19 February 2013

Hecklers

David Weigel has a Slate article about hecklers:
It's a weekday, which means the bipartisan duo of Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles is re-re-re-re-re-upping their Cassandra campaign for austerity taxes and budget cuts. Even ABC News approaches the new campaign with one eyebrow arched: 
"They’re pushing a re-hashed plan to slow the nation’s debt growth and put it on a more stable path, essentially fitting their old plan into a new timeline and pushing leaders in Washington, D.C., to adopt a piecemeal approach to fiscal reform."
The kickoff started with a Politico piece, followed IRL by Simpson and Bowles at the magazine's Playbook Breakfast. In no time at all, moderator Mike Allen was interrupted by a middle-aged black man walking close to the stage and yelling, passionately and on-message: "Pay yo' damn taxes!" he said, as security politely corralled him. "Pay yo' damn taxes!"
"We'll bring you into the conversation," said Allen diplomatically. Allen tried to continue, letting Bowles introduce the new-old plan, when another middle-aged black man started yelling more slogans: "Some cuts don't heal!" Another ejection, another promise to bring him into the conversation.
Normally, it's bad policy to give hecklers a lot of attention, because it's what they want. But this direct action is part of a campaign that's dogged the Fix the Debt-ers for the better part of a year. The group Our DC was incorporated in April of 2011 by Maryland/D.C. SEIU organizers. I first became aware of the group when it started leafletting my gentrifying neighborhod in northwest Washington, but it didn't go large until it started crashing austerity events.
Our DC tells me that it sent nine activists to the open-to-the-public Playbook event, all unpaid: "taxpayers affected by cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security," according to spokesman James Adams. But it's a bit of a turnabout, isn't it? Fix the Debt aren't incredibly open about their own financing, either. The Our DC folks play on emotion to portray the austerity hawks as callous; the austerity hawks play on emotion to portray "debt deniers" as thoughtless flat-earthers. The upshot: lots of dark money is spent on mutually assured sideshow destruction.

Rico says a local event, but interesting...

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