Dem Candidate Sobs Like Toddler After Being Thrown Out Of Gov’s Office
Democratic Tennessee congressional candidate Aftyn Behn was dragged out of the office of Republican Gov. Bill Lee as she screamed and sobbed during a 2019 protest, according to resurfaced footage.

Behn and other women with the activist group Enough Is Enough Tennessee staged a sit-in inside the state capitol and demanded to speak with Lee about calling for the resignation of then-Republican state Rep. David Byrd, who faced allegations of sexual misconduct, The Daily Caller reported.
The incident occurred on April 17, 2019, when the doors to Lee’s office briefly opened, and the women attempted to rush inside. Security officers blocked the group and removed Behn from the office.
NewsChannel 5 Nashville posted footage of Behn screaming loudly as security dragged her away.
She then fell to her knees and sobbed on the floor as officers continued clearing the hallway. State troopers threatened to arrest the group if they refused to leave the building.
Several of the women complied with the order, but Behn and a few others refused and were arrested shortly after.
One month later, additional footage from the 111th General Assembly Meeting showed Behn shouting from the wing of the state House chambers and demanding Byrd’s resignation.
Security escorted her from the chamber, issued her a citation and released her that evening.
Behn is now running against Republican candidate Matt Van Epps, a former commissioner in the Lee administration, in the special election for Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District.
The special election will be held on Dec. 2 following the resignation of former Republican Rep. Mark Green.
It gets worse for Behn.
Behn was confronted on MS NOW about a series of now-deleted tweets in which she appeared to advocate dissolving the police department during the summer of 2020 at the height of the George Floyd riots, The Blaze reported.
One of the tweets read, “Good morning, especially to the 54% of Americans that believe burning down a police station is justified.”
“Yeah, I’m not going to engage in cable news talking points,” Behn said when questioned about her comments.
“But what I will say is that, you know, our communities need solutions. We need local people deciding … solving local problems with local solutions … and that’s not the overreach of a federal government or a state government of which we are dealing with in Nashville and our cities across the state.”
The MS NOW anchor pressed Behn multiple times to clarify whether she supported the sentiment expressed in the tweet.
She declined to give a direct answer.
“Once again, I don’t remember these tweets,” Behn said.
This is not the first time Behn’s past remarks have drawn scrutiny.
She previously expressed frustration and disdain for Nashville, the city she is now running to represent in Congress.
“I hate the city, I hate the bachelorettes, I hate the pedal taverns, I hate country music, I hate all of the things that make Nashville, apparently,” Behn said during a 2020 appearance on the “Year Old GRITS” podcast.
“I hate it.”
In a video posted to X on Thursday, Behn appeared to back away from those comments, saying she takes issue with “the bachelorettes” and “pedal taverns” but ultimately blamed Republicans for the controversy surrounding her remarks.
you know WHEN LORETTA LYNN AND CONWAY TWITTY SAID GOODBYE WITHOUT KNOWING IT: Their Final Duet And Emotional Words To Fans Became A Moment That Would Later Leave Country Music Lovers In Tearsyou

There are certain moments in music history that only reveal their true emotional weight years later. At the time, they seem ordinary — another concert, another duet, another warm exchange with loyal audiences. Yet with the passing of time, those same moments begin carrying an entirely different meaning, transforming into painful reminders of how quickly life changes without warning.
That is exactly what happened during the final duet shared by Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty.
For decades, the two country legends had created one of the most beloved musical partnerships in American music history. Their voices blended with remarkable emotional chemistry, balancing humor, tenderness, heartbreak, warmth, and realism in ways that made audiences feel they were listening to two people who genuinely understood the emotional complexities of ordinary life. Together, they produced songs that became part of family memories, road trips, dances, heartbreaks, and quiet evenings across generations of country music listeners.
Yet during one particular performance near the later years of their time together on stage, something quietly unforgettable unfolded — though no one present fully realized it in that moment.
The audience initially responded the way they always had whenever Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty appeared together: with admiration, familiarity, and affection built through years of shared musical history. There was laughter, applause, warmth, and the comforting feeling of watching two legendary voices reunite once again before devoted admirers.
But what audiences did not know was that this would become their final duet together.
That realization only arrived later, after time transformed the performance into something heartbreaking.
As the two legends stood side by side singing together one last time, there was reportedly an unusual emotional tenderness in the atmosphere. Their interaction carried visible warmth and mutual respect developed through decades of collaboration and friendship. Nothing about the performance appeared theatrical or overly dramatic. In fact, part of what makes the moment so emotional today is precisely how natural and sincere it seemed.
Near the end of the performance, both artists reportedly offered heartfelt words of gratitude to the fans who had supported them throughout the years.
At the time, those remarks sounded like the kind of affectionate appreciation longtime performers often express toward loyal audiences. But after Conway Twitty’s passing, listeners returned to those final words with entirely different emotions. Suddenly, what once sounded ordinary began feeling painfully symbolic — almost like an unintended farewell none of them realized they were witnessing.
That emotional shift transformed the performance forever.
For many country music admirers, revisiting the duet today feels almost unbearable because of the innocence contained within the moment itself. Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty smiled, sang, joked gently, and thanked the crowd without knowing they were creating a memory that would later become associated with goodbye, absence, and the end of an irreplaceable musical era.
There is something deeply human about that realization.
Life rarely announces its final moments clearly while they are happening. Most people do not recognize the last conversation, the last song, the last embrace, or the last shared stage until long afterward. That universal truth is part of what makes this final duet resonate so powerfully even decades later.
For older audiences especially, the emotional impact remains profound.
Many listeners who grew up with Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty understand how closely music becomes tied to personal memory over time. Their songs accompanied marriages, heartbreaks, family struggles, celebrations, and entire lifetimes of emotional experience. Watching the final duet now often feels like revisiting not only the end of a musical partnership, but also the passing of an entire chapter of life itself.
What made Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty so beloved together was never technical perfection alone.
Their performances felt emotionally genuine. They understood how to sing about love, conflict, humor, regret, and devotion in ways that reflected the emotional realities ordinary people recognized from their own lives. Audiences trusted them because they sounded authentic — never distant from the experiences they were describing through music.
That authenticity made their final duet even more heartbreaking in retrospect.
There was no dramatic farewell speech. No announcement signaling finality. No attempt to create historical significance. Instead, there was simply music, gratitude, and two legendary performers sharing one more evening with the audience that had loved them for so many years.
And perhaps that quiet simplicity is precisely why the memory continues affecting country music lovers so deeply today.
Because beneath the applause and familiar melodies stood something timelessly human: two friends and musical partners unknowingly saying goodbye to one another, to the audience, and to an extraordinary era of country music history without realizing the moment would never come again.
Long after the final notes faded away, the emotional meaning of that duet only grew stronger.
What once felt like another beautiful performance eventually became something far more powerful — a final shared memory preserved forever through music, carrying the bittersweet reminder that some of life’s most important goodbyes happen softly, without anyone recognizing them until it is already too late.