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"I'm not going to complain about being organized. They have a right to speak," he said, "but I think we have to explain, they're not necessarily representative of America. I think they're vocal. I don't think they're representative." Specter said he didn't think people opposed to various health care proposals have a right to disrupt public meetings on the issue. Obama answered his critics indirectly. At his town hall in Portsmouth, N.H., he urged Americans to ignore those who try to "scare and mislead the American people," telling a cordial audience, "For all the scare tactics out there, what is truly scary is if we do nothing." McCaskill said she was "proud of the people that showed up and I don't take that personally." "It's that they don't trust government right now," she said on NBC's "Today" show. "It wasn't the majority of the audience, it was a huge chunk of them," she said. "But I get that distrust. There's a lot of cynicism out there and it's important that I get out there and listen to that." Many people "have a lot of pent-up frustration about what has happened over the past six months because it's come fast and furious," McCaskill said.
[Associated
Press;
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