KINGSPORT — You’ve insulted our honor and we demand satisfaction. That pretty much sums up the response from barkeeps and bartenders along Long Island’s (New York) famed Nautical Mile to Kingsport’s recent “reclaiming” of the title “birthplace of the Long Island Iced Tea.” On Tuesday, Visit Kingsport — the Kingsport Chamber’s tourism arm — hosted an event to announce it was reclaiming the Model City’s rightful status as birthplace of the “original Long Island Iced Tea.” Samples were served and the story was told of how “Old Man Bishop” created the “original Long Island Iced Tea” on Kingsport’s Long Island in the 1920s — with his son Ransom making revisions in the 1940s. On Thursday, media nationwide received a press release from a New York firm announcing that state’s Long Islanders did not take kindly to Kingsport trying to steal their spotlight, repeating the long-established story that the Long Island Iced Tea cocktail known worldwide since the days of disco was created at a bar on their turf in the 1970s by “Rosebud” Butt. By mid-afternoon, the fight was on CNN. At the Kingsport Chamber, Visit Kingsport Marketing Manager Amy Margaret McColl was fielding calls from across the country and drafting an official reply while waiting on an actual copy of the letter from New York to arrive.