The Stakeholder
Editorials About the Far Right’s “Unruly Mobs” at Congressional Town Halls
As the far right is doing everything it can to silence the conversation about health insurance reform, editorial boards across the country are noting that these "unruly mobs" are not offering any ideas or a debate on the facts - just distractions from this important issue.
Here are some editorials that have been written lately:
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"'It was like he was tarred and feathered and ridden out of town on a rail,' [one of the protesters] said. ‘It was a beautiful thing.' Actually, for anyone who treasures a functioning democracy, where ideas from all sides are respectfully debated, it's a pretty ugly development." [RIP, public discourse?, Post-Standard, 8/5/09]
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"He's absolutely right. There's no place for mob behavior in these kinds of situations, and it shouldn't be tolerated. We always can agree to disagree, but shouting down an adversary won't accomplish anything." [Editorial: No room for mobs, Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter, 8/5/09]
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"The protesters jeer, heckle, wave placards, shout over the speaker and carry on much like the student radicals of yore. Memos that have cropped up on the Web show that these protests are not intended to be any kind of dialogue but purely disruptive, preferably ending with the member of Congress forced to retreat. Videos of the demonstrations almost immediately appear on the Internet. The idea is to make opposition to health-care reform seem more widespread than it really is." [Beware of staged disruptions, Salisbury Post, 8/5/09]








