To Understand ACORN, Look To the Early 20th Century
by Kyle OlsonThere was one man who paved the way for ACORN, its agenda and its tactics, and he rose to prominence a good twenty years before Saul Alinsky. His name was Arthur Townley.
Please bear with me for a bit of history. A.C., as he was more popularly known, was a member of the Socialist Party in North Dakota. At the time, grain prices were manipulated, in his view, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. What put him over the edge was when he overextended himself in an attempt to reap a hefty profit on flax, only to have the price drop, along with a bad crop. He lost a substantial amount of money.
As a socialist, he naturally blamed the out-of-state capitalists and sought to do something about it. His solution: A state-controlled grain industry. According to “Political Prairie Fire,” written by Robert L. Morlan in 1955, Townley had a multi-point list of demands, including “State ownership of terminal elevators, flour mills, packing houses, and cold-storage plants,” as well as “Rural credit banks operated at cost.”

When his Socialist Party wasn’t interested in his plan, Townley set out and created The Nonpartisan League in 1915, a mode for organizing farmers into a political constituency to be reckoned with. See, Townley lacked one key ingredient: power.
His theory was that in order to enact his plan, he needed to create the sufficient pressure on elected officials in meet his demands or face the consequences. His group also worked to elect candidates that agreed with its views.
Townley crisscrossed the state, signing farmers up as members of his organization. He pled his case of greater effectiveness than the local Chambers of Commerce with success. He soon put the dues dollars he raised towards purchasing more pick-up trucks and hiring more organizers to expand the group and thus its power.
What relevance does this have on what is happening today? According to ACORN co-founder Gary Delgado, the kind-of Third Tenor to the (in)famous Wade Rathke, ACORN used Morlan’s book “as part of the organization’s training materials since 1971.” Delgado said as much in his 1986 book, “Organizing the Movement: The Roots and Growth of ACORN.”
We’ve seen ACORN’s tactics play out in the Townley way for the last 39 years. And we see them play out as such today. Take my recent interview with Rathke as an example. When I asked him what SEIU and ACORN were doing to get health care reform passed, he explained SEIU was/is active in about 15 states and in Louisiana, where we chatted, there “are about 14 people working around the state because Sen. [Mary] Landrieu’s vote is so critical as one of those sort-of mushy Democrats we have to have to make this pass.”
You can see that portion of my interview here.
ACORN adopted the Townley method of creating the power, by registering the voters to elect its candidates or growing the “community” group to act as a hammer against weak-kneed elected officials, just to name a few.
Saul Alinsky is commonly viewed as the father of community organization and with that I have no beef. But I believe perhaps a more accurate patron of ACORN’s tactics would be A.C. Townley, the godfather of community organizing.






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[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Big Government. Big Government said: To Understand ACORN, Look To the Early 20th Century: There was one man who paved the way for ACORN, its agenda .. http://bit.ly/1hUfSK [...]
Steal Alinsky's thunder? Interesting history lesson, despite the horrendous typos. 1955 then 1915? Good job of research, might want to take another semester of high school typing.
I find it curious that Unions are fighting so hard for universal healthcare. Don't they fight hard to get their members those benefits paid for by their employers? So how is it in their members' benefit to be thrown off their private plans and onto national County Health? Could this have something to do with mismanaged and underfunded union health and pension plans? An underfunded plan assets could be absorbed back into union coffers once it's illegal for their members to have private insurance.
Mr. DaveGuy-
A.C. Townley started his Nonpartisan league in 1915. Robert Morlan's book on the prairie populism movement was published in 1955. They are two distinct events.
To DaveGuy: Per your "might want to take another semester of high school typing" comment… might I suggest you take another semester of reading before jumping the gun and erroneously criticizing the author? The dates are correct – your assessment of them is not.
Interesting look into ACORN's past. Now I'd like a really good look into their books.
The rank and file union members are just pawns to be used to achieve the ultimate control. These people want control over our very lives and will stop at nothing to achieve that. You really have to step way back and look at the whole picture.
ACORN is up to they're eyeballs in healthcare? Now that is scary !
Ya have to watch the video link.
I think? Not sure but, I believe this is also how the Democrat party in Mn. became known as the Democrat Farmers Labor Party Or DFL.
So, he made a typo and used 'in' instead of 'to'. I am no genius, admittedly; however, I can still glean the context and intent of the sentence.
Not sure what your point is. Not sure that if you have a point it even matters.
Am sure that your reading comprehension skills need swift reinforcement.
Friend, please stop reading this page. Your head is going 'in' explode.
shhhh…..I cleaverly made an intentional typo (used in instead of to)…let's see if he posts asking ya'll to make proper sense of it, since clearly the typo makes it impossible to figure out!!!
@ Texas Rules: and you cleverly spelled cleverly, cleaverly!
I pulled an O, and without thought acted "stupidly". Got it. Have fun. Was still good historical background. Cheers
To all here: I sit corrected and properly so. Please make proper sense of the folowing sentence c and p'd from above article. I was wrong and out of context on the dates, however.
His theory was that in order to enact his plan, he needed to create the sufficient pressure on elected officials in meet his demands or face the consequences.
I'm lost. Was this a hisory lesson, or a spelling lesson?
I agree, we need to see ACORN's books. I don't think it will ever happen!
I think the "1955" is in reference to when the book “Political Prairie Fire,” written by Robert L. Morlan was published, and "1915" to the history of this individual. Maybe you need another semester of reading comprehension, heh?
The reason they are fighting so hard is their political support of all things Obama and also the minor fact that the bill includes a 10 billion dollar bail out of their pension fund to apply toward their own health care shortfalls.
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Greetings from Tim.
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