Michael Berry

Michael Berry

Michael Berry has drunk homemade moonshine from North Carolina with Robert Earl Keen, met two presidents with the same last name, been cussed at by...Full Bio

 

Three Nashville Women Face Charges For Throwing A Football Watch Party

Three young women in Nashville have been issued misdemeanor citations for hosting a football watch party on Halloween.

Police showed up at the home because the party apparently violated government orders that restricted gatherings to no more than 25 people.

Because remember, politicians & public health officials don’t want you gathering in large crowds unless you are either doing it for George Floyd or to celebrate Biden declaring victory.

The Tennessean reports:

“Roommates Madilyn Dennington, Bailey Mills and Olivia Noe, all 23, were issued misdemeanor citations in connection with an Oct. 31 football watch party at their East Nashville home on the 1200 block of Boscobel Street south of Fatherland Street.
Police spokesman Don Aaron said the women were served with court summonses on Monday and are slated to appear on the charges Dec. 16...
When officers spoke to Dennington, Mills and Noe outside, they told police they had organized a watch party at their home for a football game, the affidavit states. The officers told the women that at that time, no more than 25 people were permitted to gather in Davidson County unless the gathering was approved by the city.”
The women then went inside and told everyone to leave, police reported.
Police then alerted Metro Health officials about the party. Hugh Atkins, Metro Health's environmental health services director, confirmed the Health Department did not receive an event application for the gathering.

Amazing how fast many Americans have allowed the government to trample on their rights while outlandishly claiming it is to “keep us safe”.

Outkick’s Joe Kinsey points out that in Nashville “in October, certain events (sports, political, etc.) were allowed to have more than 500 people with approval from the city. Football viewing house parties on private property: nope.”


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