Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) “will take” Americans “rights away,” according to a Minnesota granny and former business owner who was arrested for disobeying lockdown orders during the coronavirus outbreak.
Lisa Hanson, the owner of the Interchange Wine & Coffee Bistro in Albert Lea, discussed how she chose to disobey the lockdown orders and wound up serving a 60-day jail sentence and paying a $1,000 fine. Hanson said she did this after witnessing Walz allow businesses like “big-box stores” to reopen while keeping “mom-and-pop” businesses shuttered.
Hanson refuted the idea that Walz was “this loving, cheerful coach,” as the Haris campaign and mainstream media have attempted to portray him. Walz will be Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate in the 2024 presidential contest, she has said.
According to Hanson, who spoke to the publication, “This is the story that America needs to hear, that Tim Walz is not some cuddly, cheerful coach, like all the things that the MSMs are calling him.” “This man is not that person. This man wants to deny you your rights. He intends to infringe on your rights. Since anyone may have experienced what happened to me, you will experience what occurred to me.
According to the source, the mother of eight children and grandmother of eighteen belonged to an organization called “Open Minnesota,” along with “almost 200” other business owners in the state. They thought that Walz and the Attorney General of Minnesota, Keith Ellison, were acting “in a rogue way beyond the law.”
In December 2020, Hanson opened her company. She told the publication that the state government “came down” on them “with a vengeance,” bringing up six “civil and criminal lawsuits” against her “within 24 to 48 hours.”
Hanson informed the newspaper that she served 60 days of her first 90-day sentence after being “convicted in December 2021 on minor counts.” Hanson continued, saying that she ultimately had to close her company due to “tens of thousands” of dollars in “legal bills and fines.”
Hanson continued, “My family has paid a high price.” My wedding anniversary, Christmas with my family, and one of my grandchildren’s birth were missed while I was in prison. That period will never come back to me. I lost that precious time. My company was ruined. My company is closed. After all those events, Tim Walz and Keith Ellison completely destroyed my business. They completely destroyed me.
Hanson’s interview comes after a former bar owner from Minnesota, who ended up paying more than $300,000 in fines for disobeying Walz’s shutdown orders during the coronavirus outbreak, described the governor as an “evil guy” who “snatched little companies and shredded them up”.
Walz maintained a hotline where people could report on other residents who may have disobeyed his lockdown orders during the coronavirus epidemic.