@It Takes Eleven your thoughts as a resident of metro ATL?
Here's what I found intriguing about ATL's situation.
Oath of Office for the Mayor:
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully discharge the duties of the [mayor, president of the council, councilmember] City Council of the City of Atlanta, Georgia. I will not knowingly permit my vote to be influenced by fear, favor, affection, or reward, and in all things pertaining to my office. I will be governed by the public good and the interests of the City. I will observe the provisions of the Charter, ordinances, and regulations of the City of Atlanta, and I will support and defend the Constitutions of the State of Georgia and the United States of America. I am not the holder of any office of trust under the government of the United States, any other state, or any foreign state which I am prohibited from holding by the laws of the State of Georgia; I am not the holder of any unaccounted-for public money due this state or any political subdivision or authority thereof; I have been a resident of the City of Atlanta [and Council District] and am otherwise qualified to hold this office by the Constitution and laws of this State and the Charter and ordinances of the City of Atlanta, so help me God."
Constitution of the state of Georgia (Sec. I, Paragraph VII:
Paragraph VII. Citizens, protection of. All citizens of the United States, resident in this state, are hereby declared citizens of this state; and it shall be the duty of the General Assembly to enact such laws as will protect them in the full enjoyment of the rights, privileges, and immunities due to such citizenship.
Mayor Bottoms commented yesterday that the police "need to remember their oath."
Help me wrap my mind around this one. I don't have the desire to eat at Wendy's often but it sure seems like some lost their right to enjoy their sandwiches. Some, the ability to drive down the road. Other's, the ability to get to their work. Some, their jobs.