"There is more value on a single page of "Seeds of Change" than in a
year's worth of Rush Limbaugh screeds combined with a lifetime of Sarah
Palin sneers at community organizers." --Todd Gitlin
"Seeds of
Change" goes beyond the headlines of the last Presidential campaign to
describe what really happened in ACORN's massive voter registration
drives, why it triggered an unrelenting attack by Fox News and the
Republican Party, and how it confronted its internal divisions and
scandals.
Based on Atlas's own eyewitness original reporting, as
the only journalist to have access to ACORN's staff and board meetings,
this book documents the critical transition from founder Wade Rathke, a
white New Orleans radical to Bertha Lewis, a Brooklyn
African American
activist.
The story begins in the 1970s, when a small group of
young men and women, led by a charismatic college dropout, began a quest
to help the powerless help themselves. In a tale full of unusual
characters and dramatic conflicts, the book follows the ups and downs of
ACORN's organizers and members as they confront big corporations and
unresponsive government officials in Albuquerque, Brooklyn, Chicago,
Detroit, Little Rock, New Orleans, Philadelphia, and the Twin Cities.
The
author follows the course of local and national campaigns to organize
unions, fight the subprime mortgage crisis, promote living wages for
working people, struggle for affordable housing and against
gentrification, and help Hurricane Katrina's survivors return to New
Orleans.
The book dispels the conservative myth that we can only
help the poor through private soup kitchens and charity and the liberal
myth that the solution rests simply with more government services.
"Seeds of Change," not only provides a gripping look at ACORN's four
decades of effective organizing, but also offers a hopeful analysis of
the potential for a revival of real American democracy.