#town hall

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Film arriving at the Sioux Center Town Hall which doubles as a movie theater (Joe Scherschel. 1948)

Film arriving at the Sioux Center Town Hall which doubles as a movie theater

(Joe Scherschel. 1948)


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This weekend’s First Saturday is now at capacity!

While First Saturdays are free, we’re trying something new and requiring advance registration so we can help manage crowds.

We’ve waited two years for the return of #FirstSaturdaysBkM and we’re so excited to see those of you who registered for performances by Isa Reyes, Bathe, and The Lay Out, hands-on art making, pop-up talks, a special town hall with central Brooklyn’s newest City Council members, and more!

If you didn’t manage to register for April’s event, please look out for upcoming announcements to register for events this summer!

Admission is subject to capacity at the time of registered visitors’ arrival and is first come, first served. If you’re not feeling well on the day of the event, please stay home.

#brooklyn museum    #brookyn    #museum    #firstsaturdaysbkm    #performance    #town hall    #community    
Throwing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with styThrowing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with sty

Throwing it back to First Saturday. Thank you all for helping bring back #FirstSaturdaysBkM with style and safety last weekend!⁠

Here are just a few of our favorite moments including: VIVA Brooklyn! on the Plaza with Mel Chin, participants creating Fundred Dollar Bills, a special town hall in the Auditorium, performances by Isa Reyes and Bathe, and guests gathering in the galleries.⁠

We’ll be back with another exciting program in May, so look out for future announcements to register for free. Until next time!

Kolin Mendez


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sometownie:

Welcome to Whitewave’s Town Hall!

The Town Hall is among the first buildings that were ever built around the area, and the then owners and inhabitants of the house were also the founders of Whitewave. As the town grew, the family gave their house to the use of the town’s sims, as it had already been treated as a center of the community.

The building has been renovated in a way that serves modern day sims, but still respects the original architecture and style of the house. The services provided today include:

  • Mayor’s office
  • Employment office
  • City planning office
  • Auditorium
  • Library
  • Café
  • General information and ticket sales

The mayor’s office is located at the top of the building, but after mayor Benny Black stepped down the position has not been filled yet and the office remains empty.

The Town Hall faces towards Whitewave River from where the town gets its name. Whitewave’s central park - the Bella Goth Park by its official name - is located on the Town Hall’s property, but it has been untended for for years.

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Basically, I needed a community lot where I can place the 4t2 Jobs Cork Board so I built this littlelot. This is the second time I’m building this, because the original was located in a lot with wonky terrain and it was literally impossible to place it anywhere.

Mayor Brandon, in a frenzy for the perfect town.  Isabelle, you’re on sleep duty this time.  We’ve g

Mayor Brandon, in a frenzy for the perfect town.  Isabelle, you’re on sleep duty this time.  We’ve got a mission to see through.

With enough pep to keep you focused ‘til sunrise, this illustration commissioned by @marioguy28 was such a rad piece to work on!  Definitely a favourite town hall scenario – I love the idea of a super cluttered but lively mayor’s office.  Ya gotta break that seat in proper!


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A bit random but I love phone cases. When I make those big purchases like a Jean Jacket or like an i

A bit random but I love phone cases. When I make those big purchases like a Jean Jacket or like an iPhone etc, I always find a way to add a personal touch to them. Whether its a patch, changing the color or simply adding accessories. When it comes to my iPhone, I am all about hooking it up with a case. I don’t care so much about adding those thick Otterbox like cases, but more like some color, some style. I hate items with big logos on it or the cliche water in the case with glitter like no no no. I like simple solid colors, but I also like adding some unique design or drawing. Something that you wouldn’t normally see in the store.

Aliexpress comes hand and hand with my aesthetic. They carry a ton of phone cases and the best part about it, it’s mostly free shipping on most orders and the cases are dirt cheap and many are quite unique with their own designs. I buy the cases varying from $2 to $5. Since they ship from China, they take awhile, but you won’t be disappointed once they arrive.

Pictured is one of my favourite cases which I’ve bought from Ali Express and to this day has gotten so many compliments. Like its simple, sleek and unique in style. Be careful with not all of the cases are made of good material, but if you want something different, yet don’t care too much about the quality of things, this is just for you.


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We also decorated a bit for Christmas. In these photos we have the town hall, as well as some housinWe also decorated a bit for Christmas. In these photos we have the town hall, as well as some housin

We also decorated a bit for Christmas. In these photos we have the town hall, as well as some housing 


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Fox News hosted a town hall with Bernie Sanders on Monday, and I decided to watch it. Here are my impressions and takeaways:

Audience Reception on the Issues

The town hall took place in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, described by Fox News anchors Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum as an industrial town with a closed steel plant that voted for Obama and then voted for Trump. These are swing voters who Bernie Sanders should appeal to on issues like trade and workers’ rights. And, to be certain, when NAFTA, CAFTA, and TPP were brought up, the audience sided strongly with Sanders.

But on other issues, even though this town hall aired on Fox News, the audience was often very supportive. This might have best been illustrated by one of the most interesting moments of the town hall: Bret Baier asks the crowd how many of them have private work-provided health insurance, by a show of hands. Many hands raise. When asking the crowd whether they would want Medicare for All, more hands shoot up, some people stand, and some vocalize their support, as well. This is, I’m sure, not what Baier was expecting, because one of the arguments used against universal healthcare, often framed disingenuously, is that people want to keep their private insurance. The audience responded very positively to the idea of having stable, ongoing coverage.

Later, I was surprised by how loudly the crowd applauded the following comment:

“The American people, I think, are ready to deal with justice in America. That is what we’re fighting for. And that’s economic justice, social justice, environmental justice, racial justice.”

Even though this was a Fox News town hall with attendees who appeared to be mostly white, the audience got really excited and loud when Sanders brought up racial justice. From that point through the end of the town hall, it was fairly clear that the majority of those in attendance supported most if not all of what he had to say. Viewers could hear Bernie chants here and there, particularly in the second half of the telecast. Towards the end of the town hall, one of the hosts was booed for asking if Bernie supported prisoners having voting rights for his own political benefit. When he was given an opportunity to provide a closing remark, he and the audience engaged in some call and response, and he was sent off with repeated chants of Bernie.

The message

The case Bernie Sanders made was for a politics and a movement for the working class. He’s advocating for a positive agenda that benefits all workers. In many ways, he appealed to liberal Democrats: he proactively discussed climate change, he discussed suppressing black people’s voting rights, advocated for universal healthcare, challenged the demonization of immigrants, and he didn’t criticize other Democrats when given a chance while criticizing Fox News. But he also advocated for policies further to the left of Democratic Party dogma: he criticized the military industrial complex and the Pentagon for refusing to do an audit and for wasting incalculable amounts of money, he called on us to “rid the world of nuclear weapons,” he said it’s not anti-Semitic to criticize Israel, and he brought up poverty over a handful of times, even mentioning childhood poverty. And that’s where the strength of Bernie’s campaign lies: appealing to the shrinking middle class on standard Democratic issues while also appealing to the poor and working classes of all ethnicities, and he was particularly effective in advocating for inclusive class-based politics and policy, even on Fox News.

What the town hall achieved

First,he looks like the front-runner and a leader. He was criticized by the center and the Democratic Party for appearing on Fox News, and he was criticized by some of my compatriots on the left for platforming Fox News. I see the merit in the latter argument, but Fox News is mainstream and has been for a long time. I’d be concerned if he went on Tucker Carlson, but that’s not what this was. That said, being a leader means making choices you think will be beneficial even when the decision is unpopular. Effective leadership also means walking the walk: Bernie Sanders is about working class politics; refusing to go on Fox News does, to some extent, leave out a platform where some of the working class goes for news–even if the outlet itself is a horrible news source. Trump won the votes of some Americans who voted for Obama; failing to try to bring those voters back into the fold would be political malpractice.

Finally,Sanders effectively demonstrated that he can take on Trump. At multiple times during the broadcast, he spoke directly to Trump: when he brought up his support for staying out of Syria and Yemen and ending endless warfare, he called on Trump to sign the measure he introduced to end America’s support for Yemen. He also went after Trump’s hypocrisy of refusing to cut Medicare on the campaign trail but then proposing budgets that support Medicare and other social insurance programs. At multiple times during the town hall, he positively contrasted himself with Trump. Democrats and many independents–and some Republicans–want to envision a candidate who can emerge victorious against Trump. Bernie’s performance could help some of those voters envision that.

Was his appearance effective?

Press coverage suggests it was. Here’s a sampling of headlines:

  1. “Bernie Sanders may have just set the model for 2020 Democrats with his Fox News town hall” -The News-Times
  2. “Sanders takes on Fox” - and emerges triumphant -Politico
  3. “Bernie Sanders Beat Fox News on Its Own Turf” -Spin
  4. “How wide is Bernie Sanders appeal? This cheering Fox News audience is a clue” -The Guardian
  5. “Bernie Sanders Shines on Fox News” -The National Review
  6. “Bernie’s victorious Fox News town hall” -Vice
  7. “Bernie Sanders on Fox News is Most-Watched Town Hall of 2019″ -The Wrap

What could he have done better?

The first ten minutes of this town hall were particularly combative, and I think that largely stems from the initial focus on Bernie’s tax returns, which revealed him to be a millionaire, and possibly his desire to ensure that he articulated clearly that he is not on board with Fox News as a media organization. While the line of questioning about why Sanders wouldn’t just send his tax cut from Trump back–even though he voted against the bill–is completely asinine, I would like to see him come up with a better answer to what he’s doing with his newfound wealth. Ultimately, though, I think this is a debate of minimal consequence. You can certainly support policies that benefit the 99% without actually being in the 99%. Sanders, as he pointed out, also supports taxing himself at a higher level. And I think most people can draw a distinction between the Clintons, Donald Trump, Jeff Bezos, and others and how they generated their wealth versus how Bernie made his. And, not to forget, the very real degree of separation in their wealth.

And while I think that Bernie has improved on his messaging around foreign policy and developed a better vision of what that would look like, he didn’t proactively bring up foreign policy in the first half of the event. Mostly, I’d like to see him connect what’s happening at the border with our foreign policy. He said that people are desperate and “fleeing violence and misery in Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala.” This is true. He said we need more immigration judges. That’s also true. But he needs to then say that we need to stop intervening in the affairs of these countries and using diplomacy to support stability and economic growth throughout the Americas by supporting workers’ movements at home and abroad.

Final Thoughts

If you know me or were aware of my blog during the 2016 election, you know that I was a strong Sanders supporter and that I volunteered for his campaign. Over the past few years, my political views have shifted more to the left, and I’ve developed more criticisms of Sanders. In spite of that, I did come away from this town hall reminded of the appeal of the Sanders campaign: one that could represent a shift towards an inclusive working class policy focus and movement building, and away from a divisive Red State/Blue State paradigm.

I haven’t made any kind of endorsements for 2020 because, again, it’s too early, and there are many candidates running who will be out of the race a year from now. However, it was difficult not to come away from viewing the town hall with some combination of familiarity and inspiration. One could say I was feeling the Bern…

Afternoon Amsterdam. by seojoseok

Afternoon Amsterdam. by seojoseok


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Nearly half of Republicans have yet to hold a public town hall since Donald Trump took officeIt’s be

Nearly half of Republicans have yet to hold a public town hall since Donald Trump took office

It’s been 231 days since Donald Trump became the 45th president of the United States. In that time, nearly half of Republicans in Congress have still not held a public town hall with constituents.That’s according to the latest data from Town Hall Project, a group that tracks when and if members of Congress hold a public town hall.The August recess, in particular, is typically a time when representatives and senators meet with constituents. Read more. 

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Sandomierz 2022

Câmara Municipal (1970) in Santo Tirso, Portugal, by Agostinho Ricca

Câmara Municipal (1970) in Santo Tirso, Portugal, by Agostinho Ricca


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