Posted on 10/09/2008 1:50:33 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
If you thought the New Left was dead in America, think again. Walk through just about any of the nations inner cities, and youre likely to find an office of ACORN, bustling with young people working 12-hour days to organize the poor and bring about social change. The largest radical group in the country, ACORN has 120,000 dues-paying members, chapters in 700 poor neighborhoods in 50 cities, and 30 years experience. It boasts two radio stations, a housing corporation, a law office, and affiliate relationships with a host of trade-union locals. Not only big, it is effective, with some remarkable successes in getting municipalities and state legislatures to enact its radical policy goals into law.
Community organizing among the urban poor has been an honorable American tradition since Jane Addamss famous Hull House dramatically uplifted the late-nineteenth-century Chicago slums, but ACORN and Addams are on different planets philosophically. Hull House and its many successors emphasized self-empowerment: the poor, they thought, could take control of their lives and communities through education, hard work, and personal responsibility. Not ACORN. It promotes a 1960s-bred agenda of anti-capitalism, central planning, victimology, and government handouts to the poor. As a result, not only does it harm the poor it claims to serve; it is also a serious threat to the urban future.
It is no surprise that ACORN preaches a New Leftinspired gospel, since it grew out of one of the New Lefts silliest and most destructive groups, the National Welfare Rights Organization. In the mid-sixties, founder George Wiley forged an army of tens of thousands of single minority mothers, whom he sent out to disrupt welfare offices through sit-ins and demonstrations demanding an end to the oppressive eligibility restrictions that kept down the welfare rolls.
(Excerpt) Read more at city-journal.org ...
120,000 members is not enough to fund the operations described. Government money and some other big pockets are involved.
Hull House and its many successors emphasized self-empowerment: the poor, they thought, could take control of their lives and communities through education, hard work, and personal responsibility. Not ACORN. It promotes a 1960s-bred agenda of anti-capitalism, central planning, victimology, and government handouts to the poor. As a result, not only does it harm the poor it claims to serve; it is also a serious threat to the urban future.
It is no surprise that ACORN preaches a New Leftinspired gospel, since it grew out of one of the New Lefts silliest and most destructive groups, the National Welfare Rights Organization. In the mid-sixties, founder George Wiley forged an army of tens of thousands of single minority mothers, whom he sent out to disrupt welfare offices through sit-ins and demonstrations demanding an end to the oppressive eligibility restrictions that kept down the welfare rolls. His aim: to flood the welfare system with so many clients that it would burst, creating a crisis that, he believed, would force a radical restructuring of Americas unjust capitalist economy.

From deep in the article:
“But ACORN is unapologetic about its tactics. Were up in their face, an ACORN representative enthused. (Despiteor perhaps because ofthe intimidation, ACORN still gets $50,000 a year from the city of Baltimore to provide housing counseling to the poor.)”
Hmm, didn’t 0bama urge the ACommunityOganizersRN convention to “get in their face” while trying to convince people to vote for him?
Great find Ernie!
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