Article 6WA59 The Reckoning At The Town Hall

The Reckoning At The Town Hall

by
Mike Masnick
from Techdirt on (#6WA59)
Story Image

Thefootageis hard to watch-not because it's shocking, but because it isn't.

Because we've seen this coming.

Because we'vewrittenit down.

Because it's what happens when performance fully replaces governance, and people are asked to believe that DOGE" and efficiency" and Musk" now constitute anew political grammar.

Rep. Victoria Spartz stands in front of her constituents at a town hall in Indiana.

She talks about Elon Musk running government systems.

She invokes the Department of Government Efficiency - a shell entity, a fever-dream turned administrative body.

And she isbooed.

Not politely disagreed with. Not civilly challenged.

Booed.

She tells them they should have a conversation."

But they've seen enough.

They're no longer there for conversation.

They've come-as someone once said-for a reckoning.

Because this isn't about decorum anymore.

It's not about whether the line of questioning is appropriate or whether the tone is right.

It's about the slow, quiet realization that the thing they thought they were part of-

government, democracy, accountability-

is beingreplaced.

Replaced with tweets and deferrals.

With tech visionary" as a synonym for unaccountable executive power."

With a Department of Government Efficiency that answers to no one.

With decisions made inside encrypted group chats where war plans get shared by accident.

With a Treasury system reportedly more innovative" now that it's not public.

And when a member of Congress defends this -

defends it by invokingdogecoinas the marker of progress -

something in the room breaks.

Not trust. That's already gone.

What breaks is thespell.

The illusion that there's still a shared script.

That the adults are still in the room.

That this is all just part of the process, that it's still governed by rules.

No.

This is not a conversation anymore.

This isthe circus, unmasked.

And so they boo.

Not because they're disrespectful.

But because they'remourningsomething that used to be sacred.

They boo because the wire snapped, and the performer pretended nothing happened.

Because the tent is tilting, and the ringleaders are pointing to the lighting rig and saying,

But look how efficient it is."

What Spartz fails to understand is that this town hall wasn'tdisorderly.

It wasthe return of moral rhythm.

The refusal to remain audience members to their own disenfranchisement.

They didn't come to be spoken to.

They came tospeak.

And their voices-those strained, unpolished, interrupted voices-were the onlytruethings in the room.

So let this be theNote, passed quietly after the shouting.

Let it carry this message:

The people are not fooled.

They see the circus for what it is.

And they know that meaning, once abandoned, cannot be governed by efficiency.

Two plus two equals four.

There are twenty-four hours in a day.

And even here-amid the clamor, amid the spectacle-

the truth still wants to be heard.

Even in a room that couldn't speak it.

Especiallythere.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at hisNotes From the Circus.

External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location https://www.techdirt.com/techdirt_rss.xml
Feed Title Techdirt
Feed Link https://www.techdirt.com/
Reply 0 comments