The Tennessee Anti-Racist Network, The organization that formed around opposing the American Renaissance Conference earlier this year just outside Nashville is getting stronger, and today they showed the League of the South just how much stronger!
The Tennesseean
MURFREESBORO — Counter-protesters Saturday outnumbered rallying League of the South members 2-to-1 at a demonstration the group said was meant awareness about the displacement of Southern people.
Michael Cannon of the activist group Statewide Organizing for Community Empowerment said the more than 125 counter-protesters were a testament to the way most people in Rutherford County would feel about the League of the South, described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a racist neo-Confederate group.
“It’s important to take a stance against racist, extremist and fascist groups like the League of the South,” said Cannon, who is also a student at Middle Tennessee State University.
David Jones, Tennessee chairman for League of the South, said the group was not a white organization, but a Southern organization.
“There’s a matter of racial pride,” said Jones, who lives an hour west of Nashville in Lobelville. “It’s not racism. You have to get inside someone’s head to determine what is and what is not racism. And it’s very hard to get inside each others heads unless we really know each other.
“There are some people who believe in the purity of having their race. … Personally, I’ve got two nephews and niece that are half-black. My own grandchildren, their father is a good ole’ Mississippi boy, and obviously my daughter is white. I’ve got white grand babies, and I like it that way. People are allowed to have a preference.”
The League of the South also held its rally to show public disagreement with Somalian refugees living in the Middle Tennessee area, according to Michael Hill, president of League of the South.
“We’ve been dumped with by the government a bunch of refugees,” said Hill, who lives in Killen, Ala. “There’s the controversy with the (Murfreesboro) mosque, and there’s the controversy with Tyson foods (in Bedford County) hiring a lot of illegals. And we’re here to protest that, to show the people who have been here for generations of families that there’s somebody here who supports them and opposes the demographic and cultural changes that will come when you dump a completely new population into an area.”
Emily Mitchell, a first-grade teacher at David Youree Elementary in Smyrna, said she came to counter-protest League of the South because she wanted her students to know she supported all of them.
“I’ve had the privilege and honor of working with all sorts of diverse students and families,” Mitchell said. “They’ve taught me so much more than I’ve taught them.”
She added that she thought the group felt displaced because their views “are becoming more and more of a minority. They assume that if they shout louder that people will still know they’re there. But we, on the other hand, are also shouting to let people know that we’re here to be a voice for Tennesseans who don’t feel that way.”
Michael Cushman, chairman for League of the South in South Carolina, organized the rally and said the group was not against “foreigners, Iraqis or Somalis. But Somalis have a country and that’s Somalia. That’s their homeland. We have ours and that’s the South. … We’d like to see a free South.”
“(Secession) could take many different forms, to be honest,” Cushman said. “I generally don’t get in to the specifics of it; it’s more the idea that we’re promoting right now. Basically, we’re just working on Southern nationalist awareness. I think the original 13 states would be a good start. We just need a place of our own.”
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