South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

A year later, nation still seems split

But in this Virginia town, residents try a big cup of civility

- By Calvin Woodward

LOVETTSVIL­LE, Va. — When Maureen Donnelly Morris came from nearby Leesburg to open her cafe in Lovettsvil­le, neighbors rallied to her aid. Divisions ripping at their town and their country were set aside. America’s thunderous rage felt distant.

People she didn’t know sank posts for her parking signs. They brought lights for the cheery space outdoors, sharpened her bagel-slicing blades and contribute­d plants, all to herald what would become the town’s civil common ground — Back Street Brews.

Forget, at least for a second, red, blue, left, right, pro-Trump, anti-Trump.

In this northern Virginia community of some 2,200 and others like it across the nation, neighborly ways and social ties persist, even in a country that seems to be at war with itself.

It’s a quieter force than all the yelling that is driving Americans apart. But the redemption of a nation and future of its democracy may depend on it as the anniversar­y of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol approaches.

At least in the cafe, says Moe, as she’s known, “You’re allowed to be a Republican and I don’t hate your guts. And you’re allowed to be a Democrat and hopefully you like me if I’m not.”

That sentiment can no longer be taken for granted.

The U.S. is split in nearly every way.

Politics has become “Mortal Kombat, the video game,” said Fiona Hill, who served three presidents as a Russia analyst. “You have to kind of slay your enemy,” she

said. “It’s all basically framed as win-loss, victory-defeat, red versus blue, different factions and shades of blue fighting with themselves.”

That’s the warring America.

There’s another, quieter, America, too.

It asks about the family. It commiserat­es about the water bill and shoots the breeze. It’s a place where people who can be Facebook-nasty are face-to-face polite. Often it meets over coffee.

There’s no question that Donald Trump drove people further into their corners and that the one-two punch of political distancing and social distancing has taken a toll.

Trump and the pandemic “pretty much ripped a

hole through the center of town,” says Kris Consaul, a left-leaning activist and a former Lovettsvil­le planning commission­er.

Into the breach came Back Street Brews, which set up in a building shared with a craft store in late 2017, then expanded in 2021 to fill the space. It became the town’s social hub.

Worship groups, a new-moms’ group and other coffee klatches took root. Political discussion­s pop up, though rarely a heated argument. When you sneeze in one cubbyhole, a stranger in another calls out, “Bless you.”

Consultant Erik Necciai once worked as an aide to Democrats and Republican­s on a Senate committee. He knows about bipartisan­ship.

He’s also handy with a shovel.

So when another neighbor made wooden posts for Back Street’s parking, Necciai bought the concrete, dug the holes and poured the footings.

“It’s very hard to have conversati­ons nowadays in public spaces,” he said.

But he said cafe patrons recently fell into a discussion about U.S. relations with Russia and China. “Everybody’s opinion was greatly accepted,” he said. “I think we need a little bit more of that.”

Jessica Sullivan, a tarotcard reader who also works at Back Street, agrees: “I don’t need anybody to think the same things that I think in order for them to be a good person to me.”

Still, Sullivan said, “we do have a kind of dark undercurre­nt at times” in the town.

In one provocatio­n, a pro-Trump parade that came through town during the 2020 campaign diverted off the main street and stopped outside the home of Consaul and her wife, blaring horns to intimidate them.

The parade was an overt sign of friction.

But behind the shield of social media, where you can spout an opinion and not have to look someone in the eye, the tone has been rabid.

On Facebook, “people feel more free to just say whatever they want and attack,” said a woman whose yard displays the pro-Trump sentiments of her husband and herself. “I’ve heard it all.”

She asked not to be identified because of local tensions.

Off Facebook, she doesn’t hesitate to visit Back Street, sizing up Moe as “definitely down the middle.”

“We take our little one for milkshakes and things like that,” she said.

So do the radical lefties. So do the just plain people.

They’ll all shoot the breeze, ask about family, complain about the water bill or something. That’s America for you. “It’s affecting people,” Moe said of the perils of this era. “Not me. Not in my bubble. We’re going to be fine, everyone! We’re going to land on our feet in my coffee bubble.”

 ?? CAL WOODWARD/AP ?? Cafe owner Maureen Donnelly Morris chats with customers at Back Street Brews in Lovettsvil­le, Virginia.
CAL WOODWARD/AP Cafe owner Maureen Donnelly Morris chats with customers at Back Street Brews in Lovettsvil­le, Virginia.

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