Town Hall roundup
First, hats off to Congressman McCarthy, his staff, event volunteers and the thousands of people who showed up last night. It was a great opportunity for people to listen, speak and be heard. From my perspective, as someone who has been a part of numerous public hearings and town halls where only a handful show up, it is inspiring to see so many people willing to participate in a policy-related forum. As with the Tea Parties, my hope is that this interest and willingness to participate did not evaporate when the attendees passed through the exit. There are meetings every week where decisions are made that impact the quality of life of local residents. Many of these meetings go on without much attention from the press or the public. I truly believe that if just a fraction of those who attended last night continue to engage at the local level, we as a community would all benefit.

Norman Rockwell’s Freedom of Speech from his Four Freedoms paintings
The roundup:
Nick over at Facenews.org reports “The overall temperament of the Bakersfield town hall meeting on health care reform was mostly well behaved. There were few moments calling for McCarthy’s calmest tone, as only a couple of people jumped up and spoke out of turn.”
Also be sure to check out his pre-town hall video featuring a very suspicious looking squirrel.
Great to see former BakCal reporter, now BakersfieldExpress.com reporter James Geluso at the event. Here is his report.
James writes, “At times the meeting felt more like a rally than a town hall. Angry tirades drew applause, and the angrier they were, the more applause they drew.”
Steven Mayer at BakCal has a report here, while the BakCal front page shows us the angry. (Photo 2 of 9 here is on the print front page with headline “NO THANK YOU!”.)
And I would be remiss to not acknowledge BakCal’s discovery of Planet Stanley. The planet’s existence is not widely known, but it is rumored to be sparsely populated, painfully lacking in natural resources and stubborn in its strong anti-civility stance. Fortunately, I have been in contact with their ambassador and I am assured that they are ardent supporters of civil behavior and even politeness and kind acts from time to time. What the Planet Stanleyians are less receptive to are misguided attempts to correct problems that don’t exist by hoping and praying that the unwashed hordes will find within themselves the strength not to hoot and holler.

Welcome to Planet Stanley, we hope you enjoy your stay.
The Stanleyians join the BakCal in their desire for folks to mind their manners, but the honest citizens of this humble planet just had to correct the record when the paper trotted out four examples of misconduct which were both 1) more complex than they simply stated and 2) giving the distinct impression of angry mobs roaming the countryside. (Of course the Stanleyians were very surprised to find BakCal capture one of these roaming mobs on the front page of, as they described, the daily pamphlet.)
The BakCal found it amusing to juxtapose my harangue against civility with Rep. Moran’s (D) town hall in Reston, VA. So here is some video. And another. WSJ report here. NYT report here. More videos here too. Or watch the whole thing here.

Above is Congressman Moran’s town hall on 8/25/09. Right before it spiraled into chaos I guess.
A few things gleaned from these sources: activist Randall Terry was there to disrupt and after he was removed, things calmed down; Organizing for America (the DNC “grassroots” arm) was out in full force handing out their printed signs and hand-made signs; former DNC Chair Howard Dean was on stage with Rep. Moran and this all took place 20 miles from D.C.. Rep. Moran was so suspicious of one detractor that he had his identification checked before he could ask a question. The man was a local and the Congressman later apologized.
The New York Times leads with “Did anyone think that a highly publicized health care town hall within easy driving distance of Washington would not draw a massive display of Astroturf?”
The bottomline is that if any town hall in America were to fail, this would have been it - easily accessible to special interest groups’ recruits just there to shout down the other side and hosted by strong supporters of the bill, drawing even more intensely passionate counter-arguers. Instead, it ended up 95% civil, just 5% chaos. But those are strictly Planet Stanley numbers.





Sig Rogich



