I agree with you, but as an outsider I see many Americans have woken up to the slippery slope, getting slipperier (Is that a word??). The whole issue really becomes, what do you do about it? How do you change it? Can you strip enough of the garbage off of the problem to get down to the core of the issue, and deal with the real issue? Or will you be fighting against the symptoms in the future?
My personal opinion?
There is nothing we (as a group) will do about it, and very little that we can.
I will give you and example. I sometimes sit as the Sergeant-in-Arms at the city council meeting. At one of those meetings, the council was voting on what to recommend to the county transit agency regarding the placement of a rail transit center. The two main sites were across the street from one another.
To a person, the citizens that made their voices heard, and there was a lot, spoke to one particular side. The city council, in their infinite wisdom, chose the exact opposite side. They refused to listen (sounds a lot like those town hall meetings to me).
But they still voted those same people into office the next election.
That's the section where we won't do something about it.
There is also very little that we can do. The U.S. Supreme Court has sided again and again with the government in the erosion of our rights. Gun laws, drug laws, bicycle helmet laws, invasive search laws. Time and time again, as long as the illusion of our rights are still there, or the illusion that our safety is still there, we continue to go along with it.
This is why the Founders wanted us to have arms. So that when our government becomes oppresive, we would have the capabilty to stand up for ourselves. Some free states still have that. But more and more the Federal Government is taking over, telling those states what to do.
Sure, we'll stand up on particular issues, but the principles are being ignored.
One of the reasons, I believe, for that is our cultural diversity. In the words of Hamish from "Braveheart": the people of this country "coulna' agree on the color of *****..." We have no common goals, no common principles, no common understanding of government and it's roles and responsibilities.
That is not to say that we couldn't incorporate those positive aspects from diverse cultures into our system, as the Chinese did, lo those many years ago. But we don't. We mix like oil and water, sometimes congealing together, but mostly not.
That's just one man's opinion, mind you.