ACORN could be in big trouble:
A growing number of people once affiliated with Acorn want nothing more to do with the group. Marcel Reid, for example, was one of eight national Acorn board members who were removed last year after demanding an audit of the group’s books. She notes that Acorn received $7.4 million in contributions from the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) between 2005 and 2008 but actively fights unionization efforts by its own employees. Ms. Reid also notes that Acorn was sanctioned by the National Labor Relations Board in 2003 for illegally firing workers trying to organize a union.
In 1995, Acorn unsuccessfully sued California to be exempt from the minimum wage, claiming that “the more that Acorn must pay each individual outreach worker . . . the fewer outreach workers it will be able to hire.” The decision to file that lawsuit was made by Wade Rathke, who founded Acorn in 1970 and was its long-time leader. He was forced by the group’s board to resign last year after it found that he’d engaged in a cover-up of a nearly $1 million embezzlement of Acorn funds by his brother Dale, then the group’s chief financial officer.
Mr. Rathke now the chief organizer of a New Orleans-based local of the SEIU, a key Acorn ally is out with a new book, “Citizen Wealth,” in which he touts a vision of “maximum eligible participation” by Americans in welfare programs as a way to force radical social change.
Which, if it sounds to you like deeply questionable social policy perilously bordering on fraud, merely add it to ballot stuffing and pandering.
Even the reliably liberal John Conyers had his doubts, among others:
Rep. Steve King (R., Iowa), for example, has tried six times to get House floor votes restricting Acorn’s access to federal funds but has been blocked by Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s hand-picked Rules Committee members. Some Democrats have grumbled. Michigan’s John Conyers, chair of the Judiciary Committee, urged a hearing be held on Acorn abuses in March, but later told the Washington Times “the powers that be decided against it.”
With friends like Nancy Pelosi on their side, ACORN remains defiant, however:
After the Nevada voter-registration fraud indictment last May, Bonnie Greathouse, Acorn’s chief organizer in the state, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal that “we’ve had bad publicity before” and survived. “People always come forward to our defense. We’re just community organizers, just like the president used to be.”
Add that to the list of things you wish your friends wouldn’t say about you.


What’s that buzzing sound? Its all the flies suddenly realizing OMG! That’s a pile of sh!t we’ve been sitting on! … and distancing themselves as only political flies can.
let us not forget the 7 shameful senators who voted against cutting off federal funding for ACORN:
Dick Durbin (D-IL)
Roland Burris (D-IL)
Robert Casey (D-PA)
Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)
Patrick Leahy (D-VT)
Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI)
How many of these turds are up for election next year and want some of ACORN’s graft in their election coffers?
“the more that Acorn must pay each individual outreach worker…the fewer outreach workers it will be able to hire.”
Replace ‘Acorn’ with the name of just about any business and you’re well on the way of your long-overdue climb out of functional illiteracy, Wade.