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Did we just experience a bait-and-switch? The author lures us in with the promise of a discussion about civil discourse, but immediately morphs into a commercial for The Burton K. Wheeler Center.
Did we just experience a bait-and-switch? The author lures us in with the promise of a discussion about civil discourse, but immediately morphs into a commercial for The Burton K. Wheeler Center.
We spent some time on their website and found it to be curiously non-specific about its agenda. Like the article below, great effort is expended there to make the Center seem to be above the fray, reasonable, measured, fair, and unbiased.
This sets off alarms for us. Especially since the debates of society are not just simple disagreements, they are active hostilities. The Left in particular is actively toxic in its tactics against the Right, tactics that are almost exclusively comprised of name-calling and character assassination. For the Left, the Right is not simply wrong or mistaken, it is evil and not fit to exist.
It is not possible to come together and have friendly discussions with such people.
This is not to say that the Right doesn't have its bad actors. It certainly does. But one would be hard-pressed to find any Leftist who has the ability to make a thoughtful case for their beliefs absent of any reference to some sort of caricature of the Right.
The author uses the word "we" nearly a dozen times in the context of "you and I together." He thinks that all we need to do is sit down and talk. We're all a part of one big family. Let's just have a beer. We can certainly work it out together, Right?
The language and tactics of the national Left is coming to Montana. In fact, it's already here. We can't be sure, but the author feels this undercurrent and thinks the Center is the answer. That would make him naïve, for the Left isn't interested in discussion or compromise. It intends the total annihilate its opponents.
Discussion with such people is not possible.
There is something deeply Montanan about pulling up a chair and talking out an issue at the table. Not to win, not to shout, but to listen.
In a time when national conversations often feel fast and frayed, Montanans still believe in something steadier. We believe in neighbors and community. And we believe disagreement does not have to mean division.
That belief is why The Burton K. Wheeler Center exists.
Founded at Montana State University, the Center honors the legacy of Senator Burton K. Wheeler, a leader known not only for his convictions, but for his willingness to engage across differences. His career reflected a deep trust in democratic process and an understanding that the health of a republic depends on conversation that is informed, civil, and accessible to everyday citizens.
The Wheeler Center carries that tradition forward. We provide a time and place where students, ranchers, business owners, educators, policymakers, and community members sit together to talk about issues that shape Montana’s future.
One of those conversations is happening soon. Our upcoming event, “Use Your Voice: A Civil Conversation on Tax Policy”, will bring together leaders and thinkers from across perspectives to explore how tax policy impacts Montana families, businesses, schools, and communities.
Taxation is not abstract. It touches everything from property values to infrastructure, from education funding to economic development. It affects the vitality of our towns and the opportunities available to our children.
These, like so many others we are facing, are not simple conversations. They are layered. They are personal. And they matter. When we stop having difficult conversations with one another, we risk allowing misunderstanding and division to take their place.
What gives me hope is how Montanans continue to show up. They show up ready to engage thoughtfully, even when they disagree.
That willingness reflects a long-standing culture of civic participation in our state. It reflects a belief that democracy is not something we watch from a distance. It is something we practice.
If we want a future where Montana thrives economically, socially, and culturally, we must invest in the conditions that make thoughtful collaboration possible. We must create environments where policy issues can be explored fully, not reduced to just headlines. We must protect the simple but powerful act of gathering to talk.
The Wheeler Center is committed to continuing that work. We are preserving a long-standing tradition at MSU that values civic engagement. We are ensuring that students and community members alike have a place to safely discuss our state's future and the policies that shape them.
We invite you to join us. Come to the taxation forum April 6-7 and bring your perspective. Bring your questions, bring your neighbor, and pull up a chair.
The future of Montana will not be shaped by those who shout the loudest. It will be shaped by those willing to sit down, listen with curiosity, speak honestly, and work together to find a path forward.
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