I have thought about @GovBillLee’s foot-washing event all weekend. It’s important to get the details accurate, because we need to be specific about the toxicity of this stunt. (Of course it’s a 🧵)
1. The obvious place to start is the fact that nobody is masked—not the Gov or 1st Lady, not volunteers or school staff, not the kids.
The calculated defiance of this cannot be overstated, esp w/ a @usedgov investigation, multiple class action lawsuits, & sky-high Covid rates.
2. How did Lee arrive at this caricature of Scripture? Jesus washed the feet of some men...his *disciples*, already in relationship w/ him.
What does this have to do w/ the Governor touching public school kids? What does it imply about consent? biblegateway.com/passage/?searc…
3. Governor Lee & the 1st Lady partnered with Charlotte, NC-based NPO Samaritan’s Feet for the shoe distribution. They do have foot washings with some of their shoe giveaways...but I can’t find them doing it in other schools. samaritansfeet.org
It’s worth noting that the publicity Samaritan’s Feet posted about the event celebrated the partnership w/ Governor Lee as “historic” but didn’t include pictures of the foot-washing.
5. It’s also worth noting that Samaritan’s feet posts expectations for volunteers & staff at events to minimize the potential for spreading Covid.
6. So far:
*blatant disregard for children’s safety amid COVID & ongoing federal investigations/lawsuits
*appropriation of Christian traditions in a public school, regardless of students’ faith/non-faith background
*consent & healthy touch
One more issue that can’t be ignored.
7. Perry County is one of the poorest counties in the nation. Compare its stats with nearby Williamson County, where Governor Lee lives. (Source: tn.gov/transparenttn/…)
Out of 3,113 counties in the US, 261 are poorer than Perry County.
Of those same 3,113 counties, only *4*—in the entire US—are richer than Williamson County.
In his inaugural speech, Governor Lee promised to make a change for TN’s poorest counties.
9. Take a look at FaceBook, & you’ll find school teachers expressing gratitude for the shoes their students were given. Parents, too. It seems a small thing, but a new pair of shoes is out of reach for many living at the poverty level in a right-to-work state.
10. It’s difficult to overestimate the currency of this tangible gift that directly impacts a family’s everyday lives. They won’t remember Governor Lee modeling reckless disregard for public health. If anything, they’ll remember he risked his own health to give their kids shoes.
11. Every time those parents see their kids’ shoes (ie every day) they will remember the Governor gave their kids those shoes. It’s not far-fetched to imagine them handed down w/ care. The next time Lee disparages unemployment wages or federal “handouts”, they’ll overlook it.
12. Having grown up poor, I know this to be true. I couldn’t try out for school sports b/c my parents couldn’t afford another new pair of shoes.
And the shame of being poor makes you disassociate it—you look for anyone in worse straits, and *they* are the poor ones, not you.
13. This is a complex moment, & unless we’re clear-eyed about what’s happening & more ready to help our neighbors than call them stupid, we’re not going to see change.
14. But at *no time* should any child have to be subjected to a life-threatening virus without basic healthcare protection to access shoes & socks for a Governor’s political messiah tour.
When you’re so poor your Governor has to show the world how he washed your feet, it hurts.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Make no mistake. When @nytdavidbrooks says “Somehow [God] seems to want Trump elected, because there’s just been this string of events,” he knows *exactly* who he’s playing to. This is the language of white Christian nationalism. It’s infected @nytimes. Democracy is on the line.
Pay attention at 10:15. @nytdavidbrooks starts, “God is good, omniscient, omnipotent…but He seems to want Trump re-elected” & lists a series of events. He knows it connects with people who see declaration of God’s power as the beginning of a prophecy. 2/ to.pbs.org/3WmH8xB
@nytdavidbrooks How do I know this about @nytdavidbrooks’ words? I grew up in a nondenominational charismatic church started by a Pentecostal pastor in the 70s. I was “anointed” as having the “gift of prophecy,” in 7th grade—elders spoke it on me when I was 12. It’s a formula David leverages. /3
Since David French is trending, a reminder he wrote an op-ed in @nytimes directly quoting from a private vigil for our friends killed in #CovenantSchool shooting, despite many signs posted that said no press allowed & security stationed at the doors. Everyone else honored it.
Instead, let us turn our thoughts today to the prophetic witness of Rev James Lawson, who urged anyone who would listen of the #NonviolentMovementOfAmerica.
Look here, @CommunityNotes. French says in *his* NYT piece he went to a vigil at Christ Presbyterian Church Tuesday 3/28/23, a day after the Covenant shooting. If his wife insists he went to one Monday 3/27, the day of the shooting, I’m not the one lying. nytimes.com/2023/03/29/opi…
You want the origin story for @GovBillLee’s voucher scam? Reconstructionist Rushdooney & Christian leaders met with President Reagan’s Edwin Meese. Rushdooney & Tim LaHaye were furious Reagan would remove tax-exempt status from private schools that segregated on race. 1/
RJ Rushdooney was a reformed Presbyterian (@GovBillLee & @MarshaBlackburn sent their kids to a Presbyterian school), a pioneer of Christian Reconstructionism & the homeschool movement who believed government should be under the lordship of Jesus. 2/ en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian…
@GovBillLee @MarshaBlackburn @brmorris mentions the argument Rushdooney & his friends gave Reagan’s Chief of Staff Ed Meese for their right to discriminate in their private schools—it’s their religious freedom!! We’ve seen this argument again & again since then. 3/
@DPCassidyTKC Intersectionality isn’t a cult, David. When I started advocating for adoptees, intersectionality was the word I learned from Dr Karyn Purvis of TCU, which describes the way different facets of a child’s (or adult’s) live cross one another to create unique & complex needs. 1/
@DPCassidyTKC For my sons, that means that I need to respect that they’ve lost birth family, heritage, language, food, all because of disability; that disability presents unique learning challenges; that the surgeries in their early years carry trauma & anesthesia issues…2/
@DPCassidyTKC Each of those strands intersect to create complex challenges that love or prayer alone can engage. The author of the universe has given us so much; the least we can do is honor God’s own image in one another & why our neighbor’s needs might not be the same as our own. 3/
👀 on @GovBillLee’s Tennessee, y’all! In a Civil Justice Hearing of the #SpecialSession that was *supposed* to focus on gun reform after #CovenantSchool shooting, State Troopers are seizing anything that can be construed as a sign from citizens. Crushing freedom of speech!
And State Troopers were ordered to remove #CovenantSchool parents from the room because even after signs were banned, Tennessee citizens are not allowed to clap in the People’s House.
What’s that, you say? Why yes, the #CovenantSchool parents removed from the room included Katy Dieckhaus, whose 9yo daughter was killed, and @SarahShoop33.
h/t @rhonda_harbison
Here’s the link. (h/t @K12ssdb) I’m not combing through this entire thing today, but because @TNGOP Executive Committee did their little pro-murdering children resolution telling @GovBillLee to end Special Session, this can’t wait. 2/
Here’s a graph of TN school shootings in the last 25 years (since 98/99). The Comptroller includes in the definition any time that a gun is brandished or shots fired on school property & shootings that happen at school sponsored events off campus. (details in report footnotes) 3/