An America pleading to be heard
By Dan Zak and Terence Samuel
February 22 at 5:26 PM
... Kimberly Wyman was first in line, eight hours early. She wore a black T-shirt with pink letters declaring: A womans place is in the revolution. She represented many of the people who would queue up behind her on Blackstones Main Street: newly involved in politics, hostile to both President Trump and any Republican who supports him, and propelled to action by loose online organizing such as local huddles birthed by Januarys womens march, action plans propagated by the Indivisible grass-roots movement and outgrowths of the Facebook group Pantsuit Nation (like Together We Will).
If you live in a small town, you think no ones going to come and join you and people do, said Wyman, 41, who deals antiques in Spotsylvania County. Her home is at the northern end of Rep. David A. Brats sprawling 7th District, which begins near Culpeper and skirts Richmond on the way to its southern terminus here in Blackstone, 45 minutes from the North Carolina border in Nottoway County.
This is a female-driven movement, said Alsuin Preis, 44, an Irish woman who became a U.S. citizen in August and lives in Richmond. These are female concerns. We were shocked, stunned and horrified that the nerdy, informed woman was pushed aside for the infantile man-boy.
Congress is off this week, which means its constituents are on. During visits to their home districts this month, lawmakers have hosted dozens of town halls and felt the wrath of liberals (and of some conservatives) who are terrified of Trumps divisive rhetoric ...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/at-a-town-hall-in-trump-country-an-america-thats-pleading-to-be-heard/2017/02/22/09b22498-f860-11e6-bf01-d47f8cf9b643_story.html?utm_term=.db0612725372