This Ain't It

"If Your Vote Didn't Matter, They Wouldn't Work So Hard to Take It"

1 h 3 min · 5. Juni 2026
Episode "If Your Vote Didn't Matter, They Wouldn't Work So Hard to Take It" Cover

Beschreibung

After a few weeks away, Matthew and Melissa are back — and they're not easing in. The episode opens with Melissa getting quizzed on actual 1960s Southern voting literacy tests (the ones used to keep Black citizens from the ballot box), and it turns out someone with a bachelor's degree in the year 2026 would've failed plenty of them too. From there, it's a deep dive into the Louisiana v. Callais decision and what it means for the Voting Rights Act. Matthew and Melissa trace the long history behind it: where the word "gerrymander" comes from, the difference between "cracking" and "packing," the Reconstruction amendments, and the 1873 Colfax Massacre and U.S. v. Cruikshank — a story that runs straight from a burning courthouse in Louisiana to the gutting of Section 2 today. Then they break down the ripple effects already underway across the South and beyond (Louisiana, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia, and more), why Justice Kagan's dissent matters, why Alito's "that was a long time ago" reasoning is so galling, and what an actual fix for gerrymandering would even look like. Books & authors mentioned: Carol Anderson — The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America; Lee Drutman — Breaking the Two-Party Doom Loop; Steven Levitsky & Daniel Ziblatt — Tyranny of the Minority. Plus the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and Justice Kagan's Callais dissent. 1960s voting tests: https://secure.splcenter.org/page/67431/survey/1?locale=en-US [https://secure.splcenter.org/page/67431/survey/1?locale=en-US]

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Episode "If Your Vote Didn't Matter, They Wouldn't Work So Hard to Take It" Cover

"If Your Vote Didn't Matter, They Wouldn't Work So Hard to Take It"

After a few weeks away, Matthew and Melissa are back — and they're not easing in. The episode opens with Melissa getting quizzed on actual 1960s Southern voting literacy tests (the ones used to keep Black citizens from the ballot box), and it turns out someone with a bachelor's degree in the year 2026 would've failed plenty of them too. From there, it's a deep dive into the Louisiana v. Callais decision and what it means for the Voting Rights Act. Matthew and Melissa trace the long history behind it: where the word "gerrymander" comes from, the difference between "cracking" and "packing," the Reconstruction amendments, and the 1873 Colfax Massacre and U.S. v. Cruikshank — a story that runs straight from a burning courthouse in Louisiana to the gutting of Section 2 today. Then they break down the ripple effects already underway across the South and beyond (Louisiana, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia, and more), why Justice Kagan's dissent matters, why Alito's "that was a long time ago" reasoning is so galling, and what an actual fix for gerrymandering would even look like. Books & authors mentioned: Carol Anderson — The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America; Lee Drutman — Breaking the Two-Party Doom Loop; Steven Levitsky & Daniel Ziblatt — Tyranny of the Minority. Plus the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and Justice Kagan's Callais dissent. 1960s voting tests: https://secure.splcenter.org/page/67431/survey/1?locale=en-US [https://secure.splcenter.org/page/67431/survey/1?locale=en-US]

5. Juni 20261 h 3 min
Episode The Boy Who Cried Assassination: When Political Violence Stops Shocking Us Cover

The Boy Who Cried Assassination: When Political Violence Stops Shocking Us

On this week's episode, we unpack Lillia Ellis's Christian Century piece "Spectator Violence is a Form of Moral Injury, [https://www.christiancentury.org/features/spectator-violence-form-moral-injury]" sparked by the recent attempted assassination at the White House Correspondent's Dinner. Why does an NPR poll show 30% of Americans now believe political violence may be necessary? What does Simone Weil's writing on the Iliad tell us about how violence dehumanizes the oppressor as much as the victim? And why is "the boy who cried wolf" energy creeping into how we react to attempts on people's lives? From there, the conversation pulls in Hannah Arendt, Steve Bannon's "flood the zone" strategy, Joseph Goebbels quotes that hit way too close to home, and James Baldwin's most disturbing short story (you've been warned). Matt and Melissa dig into how authoritarianism doesn't need you to believe the lie, it just needs you too exhausted to look for the truth. Plus why education and critical thinking are the actual antidote, why you should always read the graffiti when you travel, and dispatches from Puerto Rico's far-right government gutting their universities. It wraps with the most unhinged customer service email Melissa has ever received about her y'allainright.co store, involving dozens of postcards, a stranger's mailbox, and one very confused recipient who may or may not be in the Epstein files. Mentioned in this episode: Lillia Ellis (Christian Century), Simone Weil's "The Iliad, or the Poem of Force," Hannah Arendt, Lillian Smith, James Baldwin's "Going to Meet the Man," Sinclair Lewis's It Can't Happen Here, and Daniel Immerwahr's How to Hide an Empire.

1. Mai 202645 min
Episode Stop Casting Trump as Jesus Cover

Stop Casting Trump as Jesus

This week, Melissa and Matt dig into the ongoing entanglement of the Trump administration and Christianity — and why it should bother everyone, especially right after Easter. From Pete Hegseth reading a fake Bible verse pulled from Pulp Fiction at a Pentagon prayer service and comparing the press to Pharisees, to Paula White-Cain telling Trump at Easter lunch that his suffering mirrors Christ's, to Hegseth drawing parallels between a military rescue and the Resurrection, to Trump posting an AI image of himself as Jesus, the lines between political power and faith keep getting blurred. Then we get into the escalating public feud between Trump and Pope Leo XIV, including Trump's claim that Leo only became pope because of him, Vice President Vance telling the pope to be careful when speaking on theology, and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops pushing back by reminding everyone that the pope isn't freelancing — he's drawing on a thousand years of church teaching on just war. It's a lot. Buckle up. NPR article: https://www.npr.org/2026/04/15/nx-s1-5779690/pope-leo-donald-trump-war-iran-vance-history [https://www.npr.org/2026/04/15/nx-s1-5779690/pope-leo-donald-trump-war-iran-vance-history]

17. Apr. 20261 h 10 min
Episode Jesus the Revolutionary: Jesus's Final Week Through Political Eyes Cover

Jesus the Revolutionary: Jesus's Final Week Through Political Eyes

It's Holy Week, and Matt reads a piece he wrote last year [https://interminablerambling.medium.com/hosanna-save-us-how-we-need-to-think-about-jesus-during-easter-68e0e8ad56df] exploring the political and revolutionary dimensions of Jesus's final week in Jerusalem. Drawing on Howard Thurman's Jesus and the Disinherited, Diana Butler Bass, and Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan's The Last Week, the conversation digs into what "Hosanna" actually means — not a shout of praise but a cry for salvation — and why Jesus's entry into Jerusalem was a deliberate counter-protest to Roman imperial power. They explore how Jesus's first sermon in Luke 4 pointed to the Year of Jubilee, how the "domination system" of political oppression, economic exploitation, and religious legitimation carries into the present, and why growing up Southern Baptist meant missing much of this context. Melissa pushes back, asks questions, and keeps things grounded. They wrap up by sharing what's keeping them sane right now — baseball, hammock weather, bird watching, a dense Irish novel, and the importance of stepping away from the news cycle for your mental health. Books & Authors Mentioned: Howard Thurman – Jesus and the Disinherited; Marcus Borg & John Dominic Crossan – The Last Week; Diana Butler Bass – Christianity for the Rest of Us, Freeing Jesus; Lillian Smith – Killers of the Dream; Anna Burns – Milkman

3. Apr. 202648 min
Episode The Voter Fraud Lie and the Law It Built Cover

The Voter Fraud Lie and the Law It Built

They want you to think the SAVE Act is about showing your ID when you vote. It's not. It's about requiring documentary proof of U.S. citizenship just to register — and when you actually read the bill, the implications are staggering. Your driver's license doesn't prove citizenship. A passport does, but roughly half of Americans don't have one. Changed your name when you got married? You'd need to produce a paper trail connecting your birth certificate to your current ID. Nearly 21 million voting-age citizens don't have a current driver's license. More than 3.8 million don't have the required documents at all. And Kansas already tried this — a nearly identical law blocked over 31,000 eligible voters while catching fewer than 30 non-citizens. Melissa and Matt walk through the Constitution, the history of voter suppression in this country from poll taxes to literacy tests, and the exposed math showing that this bill would actually hurt Republican voters more than Democrats. They break down the lies fueling the whole thing, why Trump is holding DHS funding hostage over it, and the part of the bill almost nobody is talking about — the voter roll purges that could remove you without notice. The episode closes with the Declaration of Sentiments from 1848 and a reminder that the right to vote has never been given freely in this country. It has always been fought for. Every single time. SHOWNOTES: The Hill opinion piece [https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/5797389-congress-trump-save-america/] New York Times article about Kansas' similar law [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/24/us/politics/proof-of-citizenship-voter-registration-kansas.html] BipartisanPolicy.org - 5 Things to Know About the SAVE Act [https://bipartisanpolicy.org/article/five-things-to-know-about-the-save-act/] SAVE Act - full text of bill [https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/22/text] Check Your Voter Registration [https://www.nass.org/can-I-vote/voter-registration-status]

27. März 202652 min