the wrong meaning for a word with two meanings, or applies unusual homonyms, like "currency" = "current + sea." Here are some great examples.
One Moorish sovereign citizen group has recently created its own currency, the "dollarium," which it *claims* is gold-backed. Given that it has denominations in the billions, you may draw your own conclusions.
You may have noticed the unusual spelling in the above items. That is a bizarre hallmark of one particular group, the Moorishe Nationall Reepublic Federall Governmente. They seem to think it is "Annciente Ennglishe."
The "Purple Thumb Community" is a New Zealand sovereign citizen group. It was started by a follower of deceased American sovereign guru David Wynn Miller. Note it asking for an "energy exchange donation," i.e., $$$.
New Zealand has had sovereign citizens for quite some time. Some Maoris are sovereigns.
Sovereign citizens enjoy creating charts to illustrate the difference between their status and those of others, or of their system of laws vs. the illegitimate system.
The way sovereigns get their ideas is pretty simple. One sovereign, somewhere, simply makes something up. If it is interesting, other sovereign citizens will copy it. Eventually it becomes "fact" to sovereigns. One example is the sovereign citizen version of the American flag.
Sovereign citizens like to create fake government agencies, including fake law enforcement agencies. One recent creation are the "Continental Marshals." Recently they've expanded to "Intercontinental Marshals." The Moorish Empire even has a "Secret Service."
Because sovereign citizens began in the US, when sovereigns get going in other countries, they borrow a lot from the US, including references to the Uniform Commercial Code, as in this Panamanian example.
One very old sovereign citizen tradition is creating bogus vigilante courts called "common law courts." Sovereign citizens in Great Britain and Australia have recently discovered this. Also included here is a U.S. "common law grand jury" document.
I'll end with this: a sovereign selling "Baby Deeds," which are to be used instead of using a birth certificate..

That's it. Until the next time, may the UCC be with you.

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More from @egavactip

Jan 15
This is a video showing British sovereign citizens doing things that would be so typical for American sovereign citizens. To provide a little context: "common law courts" are bogus courts that sovereign citizens sometimes establish notionally or actually, and which are typically
used as pretexts for other actions ranging from "paper terrorism"-style harassment to the sort of arrests threatened here. Common law courts in the sovcit movement date back to the late 1970s but became a huge fad in the movement in the 1990s, when scores of them sprung up. This
resulted in a lot of arrests, deflating the fad, so the only have appeared occasionally since (though they do create similar entities, including county assemblies and jural societies). Another thing the sovereign citizen frequently does, like the "constables" here, is to create
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Jan 14
It's Friday, so let's Learn about Extremism! Today I want to tell you a little about one of the many women who played important roles on the far right in the United States.

I present to you Mary Lyrl Van Hyning (1892-1973), who was a prominent far right activist from the 1930s
through the 1950s, as the editor of an antisemitic and conspiratorial publication, Women's Voice, as a publisher and distributor of a variety of right-wing tracts, and as a speaker and conference organizer.

She also could rock a hat.
Van Hyning got her start with the isolationist Mother's Movement in the years before World War II. She and other far right women in Chicago formed the group known as "We, the Mothers, Mobilize for America, Inc."

In early 1941, Van Hyning began what would be a 20 year career of
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Jan 4
1/ In the 1980s, paramilitary training was very popular within the white supremacist movement. White supremacist leaders like Louis Beam and Glenn Miller organized large

"Jesus Hitler, an ‘adrenaline junkie’ and the plot to train Michigan neo-Nazis"

bridgemi.com/michigan-gover…
2/ paramilitary groups, while others, such as James Wickstrom (the "National Director of Counterinsurgency" for the Posse Comitatus) regularly held paramilitary trainings for their followers. Perhaps the most "serious" white supremacist group involved in paramilitary training was
3/ a Christian Identity group known as the CSA (Covenant, Sword, and Arm of the Lord), which even invited other groups and individuals to come to their compound and be trained.
Read 9 tweets
Dec 27, 2021
I put together some quick screen shots of this video as I was watching it, to give you a sense of what transpired.

"New January 6 video shows three hours of violent and chaotic assault on police"

cnn.com/2021/12/24/pol…
Rioters grab a Capitol Police (?) riot shield and pass it back towards the crowd--the second one they grabbed here. Riot shields would also be passed forward to use against the police.
The man in the front with the pole appears to be using it to strike an officer. The police are off-camera during the assault. The first ones you can see are Metro DC police--not sure if they were the original ones here or reinforcements.
Read 22 tweets
Dec 21, 2021
Here's a thread with some random facts about white supremacist tattoos, a very common means of expression of white supremacy. If you put it on your body, it's probably a belief you hold dear.
It's most shocking/sensational when white supremacists have tattoos on their foreheads, or all over their face.
They don't start that way, of course. A lot of white supremacists accrue tattoos over time, some eventually reaching a "point of no return" where they couldn't hide them even if they wanted to. This is Curtis Allgier in 2001, 2003, 2006.
Read 13 tweets
Dec 20, 2021
Who are the most influential white supremacists in the U.S. over the past century? Here's an off-the-cuff "Worst 10" list (I reserve the right to change my mind), in more or less chronological order.
1. William Joseph Simmons resurrected the long-gone Ku Klux Klan for the 20th century, patterning it after fraternal organizations and taking advantage of anti-immigrant, anti-Semitic, and anti-Catholic sentiments--growing it to millions.
2. Gerald L. K. Smith was one of the most prominent hardcore white supremacists of the mid-20th century--and one of the best orators. Ironically, he started off as a lieutenant of Huey Long. He also built that big Jesus statue in Arkansas.
Read 11 tweets

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