We Need ACORN
-
davidswansonWant to meet our members? Click 'Join' above!
By David Swanson
Much of this country believes that ACORN, the now defunct Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, supported prostitution, engaged in voter fraud, and caused the subprime lending crisis. Some people are aware that these lies have been more solidly disproven than Saddam Hussein's friendship with Al Qaeda. The Government Accountability Office has now joined a former Massachusetts attorney general, a federal court ruling, and the Congressional Research Service in finding no wrongdoing by ACORN. But I suspect that only a very tiny percentage of Americans has any idea what ACORN was or why we need it.
I was ACORN's communications coordinator from November 2000 to September 2003. I was the first and last fulltime communications person this 400,000-member, $100 million, 40-year organization ever had. They'd been persuaded to hire someone for public relations in 2000, but did not exactly continue the position or build it into a department after I left to work for Dennis Kucinich. At the same time, in 2004 and subsequent years, ACORN placed itself at risk of media attacks by focusing its energies on registering millions of poor people to vote in U.S. elections -- something that is just not done, will not be tolerated, and will not be defended even by those it benefits when it is attacked. I feel a great deal of guilt over having no longer been at ACORN when the assault came. I don't for a minute imagine I could have done anything to save ACORN, but I wish I had been there to go down fighting with ACORN's staff and members. No better people can be found, and no better team of engaged citizens will ever be assembled.
John Atlas's new book about ACORN, "Seeds of Change," does ACORN credit. The first several chapters of the book do a better job than any other book I've read of explaining the unique institution of ACORN, its birth 40 years ago this week, its mission, and its successes. Here was a community organization bringing together the poor with the middle class and members of all races around issues of economics and political power, while at the same time engaging in electoral politics, and simultaneously providing services and partnering with corporations and governments, while nonetheless taking its agenda from its members and its approach from a toolkit with direct action always on the top, but with innovative tactics including coalition building, new forms of labor organizing, and approaches to housing ranging from squatting to loan counseling, legislation to corporate divestment, dumping garbage on the mayor's lawn to negotiating with developers. I don't know of any similar organization. Yet, when I imagine a logical organization to build in our society, I wind up at ACORN. If ACORN did not exist, in other words, it would be necessary to invent it. All we actually need do is reconstitute it.
If books were printed more quickly, and if Americans read books in greater numbers, or checked the truth of scandalous claims at blogs like BradBlog, ACORN would not have been shut down. At least not if Congress paid any attention. It was congress members, many of them beneficiaries of ACORN's work, who destroyed ACORN at the behest of the corporate media. The legislature behaved as a court, declaring guilt. And almost nobody pushed back. Bertha Lewis, former President of ACORN, recently told RawStory.com: "It just pisses me off that the right can get away with attacks on the organization while the left and progressives just stood by and did nothing to defend us."
When I worked for ACORN I couldn't begin to keep up with, much less help properly publicize, the huge variety of work being done by ACORN chapters all over the country every day. ACORN was constantly passing local and state laws, and winning reforms from governments and corporations, on a tremendous range of issues from schools to policing, traffic to environmental quality, racial discrimination to union organizing, immigrants rights to mortgage lending. No book attempting to cover 40 years of ACORN could possibly do more than scratch the surface, and I wish "Seeds of Change" did more to communicate the depths it was necessarily leaving unplumbed. Atlas chose to highlight particular campaigns, most of them national efforts engaged in by many cities. But even this approach misses the variety of tactics employed in those campaigns. The living wage chapter leaves out the work of the Living Wage Resource Center in advising non-ACORN campaigns. The predatory lending chapter leaves out the passage of ordinances, our protests on the front lawns of Household Finance's board members, the city, state, and congressional testimony from victims, the days of simultaneous protests in lobbies, the divestment campaign, etc. In only takes that many words to list some of the facets in a multifaceted campaign.
Atlas also focuses heavily on scandals and attacks, which makes sense because of how ACORN was brought down, but which distorts the picture of ACORN over the decades I think. Atlas focuses disproportionately on New York City, as well, and disproportionately on recent years, on ACORN's response to Hurricane Katrina, and especially on the decline and fall of ACORN at the bitter end. But this will be of interest to most readers, who only know ACORN through the fictional scandals that destroyed it.
Kevin Whelan, one of ACORN's smarter and more dedicated staff members (and that's saying something), is quoted in "Seeds of Change" describing ACORN's public relations response to false charges made against it:
"We thought that by being totally transparent -- documenting everything we were doing and being the first ones to flag any problems -- we would be able to get people to understand what our work was really about. In retrospect, this was probably naïve."
Wade Rathke, who started ACORN and ran it for 38 years, left two years ago after having covered up his brother's embezzlement of funds. (Wade had arranged for the money to be paid back, but had not informed ACORN's board). On Friday, Wade told me:
"Today is the 40th anniversary of my founding ACORN . . . . As you might imagine, there's a bit of shame, defensiveness, and god knows whatever from many at having somehow presided over the death of ACORN within 2 years of my leaving. It is unimaginable to me how one can kill a membership organization when the membership is still paying dues, but I can only guess the decision must have been horrific for them.
"As far as John's book, yes, I've read it. Social Policy is excerpting the chapters on Katrina recovery this fall and winter. I've told him directly that I think it is unfortunate that he made so many simple errors of fact in the writing and in other cases seems to have been easily duped and naive, none of which were necessary and all of which detract, even if these fictionalizations help his 'narrative' in some ways. At the same time I have told him that I appreciate the fact that he took the work and the organization seriously and tried as hard as he did with the best of intentions no matter how ill directed. I believe his book proved that he cared deeply about ACORN and its mission, regardless of how well he might have served it. David, you and I have both written books. I think John's errors were not ill intentioned or mean spirited, and that's important to me. None of us ever do our subjects as well as we wish we could. Sigh.
"Some of my objections to the book are obviously his mischaracterizations about my departure. You can't resign, be given a plaque in front of the convention to standing applause by the membership and then read that somehow you were fired and not wonder who is on what drugs?!? Nonetheless, in the whole course of events and now against the backdrop of the death of the organization, that all seems petty and irrelevant and so yesterday. Whether his book is true or false, right or wrong, i hope it finds an audience, because ACORN and its mission deserve that.
"As for me, busy as always, and probably working harder and with less than at any time in my career. It all reminds me of the early days, and it's exhilarating. ACORN International is now working in 9 countries and just opened two offices in Honduras last month. I'm spending a lot of time with ACORN Canada where we just won the 1st living wage measure in New Westminister outside of Vancouver and are getting closer in Ottawa and hope to soon open our 5th office in Montreal. Campaigns about the damage the Commonwealth Games will do to our members in East Delhi are exciting to me -- I've never had to encourage people to make demands of the Queen. Remittances are a huge issue between all of our countries, and we're still trying to get our arms around it. The union is growing and it is nice to run an independent local again down here. . . .
"As importantly, I've been thinking a lot about the lessons of ACORN's demise ever since their lawyers informed me 8 or 9 months ago that they were going out of business. This organizational vacuum for low-and-moderate income families is a crisis in my view. I've spent a lot of time thinking about what I created 40 years ago and what I would do differently now, if I were starting over. I'm slowly moving to work with old ACORN leaders and various organizers in different cities and states on how a new organization for 2010 moving forward would be organized. It is invigorating to consider both what needs to be done and the different challenges and opportunities ahead of us. . . ."
State and local ACORN chapters have, in some cases, changed names and continued, and may federate. What worries me is not so much the work required in reconstituting a structure like ACORN or the need to have one or more people run it as well as Wade and his colleagues and ACORN's members ran ACORN. What worries me most is that a new ACORN by another name would have to avoid offending those in power and the corporate media or be smeared and slandered to death just like its predecessor. When I said above that the organization we logically need is ACORN, I meant an organization independent of those in power including political parties, an organization willing to offend, an organization open to any strategy appearing most likely to both succeed in the short term and to build the movement. ACORN created a couple of radio stations, a magazine, a website, and an Email newsletter, but what I think our society needs most desperately is an organization principally dedicated to building local, state, and national independent media with much greater reach, and building it through an ACORN-like membership approach. That would be worth putting 40 years into, and a lot of what would still be needed would follow that progress much more easily.
- davidswanson's blog
- |
- Login or register to post comments
- |
-

- |
Top Actions
-
23,210 of 30,000

-
42,758 of 60,000

-
94,686 of 100,000

Comments
Reponse to your informative, well written ACORN article.
by Lynda Kohn
ACORN did not stealing the 2008 presidential election. Please note my writing only concerns the presidential election of 2008. My source is one of the most reliable, trustworthy, non partial sources on the net or anywhere for that matter. There were numerous incidents of voter registration fraud. However that is not synonymous with voter fraud.
www.factcheck.org the vast ACORN democratic vote fraud conspiracy was more a case of lazy workers than real vote fraud. Factcheck.org is a totally non partial source of factual information. For the record they are a part of the Ivy League university, the University of Pennsylvaniawww.penn.edu. Penn is one of the most prestigious institutions of higher learning in the US. While that reality doesn't guarantee accuracy, factcheck.org doesn't take sides. It criticizes when they think they deserve it Democrats, Republicans, Conservatives, Liberals, Moderates etc. Plus it praises any political party when they believe they deserve it. Moreover they completely explain in plain language the reason for their decision. In other words, factcheck.org is trustworthy. They include searches
More on factcheck.org info on ACORN's so called voter fraud. Names were written in just to meet the minimum requirements for voter registration. It was not a case of voter fraud, it was laziness. ACORN was thoroughly investigated It was people trying to get by being paid for work they didn't do. I suspect the Republicans cried Voter Fraud since most ACORN members and those they help tend to vote Democratic. For the record ACORN was found guilty of voter registration fraud, NOT voter fraud. That is they did put in fake names but that didn't constitute voter fraud. Thorough investigation showed there was no conspiracy on ACORN and its members to commit fraud in a way to influence the vote in the 2008 presidential election. The ACORN members who were found to put in false names were guilty of laziness, irresponsbiltiy, and definitely not voter fraud. It was a case of laziness. I am not minimalizing being lazy. However shirking one's duties isn't the same thing as conspiring to commit fraud with voter registration.
In fact, no votes were cast based on the more than 1,760 fraudulent registrations submitted by workers for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, or ACORN, interim Prosecutor Dan Satterberg said.
"The defendants cheated their employers to get paid for work they did not actually perform," Satterberg said. "Te defendants simply realized that making up names was easier than actually canvassing the streets." Source www.mediamatters.org
While I can't guarantee I'll convince that there was no ACORN voter fraud, no stealing of the election, I do state facts and I stand by them.
It is only natural for people to vote for polititians who they perceive to be helpful to their interests. Persons of low to moderate income are no exceptions. It was Bush who proposed an enormous tax cut to the super rich and drastically cut funding to social programs. Included were mental health programs for soldiers who fought in Bush's war, Iraq and who came home with post traumatic stress disorder. Plus cuts in health programs, social programs, pre-school, programs that effect the elderly and children, people with disabilties. Unless a person living in an economically distressed community is not for her or his self interest, I don't see why they should be voting for Republicans. Republicans tend to vote in ways that poor people perceive as unfriendly, unsympathetic toward them.
Democrats as a rule are seen as sympathetic, for their issues. It's only natural they would vote Democratic. Here the Republicans are blaming ACORN for being Pro Democratic party. It's the demographics. Or at the very least it's perceptions of what party is geared toward disadvantaged people and what party isn't. I participated in registering people to vote in the presidential election of 2008. For the record the sponsor was a non partisan organization. I know from personal experience voter registration is non partial. By the way, the organization was not ACORN.
Mark Hearne at the Ohio courthouse 2008, charged the NAACP (National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People) with voter fraud too. I see the relevance here is both ACORN and NAACP's members are mostly people of color. Mark Hearne was a lawyer for the Bush/Cheney reelection committee.
George W. Bush and former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales ordered the firing of US attorneys. One part of the reason for the firing was alleged voter fraud by ACORN and other groups, including the NAACP. (National Association for the Advanceme
In a March 2005 letter to the U.S. Department of Justice, Hearne claimed there was "substantial evidence to suggest potential criminal wrongdoing by organizations such as Americans Coming Together, ACORN, and the NAACP-Project Vote."
MSNBC commentator Rachel Madow interviewed former US attorney David Iglesias on how he was pressured , especially by Bush election strategist Karl Rove, to go after ACORN for voter fraud. In fact Karl Rove was deeply involved in the firing of the US Attorneys. Former U.S. attorney David Iglesias who was fired even though he received many positive reviews. He claimed his firing was because he refused to obey Republican pressure to pursue phony voter registration cases that supposedly involved ACORN. The pressure was as early 2002 when Mr. Iglesias wrote in "In Justice," he received an e-mail from the Department of Justice in Washington, quote, "suggesting, in no uncertain terms" that U.S. attorneys "offer whatever assistance we could in investigating and prosecuting voter fraud cases". In fact former US attorney David Iglesias never found any evidence of any wrong doing regarding voter fraud
John Fund, Wall St. Journal columnist in his book "Stealing Elections, How voter fraud threatens our Democracy, writes about Camp Obama and ACORN. The fact is there is no coorelation between Camp Obama and ACORN. Camp Obama was a part of the Obama presidential election team exclusively.
I am not saying ACORN is a consistently ethical organization. What I do say is voter fraud is not something they committed. This is proven in a thorough investigation. ACORN members are low income, disadvantaged. The Democratic party been traditionally the party of the downtrodden. It's the demographics period. ACORN didn't steal the election. This is an untruth served to undermine ACORN by right wing Republicans. This firing in regards to one former US attorney directly
Comfort for: Elizabeth Edwards
Dear Ms. Elizabeth Edwards:
My thoughts are carefully and methodically plotted out now, as a knight of Our Lord, through the turmoil your suffering. To think like a good chaplain of the divine command. I seize thee opportunity to wish you success, in moving on to a higher realm. I am not one to meddle in your current affairs, yet I pour my heart out with prayer and supplication and love. The greatest of these is love. I come from the land of broken hearts and my parents divorce when I was eleven years of age. My Mum just passed two weeks ago of stage 4 lung cancer at 74 years of age. She died at home around her family with no husband. My Mother had a saying, she learned from her mother: "Your Father is only your Father, till he finds another wife. But your Mother is your Mother for life." Dearest Elizabeth, I was born on the same day as St. John the Baptist and you know about Herod from your Christian namesake. It makes it hurt all the more, does it not. So you were once a little girl, with Cinderella and Snow White dreams, I hardly know thee heart of the weaker vessel when it comes to dreams that get burned up like paper in fire. I do see this, though, as life passes on God calls some of His children, to light and truth, because the world has forsaken or forgotten them. I wonder if The Lord will take me home similar one day. I'm sure you understand in male camaraderie, that when it comes time for your eyes to made open, like in The Transfiguration of Christ, that it might all be white-washed and you could be left in the cold, like The Tomb of The Unknown Soldier. There are hecklers and cackles in this cruel fetish world, laughing at your demise with good riddance. I hope in your once powerful social circles, they immortalize your name and give you your just due. There are so many unsung heroes or heroines in life, what are your chances. There is a just God, you have been made a spectacle before, in cuckold humility, He will see to your reward in this world and in the "hereafter." My Mother as she got older and less attractive, used to say when she goes to heaven: "I'll just pick another Robert Redford." There are spiritual laws about your predicament, and God will see you through, as if your thee only person alive, with his fine daughter that became a woman, and iniquity robbed you of "stand by your man?"
To those that read this letter, let us not forsaken a good child of God, that meant only goodness, for us all. We should not hear the cry of a woman and "why has The Lord forsaken me." God save Elizabeth Edwards as we carry a torch to keep her memory alive. Have mercy.
Mr.David M Pedjoe
21 Cypress Ave
Shrewsbury, MA. 01545-1308 USA
Phone: 1-508-304-0612