The irony is that the real Acorn group did a lot of very good social service work far more cheaply than other groups. It was only one part of Acorn that was ever in trouble, but the whole group got slammed.Symmetry wrote:Phatscotty wrote:yeah you can focus on that part. You aren't referring to the other instance where he was charged, not at Acorn but for that Mckaskill senator and her phones. either way, those tapes got the Acorn funding pulled.
Contrast that with your comments regarding Tea party renegades that they are not really representative... rather "interesting", indeed.
Symmetry wrote: And, yes, the results do speak, but they don't necessarily tell the truth, nor are they indicative of a crime having been committed. Walker has taken a hit over this call, but I don't think he's committed a crime.
Indeed. I started to post comments from the local police chief (WI) about their anger that he was even considering placing citizens in danger (the protests have to all accounts been very peaceful). However, when I heard the interview, it seemed more like he was just not arguing with Koche, not necessarily talking about anything he really and truly seriously considered.
Symmetry wrote:In fact he seems pretty reasonable. It does add fuel to the argument that he was dishonest about his original motives, and also to arguments that he's too closely tied to big business, however.
Yes, this is a concern. However, to think anything else might happen is a bit naive. The bad part is not so much that he is taking calls from bigwigs (what politican could afford not to do so!), but that he is not taking enough calls from average people.