Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and his Republican allies may have imagined that the insufficient debates, inappropriate votes, flagrant violations of open meeting laws, threats and general legislative lawlessness used to pass his plan to strip public workers and teachers of their collective bargaining rights would finally silence the opposition. But when the state Assembly finally voted Thursday to approve a version of Walker?s draconian proposal, following Wednesday night?s surprise state Senate vote, the people who have for four weeks campaigned to ?kill the bill? kept on coming — hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands of Wisconsinites, rallying, marching, banging on the doors of the state Capitol in Madison and chanting: ?Let us in! Let us in!?