The town hall was full of Walker supporters, and dissenters. And it was not unruly, it was just loud when the crowd was mistreated and terribly disrespected. It started out that way, and the Congressman and Senator were both rude from the start, assuming a battle would take place, and refusing, from the top, to use a microphone.

[W]e were not protestors; we were constituents who were told we'd have a meeting/conversation with out representatives. That's not what it was, and that was not the crowd's fault. They responded to what they were handed, and loudly disagreed at times.

As far as Sensenbrenner goes, he was grumpy from minute one, but turned on us when a questioner asked him about his relationship to oil companies and how we could trust that our tax payer dollars would be cared for if this were the case. That is where the change [in tone] took place. That is where the story should be.

The protestors were outside, yelling, the rest of the constituents were inside, wanting answers to their questions and receiving token talking points that too often had nothing to do with what they asked---that was the jeering, because we were being played and lied to. (Both reps made inaccurate statements and were being held accountable for that!)