There are a few black cowboys in Wyoming, all denim, chaps, horsehide, and leather - indistinguishable from their white saddle mates except for skin color. Generations of living as ranch hands gave them the same bow-legged, rodeo swagger, the same taste in woodfire cooking, and the same ease with the discomfort of days on the range.
There are not enough black people in any one place in Wyoming to call it a community, let alone a ghetto, so most white people take them as they come, one by one, judging them by their saddle sense and roping skills - which is of course the way it should be, never judging a book by its cover.
The white people of Wyoming only read about the percentages - most murders, rapes, armed robberies, and assaults are committed by black men; prisons are overwhelmingly black; and inner cities are nexuses of dysfunction. But all this is too far a away to figure into their lives; and most Wyoming residents cannot believe that the Eastern hellhole can possibly exist.
That obliquity is not restricted to race. Wyomingites cannot imagine that the shenanigans of Washington are real either. It simply cannot be that the country is governed by that lot - pregnant men, transgender teachers, the Squad, buffoons, con artists, and Big Brother - but as impossible as it seems, it is true. A sinkhole of corruption, moral decay, and greed, fetters, traces, and harnesses on everything that moves, a government not of and for the people, but on their backs.
Brent Collins was old enough to see both Republicans and Democrats occupy the White House, and although he was a conservative in principle, he was no partisan. Whether Left or Right, political parties were out to interfere in the lives of ordinary people, take their money, and leave them to the wolves.
There was something else in the air in Wyoming that made everyone different. Not only did they feel happily removed from the worst of the indifference and self-assuming political ambition, but they were shameless idealists. Out here in God's country, one could sense the limitless possibilities of the human spirit. A peaceful, verdant, compassionate, and giving world was indeed possible.
Brent lived off the land - he tended his own garden, raised goats and chickens, built his own yurt - and gave back to the community. He was as free as any man could be, off the grid, unnoticed by the revenuers and truant officers, practicing traditional medicine and trusting to Nature to cure the minor ills of his family.
He got whatever clothes his wife Alice could not make from Goodwill, traded and bartered with supermarkets for meat and cooking oil, worked spells clearing brush and opening trails for the Park Service, and taught his children the spiritual values of Gaia, Mother Earth, and her bounty.
He still used the library's computers to access his email which he used only to keep in touch with family members in Coeur d'Alene and Bozeman, but had a fearful concern about the tide of technological change that was sweeping the country - robots, artificial intelligence, the replacement of tightly-knit human society with an impersonal, mechanical, cybernetic universe without ethos or moral core.
Of course anyone from the coasts would have tagged Brent as an airy-fairy zip-head, a throwback to the Utopian communities of Oneida, Brook Farm, and the German Pietists, a hippy-dippy leftover from the Sixties. Of course what did they know, so immersed in diversity, equity, and inclusivity, immured within the harsh, irremediable confines of progressivism?
Yet, for all his confidence and home-grown sense of honor and rectitude, Brent felt like the Amish on the tourist trail, cute, bearded, buggy-riding oddities. The tourists who came to Wyoming to ride, hike, and ski helicoptered in and out, gave ranchers and cattlemen hardly a second glance, and never even saw the true men of the land like Brent Collins.
He did have his moments - like the time his daughter almost died when allopathy, homeopathy, tribal cures, and universal prayer failed and he was forced to take her to the hospital; or when his wife almost died in childbirth, attended by a Hopi woman from the reservation; or when the winter of '16 nearly carried him off - but all in all, he remained faithful. If he abandoned ship - he, the model of naturalness and peaceful oneness with the Earth - then how easy it would be for lesser men to jump over the side. No, he must maintain the course.
How simple it was for Brent to believe in a better world, so removed as he was from the real one. Looking out over Eden Valley and the Tetons beyond, this was God's creation as He had intended it, and thanks to the divine intervention, Brent was able to suspend disbelief. Not only did Eden Valley exist, but the rest of the world, corrupted, defiled, and dishonored was kept out. With hope, good will, kindness, and sincerity Eden Valley could become universal - perhaps not its meadows and snow-capped mountains but its spiritual core.
Idealism is of course a frail thing, borne as it is of naivete, credulous belief, and inwardness. Sooner or later the real world would invade and destroy. Brent never believed in this eventuality. His belief in the rightness of his ways was impenetrable - absolute goodness was its own defense - and the time would never come when he would have to take up arms.
Millennialist churches were not uncommon in the West - that something in the air that so inspired Brent in his utopian beliefs was breathed by those who did arm themselves. After nuclear Armageddon, the members Church of the Risen Masters who had lived for generations under the prairie in survivalist warrens, would emerge into a post-apocalyptic world in which they would have to defend themselves in order to assure their holy repopulation of the world.
Such nativist spirituality, as deformed as it might seem, had its parallel in other parts of the Americas. The Mixtec and Zapotecs in ancient Mesoamerica practiced ritual human sacrifice to appease the powerful gods immanent in the natural world around them. They formed an unholy alliance with these gods to assure their survival and the eminence of their domain. They like the members of the Church of the Risen Masters felt themselves anointed, privileged, and special; and if they performed the proper rites and rituals, they would prosper and would be the founders of a new, better world.
Brent was a lucky man as long as his luck held out. Already there had been inroads of the civilization he had kept at bay - the hospital visits, the run-ins with truant officers, lawyers from the county with eviction notices for non-payment of property taxes, the more frequent reliance on food stamps and public generosity, the raid on his land and the rustling of his animals.
Yet he held fast. He had not spent his life building an alternative life style for his family only to see it come down in ruins. At each reversal he was energized, more committed, and more defiant. The world simply had to be the way he saw it, and these setbacks were only bumps in the road to a better place for all.
Middle age cannot sustain idealism as youth can, so when Brent was well into his forties, his tenacious hold on his idealistic vision loosened. A little give here and there was only to be expected and before long he had joined the mainstream. He was not unlike his progenitors, the hippies of the Sixties who held on to their idealistic dream until they stooped and stumbled a little but kept only their pony tails as the last reminder of earlier, better days.
Idealism dies more quickly and easier in some than in others, and Brent gave it up reluctantly, but he saw the handwriting on the wall and settled down in his trailer, worked, managed, and to his credit, never angry.











