With the End Times Coming, Who Needs State Government?July newsletter... better late than never! Primary election early voting starts tomorrow in Tennessee, and a Donelson Town Hall focused on Briley Parkway next week!“….it’s God’s will.” Stunned, my lips parted ways, and my audible gasp not only caught my attention but also that of those around me. Exiting the House Committee following the Special Disaster Relief committee hearing, I walked past the gaggle of local electeds from Upper Northeast Tennessee who had just testified to the destructive wrath of Hurricane Helene. It was the January 2025 Special Session, entering my second year as a legislator, and my brain hurt rationalizing these government officials’ fixation with the belief that Hurricane Helene, which killed 17 Tennesseans and caused billions in economic damage, was God Almighty embracing our state, preparing for humankind’s last days on Earth.
Eschatology is the study of “end times,” and Christians split into two basic camps on how to read it. Camp 1 believes the Bible’s scariest prophecies (global suffering, believers swept up to heaven, Jesus ruling on earth for a thousand years) haven’t happened yet; they’re still coming, so wars, earthquakes, and disasters today get read as signs the end is near. Camp 2 believes almost all of that prophecy already happened nearly 2,000 years ago, when Rome destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD, meaning Jesus’s warnings were about that event, not ours, and the only things still ahead are his final return and the resurrection of the dead. A year ago this month, black floodwaters ripped through the Texas Hill Country in the middle of the night, killing 137 Texans, including 27 little girls who were campers at Camp Mystic on the banks of the Guadalupe River. For a brief moment, I found myself in a sorority at the University of Texas at Austin, and if you've ever gone through Panhellenic sorority recruitment, you understand that camp politics are class politics. One of my sorority sisters was a Camp Mystic disciple, and as a result of my experience, I’ve become obsessed with the political aftermath of the tragedy. The impacted families, based on their proximity to Camp owners, their religious affiliation, their professional backgrounds, self-selected into two camps, if you will: those that believed the lives of those little girls could have been saved, and their lives were lost due to human negligence, and those who believed losing their girls “was God’s will.” As I stayed up late at night, inhaling each thought piece on Camp Mystic, I knew what was driving the obsession: a deep empathy for the parents who believed that human intervention focused on severe-weather adaptation and mitigation could have saved their lives. The same feeling I had learning about the immigrant workers stranded at Impact Plastics in Erwin, Tennessee, who drowned and died during Hurricane Helene. You see, naming “climate change” as a driver of the intensity of the Guadalupe or Hurricane Helene would require admitting a governable human cause. So, the end-times frame does double-duty: it explains rising disaster frequency without any reference to emissions, infrastructure investment, or regulation, and it makes any climate policy look faithless, an attempt to control what only God controls. I’m not a doomsday prepper like some of my end-times colleagues in the Legislature. But the next decade in Tennessee is going to be dark, and I don’t think we’re prepared for how dark. I’m a nerd who studies history, pays attention to economics, and reads everything Naomi Klein’s writes about “End-times fascism”, and all disciplines settle on the observation that collapse is rarely an accident. It’s a series of choices, made by leaders who always had other options. Currently, our federal and state leaders have decided to pillage and steal from us, creating what economists call a “K-shaped” economy. The rich spend as the Gods intended them to, while the rest of us hobble together 2-3 jobs and spend less and less recreationally, hyper-focused on survival as the safety nets crumble around us (I’ve heard from numerous business owners that business is down 30% across the board…). The Second Gilded Age has arrived, and the Great Depression 2.0 is peeking around the corner…
How this will feel, if we don’t change course:
OK, so now that I’ve laid out my version of the end-times, what’s the plan? Despair is not a strategy, and imagination is a muscle, one that atrophies, unfortunately, under conditions such as these. I’ve spent the last few years in a near-constant state of grief, but I’ve come to understand that as authoritarianism’s most reliable export…not just fear, but exhaustion, the slow attrition of the civic imagination until people can no longer picture anything other than what’s already failing. I’ve decided to treat my grief as information rather than a verdict, and somewhere between mourning and imagining, my interns and I have been dreaming up and building A New-er Deal for Tennessee… details forthcoming. Despite the chronic grief, I find myself overwhelmed with gratitude to be alive, elected, and organizing in this moment, because whatever else this era is, it’s an era for the dreamers, the visionaries, the world-builders… a rejection of the theology of fatalism, and an embrace of a collective, generative, pluralistic futurism.
With hope for the future we deserve, Aftyn PRIMARY EARLY VOTING STARTS TOMORROWYou can’t complain if you don’t vote. I don’t make the rules!!!!! We have some competitive primaries across the state, which you can learn from Senator Oliver’s recent Substack. Yes, I’m on the ballot and running unopposed. For my House District 51 constituents, you can vote for me (or not!) this time and again in November.
Due to Republican shenanigans, your congressional district MOST LIKELY CHANGED. Need information about your congressional voting district? Click below to see your sample ballot and identify which districts you’re in! MY PRIMARY PICKSHere’s the deal. I just don’t have time for unserious candidates anymore. I need elected leaders who are collaborative, willing to do the hard work of capacity-building and training the next generation to shift the tide in Tennessee, and disinterested in chasing cameras and more interested in the tedious, invisible labor of rebuilding democracy. And with that…
DONELSON TOWNHALL NEXT WEEKJoin Councilmember Jeff Gregg, the Tennessee Department of Transportation, Metro Police, Nashville Electric Services, and me for a town hall meeting next Thursday, July 23rd at 6:00 PM at Connection United Methodist Church to discuss Briley Parkway… everyone’s favorite pothole, and of course, the Opry Mills beavers. What I’ve Been Up To This Summer![]() Quick recap, because you deserve to know where your representative has actually been spending her time:
Take ActionSign this petition demanding TN leaders address maternal healthcare!One of my legislative interns created a Change.org petition calling on Tennessee leaders to take meaningful steps in improving maternal healthcare after her experience at the “Monument to Unborn” demonstration. If you want to see anything in this newsletter, please e-mail us at [email protected]. We aim to please and give the people what they want!Rep. Aftyn Behn proudly represents TN House District 51, where she organizes against corruption and corporate greed and for a government that works for us.Donate today to keep Aftyn organizing in Tennessee! |