Pablo Eisenberg places the hidden camera video issue squarely within a right wing campaign, which gained momentum exponentially when the mainstream media jumped aboard:
“The media war they waged against ACORN was brutal and effective, despite, or perhaps because, of its distortions, lies and hysteria. The mainstream media virtually ignored the issue until the ferocity of the campaign reached its height after the release of the videos. When the major newspapers did cover the story, they did little investigative reporting of their own, preferring not to challenge many of the wild assertions of their right wing colleagues….” (From Mr. Eisenberg’s contribution to the March 31 Huffington Post, featured in “Epitaph for ACORN: Done In by Its Friends?”
In my initial post, “Conservative Activists’ Sting: the Undercover Videos,” I had tried to stay somewhat above the fray, more focused on summarizing the public controversy as it had played out in the media, than on defending or condemning ACORN. While critical of the videographers’ choreographed crusade (which I likened to performance art), I also noted Bertha Lewis’ characterization of what was captured on tape as “horrendous,” “outrageous,” and “indefensible.” But – although I was reluctant to defend the indefensible – I added a second post, “The Filmmakers’ Invisible Art: Editing to Tell a Story,” noting that the selectively edited videotapes (“doctored,” as Mr. Eisenberg put it) were designed to tell a story. I concluded that because we lack “any reason to put our trust in Mr. O’Keefe” and his allies, “we have no reason to accept the story as presented.”
Recently, the Attorney General of the State of California, which initiated an investigation into ACORN and the hidden camera videos at the request of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, obtained copies of all the unedited videos (and has made the videotapes from California available online).
The report from Attorney General Jerry Brown’s office confirms the critical judgments about James O’Keefe and the videos as released, as this press release summarizes:
Videotapes secretly recorded last summer and severely edited by O’Keefe seemed to show ACORN employees encouraging a “pimp” (O’Keefe) and his “prostitute,” actually a Florida college student named Hannah Giles, in conversations involving prostitution by underage girls, human trafficking and cheating on taxes. Those videos created a media sensation.
Evidence obtained by Brown tells a somewhat different story, however, as reflected in three videotapes made at ACORN locations in California. One ACORN worker in San Diego called the cops. Another ACORN worker in San Bernardino caught on to the scheme and played along with it, claiming among other things that she had murdered her abusive husband. Her two former husbands are alive and well, the Attorney General’s report noted. At the beginning and end of the Internet videos, O’Keefe was dressed as a 1970s Superfly pimp, but in his actual taped sessions with ACORN workers, he was dressed in a shirt and tie, presented himself as a law student, and said he planned to use the prostitution proceeds to run for Congress. He never claimed he was a pimp.
“The evidence illustrates,” Brown said, “that things are not always as partisan zealots portray them through highly selective editing of reality. Sometimes a fuller truth is found on the cutting room floor.”
The January 13, 2010 press release / statement by Amy Schur announcing the launch of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment asserted that “vicious politically motivated attacks have led to right-wing activists digging through our trash and editing undercover videos to tell a lie so malicious that, if it were true, would upset any citizen.” There is no question, in view of what we know now, that the undercover videos – as edited and released –represented a malicious lie. (The press release is featured in my February 5 post, “California Chapter Splits from ACORN to Form New Group.”)
Rachel Maddow, comparing the unedited videotapes with the edited versions – and outraged commentary – broadcast on Fox News, unravels the deceptions. Her 12-minute feature – Context, Lies, and Videotape – is a case study of how media-savvy conservatives bamboozled the mainstream press and United States Congress:
“If you watched the footage these guys released, if you followed the wall to wall coverage on Fox, if you read all the fawning mainstream media coverage of what these guys did, if you were a Member of Congress and you voted to defund ACORN because of the outrage portrayed in these tapes – you were had.”
But, of course, this retrospective look is of little consequence at this stage, since the conservatives’ campaign worked.
John Atlas (whose book about ACORN, Seeds of Change, will be published this fall) points to release of the undercover videos as devastating to the organization. “Acorn would have recovered had it not been for the incident involving the fake prostitute and pimp,” he told Ben Gose (Chronicle of Philanthropy, “Local Affiliates Seek to Rise from the Ruins of a Besieged Organizing Group,” April 4, 2010 – Subscription required). Pablo Eisenberg concurs, suggesting that the videos’ release “provided the nails that sealed the organization’s coffin.”
Wade Rathke – ACORN’s founder, who led the organization for nearly 4 decades – endorses this view (in conversation). Mr. Rathke’s views will be featured more prominently in my next ACORN post.
Click here to view a video of Andrew Breitbart (whose Big Government website released the videos that hoodwinked the mainstream media) musing about racism and the burden of proof – and concluding with a comment about the videos.