Saturday, October 25, 2008
The Many Faces of ACORN
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Its Your Serve Mr. Walls.....
Great research Mr. Vadum.
Huffington Post and ACORN Tag-Team Cover Up of Obama’s ACORN Days
You’ve got to expect obfuscation from professional obfuscators. Not surprisingly, the spin doctors at the Huffington Post microscopically lawyered my post Media Matters-style to attempt to get away from the fact that Project Vote is a vital
part of left-wing ACORN’s empire of vote fraud and political agitation. (And incidentally, for 30 years ACORN has been laying the groundwork for the subprime mortgage meltdown.)
And as I write this post, news is circulating that police in Las Vegas, Nevada, raided the local ACORN office. Authorities allege that ACORN canvassers "falsified forms
with bogus names, fake addresses or famous personalities." The Las Vegas
Review-Journal reports "that most members of the Dallas Cowboys appeared to be registering in Nevada to vote in November's general election." And in Ohio, ACORN admits voter fraud is just part of doing business.
Meanwhile, the HuffPost denies that Project Vote is now and has for years been the voter mobilization arm of ACORN. But now that ACORN is getting bad press by the
bushel, HuffPost writer Seth Colter Walls argues that when Barack Obama ran Project Vote in 1992 it wasn’t technically a part of ACORN. (Background: Walls’s original post criticizing Seton Motley of the Media Research Center is here;
Motley’s post in response is here; and my post in response to Walls’s original post is here.)
In the immortal words of Tommy Flanagan, Jon Lovitz’s pathological liar character from “Saturday Night Live”: Yeah, that’s the ticket!
Walls produces statements from the Obama campaign and Obama supporters at the ostensibly nonpartisan Project Vote who –surprise, surprise— proffer an invented claim that Project Vote and ACORN didn’t become closely aligned until 1994, which is after they say Obama left Project Vote. Of course there is no credible evidence we’re aware of that substantiates the claim. The HuffPost hasn’t provided any.
Walls’s article is meant to serve as a distraction from the fact that Obama has long been directly involved with ACORN. And unlike the HuffPost, we have proof.
An article by Toni Foulkes of ACORN dispels all doubt. In the article, “Case Study: Chicago-The Barack Obama Campaign,” which appeared in Social Policy magazine in 2004, Foulkes makes it abundantly clear that ACORN and Project Vote were partners in the voter registration drive.The blog Sweetness & Light has reprinted the text of the article. In a discussion of the primary race in March 2004, Foulkes writes:
Obama started building the base years before. For instance, ACORN noticed him when he was organizing on the far south side of the city with the Developing Communities Project. He was a very good organizer. When he returned from law school, we asked him to help us with a lawsuit to challenge the state of Illinois’ refusal to abide by the National Voting Rights Act, also known as motor voter. Allied only with the state of Mississippi, Illinois had been refusing to allow mass-based voter registration according to the new law. Obama took the case, known as ACORN vs. Edgar (the name of the Republican governor at the time) and we won. Obama then went on to run a voter registration project with Project VOTE in 1992 that made it possible for Carol Moseley Braun to win the Senate that year. Project VOTE delivered 50,000 newly registered voters in that campaign (ACORN delivered about 5000 of them).
Since then, we have invited Obama to our leadership training sessions to run the session on power every year, and, as a result, many of our newly developing leaders got to know him before he ever ran for office. Thus, it was natural for many of us to
be active volunteers in his first campaign for State Senate and then his failed
bid for U.S. Congress in 1996. By the time he ran for U.S. Senate, we were old
friends. And along about early March, we started to see that the African-American community had made its move: when Sen. Obama’s name was mentioned at our Southside Summit meeting with 700 people in attendance from three southside communities, the crowd went crazy. With about a week to go efore the election, it was very clear how the African-American community would vote. But would they vote in high enough numbers?It seemed to us that what Obama needed in the March primary was what we always work to deliver anyway: increased turnout in our ACORN communities. ACORN is active on the south and west sides of Chicago, in the south suburbs and on the east side of Springfield, the state capital. Most of the turf where we organize in is African American, with a growing Latino presence in Chicago’s Little Village and the suburbs.
So Obama was right there in the thick of things, organizing for ACORN/Project Vote, representing ACORN in court at its specific invitation and leading ACORN training seminars.
It's worth noting that groups on the extreme left, such as ACORN's Project Vote, often have many tentacles. That’s the way they organize themselves. They often have overlapping memberships and interlocking directorates. They align themselves in strategic coalitions all the time. Sometimes they have formal mergers and
sometimes they have strategic partnerships. This is their modus operandi.
Interestingly, Foulkes’s article can no longer be accessed online. The website for Social Policy now denies access to that specific article while apparently allowing access to all other articles.
Look at the teaser for the article on the Social Policy website (visit there yourself by clicking here -- free subscription required for access to archives):
The titles of articles that are available are highlighted in a brownish color. The
title of the Foulkes article, however, appears in black letters indicating that access has been denied.
Guess who’s behind Social Policy magazine? Something called The Institute for Social Justice. The website indicates the address of the magazine is 1024 Elysian Fields Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana 70117. Here is a screen grab of the address from the website:Guess who else lives in Elysian Fields? ACORN.
Go to Sweetness & Light blog and scroll down to the Form 990s (tax returns for nonprofits) and you will see that both ACORN and Project Vote report the same address, 1024 Elysian Fields Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana 70117.
There is also more evidence of the close relationship between Project Vote and ACORN in 1992.
We did find this item on Nexis from The Hotline dated October 8, 1992. The short article is called “VOTER REGISTRATION: PROJECT VOTE! TARGETS URBAN SWING AREAS.” It begins:
Sandy Newman, exec. dir of Project VOTE!, a national non-partisan, non-profit voter participation organization which targets African-American communities, announced that registration efforts have added "over a half million" new voters to the rolls --
"most of them in swing presidential states with close Senate races," including IL, PA, MI, OH, NY, CA, MD and CT.
It indicates that in New York City in October 1992 Project Vote was either part of or closely aligned with ACORN. The exact wording of the relevant paragraph is:
NY: In NYC, Project VOTE! with ACORN and the NY Public Interest Research Group, added more than 90,000 voters (Project VOTE! release, 10/5).A recent article by Lynn Sweet of the Chicago Tribune (Oct. 6) also lumps ACORN and Project Vote circa 1992 together: In 1992, Barack Obama worked for Project Vote for about seven months; now Project Vote and ACORN--a coalition of community organizations serving low income families--just wrapped up a voter registration drive targeting battleground states Obama needs to win the White
House.
Though officially non-partisan, the focus of the ACORN/Project Vote voter drive was on groups leaning Democratic in the presidential contest: African American, young, Latino and low income earners.
Maybe Sweet didn’t get the memo from the HuffPost.
Thursday, October 2, 2008
GREEN ALERT: Hidden Carbon Tax Provision in Paulson’s Bailout 2.0
If you look at page 180 of the 451-page monster bailout bill that easily passed the Senate yesterday (PDF here), you will see that it includes at Section 116 language about the tax treatment of “industrial source carbon dioxide.” It also provides, at Section 117, for a “carbon audit of the tax code.”
What could a provision about the tax treatment of “industrial source carbon dioxide” and another provision about doing a “carbon audit” of the tax code possibly have to do with restoring confidence in Wall Street’s troubled credit markets?
The answer: NOTHING.
This appears to be an attempt by global warming fanatics to lay the foundation for an economy-killing carbon tax just like the “cap-and-tax” system that is now destroying European industry.
If you think the Mother of All Bailouts is bad, just wait till you see the carbon tax. Get ready to reduce your standard of living drastically.
It really shouldn’t be a surprise that these non-germane provisions are included in legislation that is supposed to save all of us from economic Armageddon.
After all, Henry Paulson is a confirmed environmentalist and global warming true-believer who abused his power at Goldman Sachs. While Paulson headed Goldman Sachs he simultaneously headed the Nature Conservancy and his wife was a former Conservancy board member. (See “In Goldman Sachs We Trust: How the Left’s Favorite Bank Influences Public Policy,” by Fred Lucas, Foundation Watch, October 2008.)
Henry Paulson presided over Goldman Sachs’s donation of 680,000 acres of land it owned in Tierra del Fuego, Chile to the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society.
One of the trustees of the Wildlife Conservation Society was H. Merritt Paulson, the son of Henry Paulson.
As green critic Paul Driessen observed, at no time did anyone “assess the vast area’s potential value for timber, oil or metals, so that locals and [Goldman Sachs] shareholders would at least know the true cost of the giveaway.”
And the media tells Americans to trust Henry Paulson to do the right thing when doling out taxpayer dollars to his former colleagues on Wall Street?
The media needs to start asking hard questions.
(Hat tip to Paul Chesser, of Center for Climate Strategies Watch, as posted at AmSpecBlog)
(cross-posted)
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Education in America Project
A good friend of mine has embarked on a unique journey across America's school systems (all fifty states.) I owe him a plug. Please enjoy his intro video and get updates from Education in America starting in early September after Labor Day. (Stay tuned more updates to come.)
Monday, August 4, 2008
Obama as Teen Idol
-Matthew Vadum
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Racial Separatism in the Aloha State
The Akaka bill sets a dangerous precedent. Could ethnic activists in the American Southwest argue that they deserve tribal status? What about ethnic Cajun or Creole peoples in Louisiana, who trace their roots in the Mississippi Delta to the exodus from French Nova Scotia before the Louisiana Purchase? The federal government has a constitutional duty to protect the individual equality of all Americans on the basis of their citizenship. It should not balkanize neighbors on the basis of their race or ethnic heritage.And few additional blogs commenting about the Hawaii-Akaka problem. The article goes in depth about the racial prejudice exercised by the Bishop Estate (the major source of funding for the Kamehameha Schools that limit admission to Native Hawaiians only) and their efforts to preserve and expand their ethnic fiefdom. Read it all.
Sunday, May 4, 2008
Apologies
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
The Queen of Pork
Hillary's $1.5 million gift to Calvin Butts came from three of her earmarks in the fiscal year 2008. She had a lot of them. In fact, between 2002 and 2006, Clinton secured more than $2.2 billion in earmarks, many of them attached to defense-spending bills, where she has unusual influence as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Hillary succeeded in securing twenty-six earmarks to the 2008 defense bill worth a total of $148 million — a number that dwarfed that of any Democrat except committee chairman Carl Levin. Barack Obama, by contrast, had only one request attached to the defense bill.Not that Obama or McCain are saints either:
Hillary isn't alone among the candidates in selling us down the river for a few campaign contributions. Unlike Clinton, who has only disclosed the pork she actually succeeded in doling out, Barack Obama has supplied reporters with a list of every earmark he requested. But the list only served to highlight Obama's own pork, including $8 million for a "High Explosive Air Burst Technology Program" that would have been overseen by General Dynamics. Obama's Illinois finance chairman, James Crown, not only sits on the board of General Dynamics, he and his wife are both Obama bundlers who have raised more than $200,000 for Obama's campaign. Obama was also alone among the remaining candidates last year in using his leadership PAC to hand out money to politicians whose support he sought in his presidential run.Taibbi does yeoman's work pointing out the ridiculous return for profit donors get with earmarks:
McCain, meanwhile, has run a finger-wagging, holier-than-thou campaign. He insists he doesn't request any earmarks, even though he has: In 2003, he doled out $14.3 million to Luke Air Force Base in Arizona. He also insists that he is "the only one the special interests don't give any money to," even though he has lapped the field when it comes to surrounding himself with lobbyists. Public Citizen, the nonprofit watchdog group, has identified sixty-six current or former lobbyists who are either major fundraisers or bundlers for McCain, a number that far exceeds either Clinton or Obama.
The thing that's really vile about earmarks is how cheaply we all get sold out. Two million of your taxpayer bucks in exchange for a $5,000 donation? Greenlighting a billion-dollar Pentagon boondoggle for a couple of free flights? Hey, if you're going to sell us out, at least fucking bargain. But it's not their money, and they never do.As they say read it all.
Paging James Carville
But Bonk wanted nothing of that question. "I don't know how you could make this kind of mistake," he continued. "Why did you break away? Lackawanna County is Clinton country. You slapped all of us in the face. You should have supported the hometown girl."I'll say it: Judas! Seriously though, this tribalism needs to stop. It is ruining both parties when people are being goaded into choosing their representatives on identity politics (race, gender, religion) in the face of reason and judgment.
Moreover, as loathe as I am to call RACISM!11!!!, there is a racial bias in how the media is describing what the candidates need to do. Obama absolutely needs to make inroads in the white working class demographic or he will lose. Yet it is assumed that Clinton will carry the black vote fait accompli. In fact it is very easy for the argument against Obama to be made against Clinton, yet I have NEVER heard anyone on the cable nets make it; everyone just assumes the black vote will loyally fall in lien without being wooed, unlike the poor whites. It is why people are already emphasizing Indiana over North Carolina, since Indiana has a higher population of "real Americans" (sidenote: I am also tired of media elites putting poor uneducated whites on a pedestal as "real Americans" and giving them the keys to the nominating process, when the same thing would NEVER happen with any other ethnic group. Little known fact: EVERY VOTE COUNTS THE SAME AMOUNT).
Okay rant over. God I am ready for the primaries to be finished.
Millenial Individualism
In placing a heavy value on the opinion of friends and peers, the authors of this book suggest, Millennials are inclined to favor conclusions reached by decentralized decision making, and multilateral rather than unilateral policy making. Their proclivity for sharing their lives with thousands of others through MySpace and Facebook also makes them “the generation least perturbed by any potential restrictions on civil rights or invasions of privacy that might have occurred in fighting the war on terrorism.” As a more socially tolerant and less divisive Millennial generation becomes a larger part of the electorate, Mr. Winograd and Mr. Hais predict, “the power of social issues to drive our political debate will wane”: wedge issues will lose their effectiveness, and ideological divisions will give way to an emphasis on “successful governmental activism.” “Majorities,” they argue, “will coalesce around ideas that involve the entire group in the solution and downplay the right of individuals to opt out of the process.”It is worth noting that Hais and Winograd are both Democratic operative, so it should come as no surprise their conclusions are favorable to the presently constituted Demcratic party. Yet, I feel like their characterizations of the Millenials (of which I am part of the gray area between Gen X and the Millenials depending on where you define the line between them) is slightly off.
I agree that there is a civic emphasis in this generation, spawned by the internet technology that makes organizing far simpler than at any time previous. But, I think they downplay the individualism that marks a good portion of Millenials (at least from my perspective). Particularly, I believe they make a fundamental mistake in how they view social networking sites like Facebook or MySpace. They seem to see them as social communities, where people can be a part of something greater, whereas from my experience Facebook (and one's profile) is an intensely personal and individual expression of one's self.
That misreading of online social networking causes them to understate the role of the individual in Millenial culture. Part of it may be the typical youthful rebellion of the communitarian ethos of modern suburbia and the doting parents shipping them off to the next game or practice or concert. It may also be the atomization of culture has allowed for far greater niche interests and personalities that makes group indentification harder to pin down. That in turn breeds greater tolerance and acceptance of divergent views and identities, to levels a non-Millenial may not grasp.
As such, the idea that these attitudes will lead to greater communitarianism just seems wrong. There might be a greater appeal to more broadly acceptable policies and rhetoric (as can be seen in Obama's conciliatory language to conservatives and libertarians), but I think there is a real respect and understanding on the value of the individual within social networks like Facebook or MySpace that Hais and Winograd seem to downplay in favor of social community aspects.
Like That, But MUCH Better
The problem is that scientists now too frequently believe we have the answers toRead it all.
these questions, and hence the mysteries of life. But, oddly, the more we use
science to explore nature, the more we find things we do not understand and
cannot explain. In reality, both religion and science are expressions of man's
uncertainty. Perhaps the paradox is that certainty, whether it be in science or
religion, is dangerous.
Net Neutrality: Regulation for Regulation's Sake
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin said Tuesday there's no need for new regulation of the Internet, saying his agency has all the authority it needs to prevent discrimination by Internet service providers.That's a relief. Net neutrality is one of those things, like olestra, that may sound appealing in theory, but in practice is simply a bad idea prone to worse execution.
"The idea of your site succeeding or failing based upon whether or not you paid the telecom companies enough to carry your material or allow quick access is appalling," [Justine Bateman] told the committee.Yes, because we need to listen to what Mallory Keaton says. The fact is net neutrality is a solution in search of a problem. There is rarely service interruptions, which usually result from heavily trafficked sites. The real reason for this onerous regulatory regime is summed up thus:
"The only thing bigger than corporations in this country is the government," he said. "So we think we have to make clear to legislators that we need somebody making sure that that pipe is neutral."Bigger government for bigger government's sake. Heaven forbid we let private citizens order their own lives and exercise their speech rights in accord with their own preferences.
Fish, Barrell, Gun, You get the Idea
Hillary Clinton’s convincing Pennsylvania victory is the third consecutive back-to-the-wall big-state win she’s managed (following on Ohio and Texas seven weeks ago).Technically, Obama won Texas on delegates, but since when have little things like facts ever deterred Kristol or the cable networks (if I had a nickle for everytime I heard someone say Hillary won Texas I could start putting a dent in my college loans).
In all, about 16 million people have voted for her so far in this nominating contest. That’s the most votes any presidential candidate has ever gotten in any primary cycle of either party.Except Obama has MORE VOTES, unless you include Michigan which even Terry McAuliffe has backed off of. Not to mention RCP sez even including Michigan, Hillary has only 15 million votes; someone get Bill a better fact checker. This reminds me of the lame Kerry spin after 2004 that he had won the most votes ever by a Democrat in a national election.... except for the guy he was running against.
Her campaign organization and strategists have been inferior to Obama’s--but she’s gotten more total votes than he (counting Michigan and Florida--the voters there are people too!).Next thing you know Bill will be hosting a fundraiser for her; in fact I was sort of surprised there was no link for donations. Oh yeah, and:
So a tip of the hat to Hillary. Fight on!Again, this race feels more like Alice in Wonderland everyday.
UPDATE: Brendan Loy shows why Kristol's argument and Hillary's claim she has more votes than any other candidate are complete bullshit:
However, there is no debate about this. There is no possible counterargument. It is completely and utterly indefensible for Hillary Clinton to make a blanket claim that "more people have voted for Hillary than any other candidate" while literally ignoring duly held elections in four whole states!! And, similarly, it is totally dishonest for her to advance a "popular vote" legitimacy argument that depends on her Soviet-style "victory" of 328,309 to zero in Michigan.
Mildly Depressed
Den again, that little blackie can’t bowl! I don’t trust no one dat can’t roll. If you’re gonna come to Picksberg, you better be ready to bowl. Dat guy on dat 9/11 plane was. He said, “Let’s roll,” den came right here to Pennsylvania. Dis is where folks wanna bowl. That Yomama guy sure did bowl like a fairy. And I can’t vote for a fairy. Black is okay. But a black fairy? Dat’s like, tree strikes. Get aht tahwn, jagoff!
...Plus dis white guy [Hillary] likes to shoot guns. And I like to shoot guns, too! We got so much in common like dat! Not like dat Harvard guy. Plus, I kept asking dis guy what he was gonna do for me. Was he gonna help cut out a larger doorway in my house? Was he gonna lower all those taxes I pay? I paid, like, $15 last year! Bull shit! Was he gonna widen da highways so I can swerve all over da road like I love to do? Was he gonna nuke da crazy out dem towelheads?
And he said yes, he would! Dat’s good stuff.

