On Aug 1-2, 1946, the people of Athens, Tennessee, led by WWII vets, exercised their rights, protected under the Second Amendment, and staged an armed revolt against the local criminal elite government.
SOURCE: The Daily Post-Athenian, Athens, Tenn., August 7, 1946; pages 1, 6.
McMinn A Warning — By Eleanor
Roosevelt
New York, Monday — After any war, the use of force throughout the
world is almost taken for granted. Men involved in the war have been trained to
use force, and they have discovered that, when you want something, you can take
it. The return to peacetime methods governed by law and persuasion is usually
difficult.
We in the U.S.A., who have long boasted that, in our political life,
freedom in the use of the secret ballot made it possible for us to register the
will of the people without the use of force, have had a rude awakening as we
read of conditions in McMinn County, Tennessee, which brought about the use of
force in the recent primary. If a political machine does not allow the people
free expression, then freedom-loving people lose their faith in the machinery
under which their government functions.
In this particular case, a group of young veterans organized to oust the
local machine and elect their own slate in the primary. We may deplore the use
of force but we must also recognize the lesson which this incident points for
us all. When the majority of the people know what they want, they will obtain
it.
Any local, state or national government, or any political machine, in
order to live, must give the people assurance that they can express their will
freely and that their votes will be counted. The most powerful machine cannot
exist without the support of the people. Political bosses and political
machinery can be good, but the minute they cease to express the will of the
people, their days are numbered.
This is a lesson which wise political leaders learn young, and you can
be pretty sure that, when a boss stays in power, he gives the majority of the
people what they think they want. If he is bad and indulges in practices which
are dishonest, or if he acts for his own interests alone, the people are
unwilling to condone these practices.
When the people decide that conditions in their town, county, state or
country must change, they will change them. If the leadership has been wise,
they will be able to do it peacefully through a secret ballot which is honestly
counted, but if the leader has become inflated and too sure of his own
importance, he may bring about the kind of action which was taken in
Tennessee.
If we want to continue to be a mature people who, at home and abroad,
settle our difficulties peacefully and not through the use of force, then we
will take to heart this lesson and we will jealously guard our rights. What
goes on before an election, the threats or persuasion by political leaders, may
be bad but it cannot prevent the people from really registering their will if
they wish to.
The decisive action which has just occurred in our midst is a warning,
and one which we cannot afford to overlook.
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