This Ain't 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]
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