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  RACE, POWER & POLITICS Memoirs of an ACORN Whistleblower   Michael McCray has both his CPA and his law degree, and yet, in the mid 1990’s, those became obsolete when he was met with a decision that changed his life forever. That’s when he became a whistle blower. The plight of the whistle blower is one of the most under reported stories in media. McCray’s story is a variation of millions such stories. At the time, he was working at the United States Department of Agriculture, overseeing a Federal Empowerment Zone in Mississippi for the Clinton White House.   There, McCray says he discovered mismanagement and corruption involving the main bureaucrats working for the zone. When McCray attempted to report this corruption, he says that like most whistle blowers, rather than meeting him with concern and understanding, the system attempted to cover up his revelation and smear him in the process.   Since that day, he’s become an advocate, activist, organizer, and now writer. McCray found himself at a cross roads within an organization that would soon begin to live in infamy for a few months at least, and become the main story everyone was talking about.   The name of the organization is the Association for Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), and thousands of writers have broached the subject, but this story is different. That’s because it’s the first one told from the perspective of the whistle blower. As a whistle blower, McCray wasn’t merely a witness to the now recent history of ACORN, but he was an active player.   McCray says that he wrote the book, ACORN 8—Race, Power and Politics, in conjunction with another ACORN whistle blower, Marcel Reid. Glenn Beck called Reid a modern day Rosa Parks, when he first introduced the ACORN story to the public. Reid was Beck’s main source back then and she headed up the DC Chapter of ACORN, which eventually went rogue.   The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) has been given an exclusive advanced “galley” copy of the book. Furthermore, SCLC spoke exclusively with McCray, Reid, and the genius behind ACORN, Wade Rathke. Reid has been quoted often as saying of Rathke, “he’s an organic genius.” Meanwhile, McCray has described Rathke as diabolical. Rathke is arguably the greatest community organizer of all time, not a bad title considering some people consider Jesus himself a community organizer.   The book details a period in McCray’s life in which he discovers a remarkably sophisticated case of mortgage fraud involving a national landmark in Atlanta, The Hotel Winecoff. McCray had become involved in organizing shortly after becoming a whistle blower. He attempted to expose the mortgage fraud using organizing contacts. Everyone told him to go to ACORN.   ACORN did take on the issue only that’s just the beginning of the story. You’ll have to read the book to get the rest. In two short years, McCray went from partnering up with ACORN, to serving on its Georgia board, to serving on its national board, and finally to blowing the whistle on massive corruption.  McCray would go on to become a founding member of ACORN 8 but the book tells the story of the first three parts of McCray’s experiences.   The book describes ACORN as both an extremely effective organizing tool for low and moderate income individuals and as a deeply flawed institution in desperate need of reform by both Reid and McCray.   The central theme both say, “it was an organization that was supposed to be about the members, but it’s really about the organizers, better yet the chief organizer, Wade Rathke.”   Rathke denied that charge vociferously to SCLC, “The organization has always been about the membership.”   Rathke told SCLC that he considered McCray’s book another in a long line of hit jobs on his past organization and he couldn’t answer each one, even if he wanted to.   The book delves into another area entirely, the 2008 Democratic Presidential nomination. That’s because McCray is also a seasoned political operative. McCray was raised in Arkansas, the birthplace of ACORN and home of the Clintons. He worked on their Presidential campaigns in 1992 and 1996. In 2008, he jumped at the chance to work on Senator Hillary Clinton’s Presidential campaign.   In so doing, he created a perspective for himself, stunningly unique. He’s an African American community organizer working for the opponent of an African American community organizer who will during to course of the book pull off one of the greatest political coups, winning the Democratic nomination, of all time.   McCray points out in the book that Obama won because Clinton underestimated him from the beginning. As evidence the group of Black politicos he led, The Buffalo Soldiers, weren’t brought into Iowa until weeks before the primary. Obama had his best troops on the ground months earlier.   It’s a two pronged story that crescendos just as the world finds out that Dale Rathke, Wade Rathke’s brother, embezzled almost a million dollars. It was at that moment that the story exploded in America at large. Of course, as whistle blowers and national board members, Reid and McCray have vantage points no one else can claim.   The book ends measuring the legacy of Wade Rathke. Rathke is an individual that continues to be an enigma wrapped up in a riddle. He’s been described as everything from cold blooded, messianic, a Svengali, the most charming person alive, radical, disarming, and many others. He’s probably a little bit at least of all.   In fact, it is Reid, not McCray, that knows Rathke the best. She attended dozens of board meetings also attended by Rathke. Reid got up close and personal with Rathke. “I like Wade,” says Reid, both magnanimously and cryptically.   The book also describes an event that almost no one in the general public knows about: ACORN’s battle with the Carlyle Group. If ever there was an organization that you could build conspiracy theories around, it is the Carlyle Group. On its board includes a former President, George HW Bush, and a former Prime Minister, John Major. It trades on its influence and is run by its ruthless leader, David Rubenstein. ACORN had a history of confronting large corporations. In fact, the book describes Reid’s own confrontation with Sherwin Williams over lead in paint.   Rathke has tussled with everyone from Wal-Mart, Newt Gingrich, Countrywide Bank, along with the World Bank, the United Nations, and national banks in numerous countries.   Yet, it turned out that the Carlyle Group was different. Almost certainly, the book surmises, it was responsible for leaking the story about Dale Rathke.   The book also delves into Anita MonCrief. MonCrief fell under a lucky star when Michelle Malkin chose information MonCrief fed her as the most explosive seven pages of her best selling book Culture of Corruption.   The accounts in the book precede Malkin and MonCrief getting together by about a year, and lay remarkable context for that relationship. While Malkin acknowledged that MonCrief’s hands were dirty before MonCrief turned over evidence that purported to lay blame on ACORN, she also down played it. Malkin characterized MonCrief as courageous while this book takes a totally different tact.   ACORN 8—Race, Power and Politics is a thriller, political analysis, historical document, and screenplay idea all rolled into one. If you thought you knew this story, you know nothing about the inside story of ACORN until you read ACORN 8—Race, Power and Politics.                                                                           Mike Volpe is a freelance writer for the The Daily Caller and the World Net Daily.” - Mike Volpe

— SCLC Magazine

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