This morning, the Tennessee secretary of state, Tre Hargett, released an official Q&A [PDF] that his spokesperson, Blake Fontenay, says addresses “what their office has done to implement the Tennessee Voter Confidence Act.” Below is each question and answer. And my answers to his answers.

What is the Tennessee Voter Confidence Act?
The Tennessee Voter Confidence Act is a state law that requires all 95 of Tennessee’s counties to use paper ballots with optical scan voting machines by November 2010.

The law also adds two additional and extremely important provisions to our election law. First, there is a provision mandatory, random hand-counted audits a specific percentage of precincts. The hand-count is in place to catch any problems with the optical scan machines i.e. not counting the ballots correctly. The second provision is that the paper ballot become the ballot of record in the case of a close election or recount. This should be of special interest to both candidates and election officials who want to make sure that the will of the people is done. These two provisions add an additional layer of security and verifiability to Tennessee’s elections.

What is the Tennessee Department of State’s position on the Voter Confidence Act?
The Department of State is committed to helping counties implement the act. There are, however, significant financial and logistical hurdles that counties will have to overcome in order to meet the 2010 deadline.

Not so significant, as you will see.

What’s the advantage in switching to optical scan machines?
Supporters believe the machines make it easier to conduct recounts and verify election results.

What’s will all this “Supporters believe…” stuff?!?! What supporters know is that the advantage of switching to optical scan machines is that we will be switching to PAPER BALLOTS to record the intent of our vote before the optical scan machines even touches it. It’s the PAPER BALLOTS which will make recounts even POSSIBLE and give us verifiable elections results. The touch-scree machines without paper ballots that we use now are not capable of giving a meaningful recount. A recount with the machines we use now consists of pressing the same button and getting the same total every time. And don’t even get me started on verifiable elections with the machines we use now. Our votes now are counted in secret by secret counting software and we have no idea what happens to our vote once it is put into the machines we use now. No idea. Nada. Zip. Zilch.

Does the Department of State oppose the use of optical scan machines and paper ballots?
No. The Department of State already allows Tennessee counties to use optical scan machines if they choose.

Good to know.

Who pays for the optical scan equipment?
The state will pay the cost of purchasing the machines. However, county governments will be responsible for other costs associated with the act, such as ballot printing, ballot storage and election worker training.

The state will pay the cost of purchasing the optical scan machines with federals dollars given to us when the Help America Vote Act was passed. We have 34 million of HAVA funds. 25 million of which will be used to purchase the machines. There is approximately 11 million in extra funds that could be used to offset the costs for each county. That said, no one has of yet given a good reason why the cost estimates used as evidence that implementation of the TNVCA would be cost prohibitive were so wildly disparate. Privacy booths would cost $10.00 each in Haywood County and $750.00 each in Cannon County? Couldn’t we leverage economies of scale here and have all the counties get the lowest cost and then get a discount on top of that for bulk purchases?

Will voters get printed “receipts” that show how they voted?
No. That’s not a requirement of the Voter Confidence Act.

Correct. A “paper receipt” would violate the “vote in secret, count in public” that is the very foundation of our free and fair election system and what we are fighting so very hard to bring back to Tennessee.

What are some of the hurdles to meeting the implementation deadline?
Cost is obviously one, during an economic climate in which many local governments are struggling financially. However, a much bigger issue is the lack of availability of the equipment. The act requires counties to use equipment that meets the security and reliability standards adopted by the federal Election Assistance Commission in 2005. Currently, there are no vendors who sell equipment that meets those standards – in Tennessee or elsewhere in the country. Additionally, the commission’s certification process is very thorough, so it appears there is insufficient time for a vendor to complete that process and become certified before the 2010 deadline.

Cost – see “Who pays for the optical scan equipment.” As for the claim that there is a lack of available equipment – while it is true that the TNVCA requires counties to use equipment certified to the EAC’s 2005 standards, this could have easily been amended during the last legislative session to state that the counties would be required to use machines certified to the EAC’s 2002 standards, of which there are significant amounts. That said, there are additional problems with this statement. First, the EAC’s 2005 standards are almost the exact same as the 2002 standards. The only difference is that some language to accommodate voters with disabilities has been changed. In addition, no machines certified to the 2002 standards were de-certified when the 2002 standards were reissued as the 2005 standards. As a matter of fact, two Tennessee counties are using these machines.

So why did the Secretary of State’s office spend 6 months trying to delay the implementation of the TNVCA when all it had to do was amend the law to include the ability to purchase machines certified to the EAC’s 2002 standards?

More importantly, the answer to this question puts the emphasis of the TNVCA on the wrong element – the machines. The emphasis of the TNVCA has always been on the PAPER BALLOTS, not the machines. We are moving to paper ballots because machines cannot always be trusted to perform correctly – no matter what standards they are certified to.

So what are the alternatives then?
One would be for the General Assembly to lower the security and reliability standards for the equipment. Another would be to delay implementation of the Voter Confidence Act until 2012.

Oh no you didn’t. See above. Requiring machines purchased to the 2002 standards would no be lowering the “security and reliability” of anything. And any attempt to change the TNVCA’s requirement standards from 2005 to 2002 was rejected by the sponsors of the bill that would have delayed implementation – Rep. Curry Todd and Senator Bill Ketron.

Isn’t supporting a delay just a way of killing the act?
Not at all. Anything worth doing is worth doing right. And it makes more sense to take the time necessary to get the best quality equipment rather than settle for equipment that’s less reliable and less secure.

Oh, no. Again no you didn’t. What could possible be less reliable and secure than the machines we use now in 93 out of 95 counties!?!? You know, the touch screen black boxes that take our votes and does God knows what with them in it’s secret little counting software before it spits it out when the machine operator hits the tally button!!! Wait…stop…ok…I’m ok…Again, optical scan machines certified to 2002 standards are not “less reliable and less secure.” They are used in 2 counties in Tennessee and 49 other states.

Is this an issue in which partisan politics comes into play?
It shouldn’t. During the General Assembly’s recently completed legislative session, a bill that would have delayed implementation until 2012 passed the House of Representatives with broad bipartisan support. That bill came one vote short of the constitutional majority needed for passage in the Senate.

But not as much support as the original TNVCA paper ballot bill had in 2008. It passed almost unanimously in the House (3 “NO” votes) and unanimously in the Senate. When given facts instead of excuses – which kept changing – a simple amendment that would have amended the TNVCA could have easily passed.

Instead, the secretary of state’s office spent six months lobbying for a delay.

If the secretary of state had a real desire to give the people of Tennessee the secure and verifiable elections we clamor for, he would have found a way instead of excuses.

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Thanks, Jennifer, for live blogging yesterday’s tea party so I could stay inside where there’s air conditioning.

1 p.m. — Tea party wraps up with stirring suggestion from Phil Valentine to mail golf balls to our lawakers, “because if they don’t have any, we’ll send some to ya.”

12:55 — Freedom yell was intro for Phil Valentine. Hi, Phil Valentine!

12:55 — Again with the freedom yelling.

12:50 — Two more speakers to go. Crowd is urged to consider the Vitamin D they’re absorbing from the blazing sun right now.

Hi, Drew Johnson! Lay some libertarian think tanking on us.

Remember that time Johnson and the Tennessee Center for Policy Research revealed Al Gore’s electric bill to the world? He says they got a dozen death threats after that. Hmm.

12:46: You know who’s having a good day? Hosea the flag vendor. Suddenly those little yellow Don’t Tread on Me flags are everywhere.

Please say you’ll do us a solid and be there to bring the funny again tomorrow…? Thanks! We owe ya one.

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For over four years, Liberadio(!) with Mary Mancini and Freddie O’Connell has broadcast on Vanderbilt University’s WRVU 91.1 FM for two hours, one day per week. Beginning Wednesday, July 1, the popular talk radio show will expand to include an additional live hour every Tuesday through Friday from 9:00 to 10:00 am (CT) on BlogTalkRadio.

BlogTalkRadio launched in August 2006 and is a web-based social radio network which will enable Liberadio(!) to host a live, call-in talk show every weekday. Shows stream live directly from the Liberadio(!) Blog Talk Radio web page and, when finished, are archived automatically and made available at Liberadio.com, iTunes, and other RSS feed readers. More than 1.9 million listeners tuned into BlogTalkRadio in December.

“After every Monday morning show on WRVU, there is still so much to talk about,” says Liberadio(!) senior producer and co-host, Mary Mancini, “We look forward to continuing the conversation with our listeners and special guests every weekday.”

Liberadio(!) on BlogTalkRadio will debut Wednesday, July 1, with local election integrity activist Bernie Ellis, who was recently investigated for making “terrorist threats” by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation at the behest of the Secretary of State.

Upcoming guests also include P.J Tobia, a journalist based in Afghanistan and author of a blog at TrueSlant.com; Betsy Phillips, author of the blog Tiny Cat Pants, contributor to the Nashville Scene’s blog, Pith in the Wind, and upcoming guest blogger at Feministe; Nashville Metro Councillady Emily Evans; Teddy Bart, author and Beyond Reason host; Steve Scarborough, environmental activist and proprietor of RoaneViews.com; and Bob Moser, author of “Blue Dixie: Awakening The South’s Democratic Majority” and Editor of The Texas Observer.

The schedule is:

    Wed, 7/1: Bernie Ellis
    Thursday, 7/2: PJ Tobia
    Friday, 7/3: The Gals About May Town with Betsy Phillips and Councillady Emily Evans
    Tuesday, 7/7: Bob Moser, author of Blue Dixie: Awakening The South’s Democratic Majority
    Wednesday, 7/8: TBA
    Thursday, 7/9: Teddy Bart
    Friday, July 10: Steve Scarborough of Roaneviews.com
    Tuesday, July 14: TBD
    Wednesday, July 15: Wednesday, July 15: Evonne Tisdale from the Center for Community Change; Robert Grant, Jr. of Second Chances, and Nell Levin with Tennessee Alliance for Progress

“Since the terrestrial radio landscape for commercial talk is almost all conservative all the time in our local market,” says producer and co-host, Freddie O’Connell. “It’s been important for us to embrace the Web and online media. This is just one more step in our “Screw You Guys, We’re Doing It Ourselves” business model.

To listen to the Liberadio(!) on BlogTalkRadio, go to http://www.blogtalkradio.com/liberadio every Tuesday through Friday at 9:00 am (CT). To call-in and join the conversation, dial (347) 677-0660.

Since Mary Mancini & Freddie O’Connell began broadcasting together in 2004, they have been voted one of Nashville’s “Best Radio Personalities” in the Nashville Scene’s Best of Nashville Readers’ Poll three times. In April of this year, they were named to Talkers Magazine’s “Frontier Fifty,” a list of 50 talk radio acts that best represent “the important pioneering work taking place in the burgeoning world of internet talk media.” For more information, please contact us at feedback@liberadio.com or visit the website at www.liberadio.com.

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There’s a nice picture of Attorney John Harris, executive director of the Tennessee Firearms Association, on the front page of the Tennessean today.

Apparently, he’s upset because he carries his gun at all times and if Davidson County opts out of allowing permit-holders to carry in parks, he’ll be unable to cut through the grassy area on Church Street to get to his office.

Call the wahmbulance, Harris. At least you have an office to go to unlike more than 10% of your fellow Tennesseans.

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UPDATED from a previous post.

Tonight, Dr. Peter Phillips, director of Project Censored at Sonoma St. University, will be in Nashville to deliver his lecture “Media Democracy in a Time of Truth Emergency.”

The lecture, at 7:30 PM at the First Unitarian Universalist Church, 1808 Woodmont Avenue, is free and open to the public. There will be a Q&A immediately following.

Dr. Phillips was our guest on Monday and you can listen to the interview here.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Project Censored is a media democracy project which has been highlighting the 25 most important stories ignored by the mainstream media through an annual publication and website, including stories such as NATOs consideration of a “First Strike” Nuclear Option, Cruelty and Death in America’s Juvenile Detention Centers or the Seizing of War Protesters’ Assets. The top most underreported story of 2009 according to the project has been the violent deaths of over one million Iraqis since the beginning of the 2003 United States invasion of Iraq.

“Over one million Iraqis have met violent deaths as a result of the 2003 invasion . . .These numbers suggest that the invasion and occupation of Iraq rivals the mass killings of the last century—the human toll exceeds the 800,000 to 900,000 believed killed in the Rwandan genocide in 1994, and is approaching the number (1.7 million) who died in Cambodia’s infamous “Killing Fields” during the Khmer Rouge era of the 1970s.”

Dr. Phillips is a Professor Sociology at Sonoma State University where he teaches classes in Media Censorship, Investigative Sociology, Sociology of Power, Political Sociology, and Sociology of Media. He has published eleven editions of Censored: Media Democracy in Action from Seven Stories Press. Also from Seven Stories Press is Impeach the President: The Case Against Bush and Cheney (2006) and Project Censored Guide to Independent Media and Activism (2003).

Phillips also writes op-ed pieces for independent media nationwide having published in dozens of publications newspapers and websites including: Z magazine, Free Inquiry, Counterpunch, Common Dreams, Buzzflash, Dissident Voice, Social Policy, and Briarpatch. He frequently speaks on media censorship and various socio-political issues on radio and TV talks shows including Talk of the Nation, Air America, Talk America, World Radio Network, Flashpoints, and the Jim Hightower Show.

He has completed several investigative sociology research studies that are available at Projectcensored.org including: The Global Dominance Group: 9/11 Pre-Warnings & Election Irregularities in Context, A Study of Bias in the Associated Press, Practices in Health Care and Disability insurance: Deny Delay Diminish and Blame, US Electromagnetic Weapons and Human Rights, and The Left Progressive Media Inside the Propaganda Model.

For more information about tonight’s lecture, contact Dan Tyler, dantyler@comcast.net, 615 297 3637 or Chris Lugo, christopherlugo@aol.com, 615 593 0304.

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Eleanor Roosevelt

Eleanor Roosevelt

This morning, Election Integrity activist Bernie Ellis emailed me a 1946 newspaper column by Eleanor Roosevelt in which she defends the men of McMinn County, WWII veterans all, who took the matter of free and fair elections into their own hands during the Battle of Athens (TN).

In the column – which The Daily Post Athenian Managing Editor Richard Edwards confirmed did indeed appear in the August 7, 1946 issue – is a general warning against abuse of power aimed at politicians everywhere.

But in light of recent events in which Tennessee’s Secretary of State Tre Hargett sent two TBI agents to pay Mr. Ellis a visit because of a reference he made to the Battle of Athens in a comment on the Nashville Scene’s Pith in the Wind blog, it’s almost as if Mrs. Rooselvelt were reaching up to box Mr. Hargett’s ears from beyond the grave:

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.

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.

If this is a Tennessee version of “A Christmas Carol” playing out before our eyes, who will visit Mr. Hargett next? Step right up, Alice Paul!

UPDATE: The reprint of Mrs. Roosevelt’s column originally appeared in the Athens, TN paper with the following: Editor’s Note — Our attention has been called to Mrs. Roosevelt’s column upon McMinn. She seems to have grasped the facts and significance better than any other outside writer.

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The Tennessee Democratic Party and Organizing for America have put together a kickoff event to begin the push for health care reform in Tennessee tomorrow, Saturday, June 27th, from 8am to 4pm, at Farmer’s Market.

Citizens, advocates, parents, medical professionals, educators, and students will join together to work towards improving the health of the community through fitness, education, and nutrition. More importantly, however, is the opportunity to raise awareness about the urgent need for health reform.

The day will begin with a 1.5 mile walk, followed by a panel discussion featuring health care experts, health care providers, and ordinary Tennesseans discussing their struggles with the current system.

The day will conclude with a Health Care Fair where there will be free preventative health screenings, nutrition consulting, patient education and assistance materials. All events are free and open to the media.

The panel at the event will include Chris Link, a small business owner in Nashville who was forced to lay off employees because he could not afford to cover their health insurance. President Obama recently cited Mr. Link’s story in a speech to the American Medical Association as evidence of how the broken health care system is hobbling our economy. Also appearing on the panel are Landon Gibbs, a former White House Aide under George W. Bush, now Executive Director of SHOUTAmerica, a nonprofit youth-mobilization initiative, Dr. Adrian Samuels, Professor of Health Administration and Science at Tennessee State University, Bonnie Pilon, Senior Associate Dean at Vanderbilt School of Nursing, and Dr. James S. Powers, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University.

Community Walk: 8am to 9:30am
Expert Health Panel: 9:30am to 11am
Health Care Fair & Second Harvest Food Drive: 11 am to 4pm

If you can volunteer, contact Julia Mitchell – julialyn@gmail.com

Other events in TN:

MEMPHIS: Crusade to End Infant Mortality. “Memphis has the highest infant mortality rate among the nation’s 60 largest cities. Our local rate is twice the rate of the national average. Because we believe every baby deserves an opportunity to make it to their first birthday and beyond, we are going to do something about this alarming issue.”

SEWANEE: Sick Around America. “Join us to view the Frontline documentary “Sick Around America”. Following the film, there will be opportunity for dialogue and feedback from the group about health care reform. You will also have an opportunity to share your own personal health care story and information will be available about health care services in our area. Health care reform matters – please join us!”

COOKEVILLE: Give Blood for Health Care. “Blood Assurance is in critical need of type O positive and O negative blood donors. Anyone able to volunteer to donate blood is urged to do so as soon as possible.”

Visit BarackObama.com to find the service event closest to you.

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Best. Rap. Ever.

The Daily Show’s J-Sweat, also known as Samantha Bee’s husband, asks for the bass to drop and then rocks the mic with the best two lines ever uttered in a rap song:

“I’m the world’s greatest rapper in English and Farsi, I’ve got more rhymes than tabbouleh’s got parsley.”

And as Alex Leo writes in HuffPo, Jason Jones’ last report from Iran is both “hilarious and touching.”

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Jason Jones: Behind the Veil – The Kids Are Allah Right
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Jason Jones in Iran
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Earlier this year I wrote of a Republican-led “full court press” against the integrity of our elections in Tennessee. It seemed odd that during their first session in which they controlled both the House and Senate for the first time since Reconstruction, Republicans would carry so many bills that would, if passed, systematically disenfranchise voters of Tennessee.

The bills that got my attention included HB 0639/SB 0150, sponsored by Rep. Debra Maggart and Sen. Bill Ketron, which would have required a photo ID to vote (failed in committee); HB 1838/SB 1999 sponsored by Rep. Curry Todd and Senator Mark Norris, which would have required proof of citizenship to register to vote (failed in committee); and a third, HB 0614/SB 0872 also by Rep. Todd and Senator Ketron, which would have gutted the Tennessee Voter Confidence Act (failed to get a majority of votes in the Senate).

But there’s more. Add to the above the following:

1) Legislation that did pass which added two new Republican members to the State Election Commission thereby giving the GOP a majority two years earlier than they would have had otherwise. Here you can watch Republican Senator Mark Norris threaten to let the Election Commission die if they are not given two more members and the majority on the State Election Commission.

2) The movement by the GOP to push out all the current county election administrators and replace them with more ideologically pure members of their own party. Why does this matter? Well, as Bev Harris over at BlackBoxVoting.org (America’s Election Watchdog Group) tells us, it’s not the votin’ that’s democracy, it’s the countin’!:

“Computerized vote-counting, whether on optical scan or on DREs, with paper ballots or without, is heavily reliant on the computerized compilation done by the central tabulator, which is under direct control of the election administrator and those he selects as IT administrators. These central tabulators have nifty features to allow manual changes in the vote counts. You control the tabulator, you own the election. What is happening in Tennessee is that political parties are choosing to put their own people in control of the computer, based on party affiliation.”

3) An attempt by the Republican Rutherford County Election Commission Chairman, Tom Walker, to violate the state’s Sunshine Laws by banning the press from a county election commission meeting. Mr. Walker, in display that can best be described as slinging ‘tude, says he “doesn’t care what the law says.” Republican Commissioner Dorris Jone added, “We’ve got some crazy laws in this country.” Today, Mr. Walker continued to break the law by denying the media access to the applications submitted for administrator of elections.

4) A suspicious visit to an election integrity activist from the TBI at the behest of the Republican Secretary of State – which smells a little like political intimidation.

These are the machinations we know about. What else might be going on behind the scenes?

*Many thanks to Bruce Barry who saved me another half-hour of trying to come up with a good title for this post.

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Secretary of State Tre Hargett

Secretary of State Tre Hargett

Or perhaps election integrity activist Bernie Ellis is guilty of misuse of a metaphor. But what he is decidedly not guilty of – contrary to the opinion of Secretary of State Tre Hargett – is making a “terrorist threat” against the government of the state of Tennessee.

Yesterday, we posted the story Bernie sent us about his visit from two TBI officers:

I was just visited by two officers of the TBI, investigating a complaint they had received from the Secretary of State’s office (complainant unnamed), saying that I had recently sent an email directly to the Tennessee Secretary of State’s office, threatening violence against that office by invoking the memory of the Battle of Athens (TN). They were here to investigate my “terrorist threat against a government official”.

Well, I’ve never sent any emails to this SoS’s office on any subject, now or at any other time. However, I told the TBI agents that I have several times invoked the Battle of Athens (TN) in my writings as the only alternative available to the citizenry if the sanctity of the ballot box cannot be assured.

Those who know Bernie – and that includes many, many people down at Legislative Plaza – know him to be a smart and passionate activist whose only fault may be that he lacks the editing chip in his brain that most of the rest of us have. You know, the one that renders us, out of fear, unable to say out loud the things we really mean.

Secretary of State Hargett could have found out if Bernie was capable of making a “terrorist threat” by simply asking his State Election Coordinator or one of the many legislators who worked with Bernie on either medical marijuana or election integrity legislation. Mr. Hargett, who spent a lot of time on the House floor this year, surely now knows enough of the same people Bernie does and if he had asked he would have found out that the comment was “Bernie just being Bernie” – passionate, eloquent, and single-minded in his quest to do what’s right for secure and verifiable elections in Tennessee. If he had asked he also would have found out that this type of thing doesn’t quite Bernie down, it fires him up.

Jeff Woods at Pith, God love’em, makes with the follow-up:

Newly installed Republican Secretary of State Tre Hargett sicked the TBI on a political opponent on a trumped-up charge of making a “terrorist threat.” The case is now closed, the TBI having found no justification for Hargett’s complaint. Yes, it matters who governs.

Pith phoned Hargett’s spokesman, Blake Fontenay, for comment today. But guess what? He’d love to talk, of course, but he just can’t. The TBI won’t let him, he says, “because they’re still investigating.” Yes, it’s the old “we never comment on pending investigations” trick.

“I really am not supposed to say anything more than that at this point,” Fontenay apologized. “We’d love to respond but we were asked by the TBI specifically not to respond. There definitely is another side to this, and we wish we could talk about it, but it’s not usually advisable to get the TBI mad at you. My hands are tied at this time.”

So then we phoned the TBI, whose spokeswoman Kristin Helm said basically there is no investigation, and she doesn’t know what Fontenay is talking about.

“We had to go pay Bernie a little visit,” Helm said. “We had a public official who felt as though he was being threatened, who felt there was something floating around in cyberland that was a threat. A couple of agents went to talk to Bernie and pretty much found the threats were unsubstantiated.”

Helm confirmed the public official who complained was Hargett. Asked whether the TBI planned to engage in political intimidation at the behest of state officials, Helm said, “Political intimidation? We went out because he felt threatened and we needed to see if that threat was substantiated or not. I don’t know anything about any political intimidation.”

There’s no doubt that the TBI did what they had to do – they had to investigate the “threat,” especially if the Secretary of State asked them to do so. But the question remains, why Bernie? And why now?

Later, Blake Fontenay did talk – to Tom Humphrey of the Knoxville News Sentinel – who nicely summs up the Battle of Athens:

In the Aug. 1, 1946 “Battle of Athens,” according to an account in the Tennessee Blue Book, “a pitched battle occurred between ex-Gis and supporters of the entrenched political machine of McMinn County.” The veterans basically contended that election fraud was afoot.

Hargett’s defense, according to Fontenay, is that he was worried about a comment Ellis posted last week on Humphrey’s blog: “He was calling something to the TBI’s attention out of an abundance of caution for his employees,” Fontenay says.

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