We’re happy for our fellow Nashvillians who were able to make the trip to D.C. to witness history, but we don’t envy them their standing outside in the frigid air and, in the Twitter of one Tennessee State Senator, “Wearing so many layers that, within the margin of error, I have zero range of motion.” Brrrrrrrrrrr.

If you are in D.C. and need info about tomorrow’s Swearing In Ceremony, you can go to the official Presidential Inauguration Committee website. If you’re still in Nashville and are looking for a front row seat to the festivities, head on down to the Belcourt Theatre where they’ll be showing the event on the big screen.

Nashville for All of Us, a coalition of over 70 local organizations working together to defeat the English-only Amendment, is hosting the free event, which will begin at 9:00 am Central Standard Time when Inauguration festivities start on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol. A live video feed will run until Noon, when President Obama completes his Inaugural Address.

Again, there is no admission fee, but to honor Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy and today’s National Day of Community Service, guests are asked to bring a children’s book (new or gently used) for a book drive for Book’em and the Pencil Foundation, or donate to the Visitation Hospital Foundation, a Nashville charity that runs a hospital in Haiti.

The Belcourt concessions will be open for business and guests can purchase food and refreshments.

The broadcast should include all of tomorrow’s regularly scheduled events.

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We’ll Never Discuss This Again

Last night, I saw 4 months 3 weeks & 2 days at the Belcourt. I’ve written before about the difficulties of discussing abortion, and this movie puts those difficulties front and center in examining a scenario in late 1980s Romania under a repressive regime that outlawed abortion.

An anti-choice friend of mine once described abortion to me as “an inconvenience,” and I wonder what her perspective of this movie would be. There’s no exploration of how the pregnancy in question occurred, only that it is unwanted and leads to desperate measures. I think the lengths to which it is implied that women in this era would go to get an abortion strikes right at the heart of the notion that unwanted pregnancy is a mere “inconvenience.” It’s not a comment on a moral absolute, but it is a strong comment on the desperation that affects people experiencing more than “an inconvenience” on their own terms, if not those of the anti-choice community.

Considering the amount of overlap between the anti-choice and anti-immigrant communities (at least in terms of voting blocs), I’m curious about whether there is enough compassionate conservatism to accept the unwanted children of poor foreign nations? This is the same community, after all, that constantly votes to undo our welfare state. To me, there’s a lack of consistency in the democratically expressed world view of the anti-choice community.

I remain, by my own definitions, vigorously pro-life. And continue to wonder at how those who use that term for different purposes condone so much warmongering and gun-love from their elected leaders.

Anyway, I’m disappointed that I missed last year’s Lake of Fire, which also played at the Belcourt, as I understand it was a nice accounting of both sides of the debate. Still, for a thought-provoking look at abortion in a context that seems designed to evoke empathy, 4 months 3 weeks & 2 days is worth a careful look.

Unlike the poor protagonists from this movie, I think we will discuss this again.

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