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While the world was watching the former president surrender to authorities in a New York City courthouse last week, I was watching Nashville, Tenn., and Raleigh, N.C. I live in North Carolina, and these two seats of government and capital cities in bordering Southern states have been roiled with political unrest in the shadow of the Donald Trump Show.
We like to look to the horizon instead of to the soil because we bury the people we do not care about in the South. It is where we have put migrants and poor people and sick people. It is where we put the social problems we are willing to accept in exchange for the promise of individual opportunity in places that sound more sophisticated. But the South is still a laboratory for the political disenfranchisement that works just as well in Wisconsin as it does in Florida. Americans are never as far from the graves we dig for other people as we hope.
First, in Nashville on March 27, people mourned six dead from the nation's 130th mass shooting this year. Three of the murdered were children, each 9 years old. The shooting took place at a private Christian academy, if such things are supposed to matter to one's outrage. It shouldn't. But I mention it because this is America.
Nashville is a politically centrist, demographically and economically diverse city that self-consciously manufactures conservative culture exports in a deeply conservative state. The town was coming off protests around a massively undemocratic ban on drag shows. The two events seem unconnected but they are not. Because after the shooting two weeks ago, Tennesseans were primed for civic action. And civic action is what we saw when people lined up outside the GOP-dominated House demanding sensible gun reforms. Three democratic lawmakers — Gloria Johnson, Justin Jones and Justin Pearson — joined the protesters, many of them children not that much older than the victims in last month's massacre.
Video from the Tennessee House floor shows actual people in the people's house, directly engaging elected representatives who are usually inoculated from the voters who have to live with the outcomes of their political machinations. Politicians look more like brawlers than like erudite statesmen. The veil of ugliness between decorum and how our lawmaking actually works — permitting the killing of kids in classrooms — was pierced briefly.
The Republicans appeared more outraged by direct engagement with voters than they are by gun violence, judging by how quickly they moved to punish Johnson, Jones and Pearson. They expedited the resolution to expel the three Democrats and pushed for a resolution by the end of the week. By the end of the day on Thursday, the Tennessee House had expelled Pearson and Jones (Nashville's Metropolitan Council voted unanimously on Monday to reappoint Jones to House District 52).