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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Congress slaps ACORN again
2009-09-27
Abandoned by even many of its Democratic allies, ACORN hit back today at Congress after it slapped the latest penalty on the community advocacy group.

The House voted today to avert a possible government shutdown next week by temporarily extending the current federal budget. But Democrats inserted a provision saying that ACORN could not receive funding under the stopgap measure or any prior legislation.

"To include language in legislation that targets a single organization is unconstitutional and wrong," ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis said in a statement. Congressman Nadler said it best: "The punishment here did not follow some criminal or administrative process with basic due process protections. It flowed out of a Fox News network report, which led the call for a public lynching. There was no statement of charges and no reference to a judicial or administrative finding of wrongdoing by ACORN.' "
Fair enough: let's stop funding all community organizations ...
Lewis added that ACORN is being singled out unfairly -- after a controversy started when employees it later fired appeared to advise conservative activists posing as a prostitute and her pimp on how to skirt the law -- when other groups and corporations are accused of doing much worse.
After all, other groups might have been advising pimps and 'hos how to avoid the heat. We don't know of any others but there could have been ...
"One unintended - and positive - consequence of the witch hunt against ACORN is that it could help rein in the likes of Halliburton and Blackwater and even Wall St," she said in the statement.
If she's going to compare the counseling of pimps and 'hos to Wall Street, then I confess she's got us ...
"If the standard is that organizations that have broken the law shouldn't get federal money, then let's set that standard consistently. There are numerous corporations that have been proven records of malfeasance. For its part -- and although we don't claim perfection in our work for poor and working families - ACORN has never yet been convicted of any crime in a court of law - the conservative imagination and the media are another matter."
A brave US attorney could change that ...
The anti-poverty advocacy group has also been disowned by both the Internal Revenue Service and the Census Bureau, which had worked with the group on tax preparation advice and the population count, respectively.
Apparently the Census Bureau has no interest in counting under-aged Salvadoran child sex slaves ...
Posted by:Fred

#3  Is it starting to get crowded under that bus yet?
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2009-09-27 13:13  

#2  Yep, they seem to avoid poverty in the upper ranks. However, that does not apply to its own workers.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2009-09-27 07:44  

#1  "The anti-poverty advocacy group"

The only poverty they're "anti" is their own. Normal poor people need not bother to apply (except to be used gratis for props).
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2009-09-27 00:13  

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