Just wondering. I see a lot of different acronyms thrown about when it comes to Taekwondo, including ATA, ITF, WTF, and USTT and others I can not remember.
What organizations are offshoots of what?
Readers Digest version:
The Kukkiwon is the actual style that is promoted via the WTF, and the Kukkiwon is the result of the merger of the nine kwans extant prior to Unification act of 1973 (?).
The WTF is the World Taekwondo Federation and is the sport sanctioning body of Kukki Taekwondo and the governing body for Olympic taekwondo.
The USTU was the US Taekwondo Union and was the national governing body for Olympic Taekwondo in the US. It was reorganized into USAT, which is USA Taekwondo.
The ITF is the International Taekwondo Federation and promotes Chang Hon taekwondo. The ITF was established by General Choi Hong Hi. The ITF developed, if I'm not mistaken, prior to the completion of unification efforts and predates the Kukkiwon.
The ATA is the American Taekwondo Association and promotes Songahm taekwondo. It was founded in 1969 by Haeng Ung Lee. I was led to believe that they originally used the Chang Hon forms prior to establishing the Songahm forms and I also have heard that he came out of the ITF (not sure of the details there).
There are some smaller organizations:
Jhoon Rhee Taekwondo, which promotes 'Might for Right' taekwondo, is an offshoot of the ITF. I trained at the Jhoon Rhee dojang back in the late seventies in Kensington Maryland. Fond memories. I know that early on, he taught Chang Hon forms. I have no idea what they teach now.
The NPTA, National Progressive Taekwondo Association, which I'm pretty sure uses Chang hon forms and is an offshoot of the ITF.
The ITA; International Taekwondo Alliance, which promotes Ho-Am (Tiger rock) taekwondo, and is an offshoot of the ATA.
There is a small, but present contingent of ITA members here, but I haven't seen any presence of the NPTA here at all.
And generally, which are bad ( everyone seems to hate ATA for example ) and which are good?
Not so much a good or bad, but a 'good' for you based on what you are looking for. If you want to be part of a large, international organization that has portability of rank and through which you can potentially go to the Olympics, Kukkiwon/WTF/USAT is your ticket. Way more schools than pretty much any of the others, using mostly the same curriculum, with dan grades registered with a central body in Korea, so rank portability is actually meaningful on a worldwide basis.
ITF folks frequently call the Chang Hon TKD 'traditional' or 'original' TKD. Whatever the nomenclature, it is a very well developed system that incorporates a more ballanced sparring style (more hands and feet) and incorporates some elements of hapkido. The organization is somewhat fractured (I believe that there are three different groups claiming to be the 'real' ITF), so I don't know what rank portability is like. Earl Weis or Chris Pillars could tell you a lot more than I can.
The ATA is pretty huge in the states, though there are no schools anywhere near my own area, and within the organization, there is portability of rank like the Kukkiwon has. Their sparring style is a light contact style that resembles WTF's full contact style with regards to how it looks and what the available targets and techniques are. They aim at suburban kids and teens and hit the mark very well, though they do have adult programs as well.
Smaller orgs will tend to mirror whatever larger org they came out of.
The school that is 'good' has more to do with the instructional staff than it does with the organization. A lot comes down to what type of sparring you like.
Also, I would like to know what the ATA hate is about. Is it because they are known for Mcdojo's? What's up.
Mainly they are criticized for issuing black belts and first dans to young children (five), light contact/heavy padding sparring, having a bilevel, eight tiered belt system (each belt has two levels), the camo belt, and for having a commercial feel. The schools tend to be financially successful and the ATA seems to have mechanisms to support school owners on the business side. This brings me to the last criticism: they're expensive, though that criticism cannot be leveled at them alone.
I've seen youtube videos of ATA practitioners posted on various forums, only to receive snyde comments and harsh critique, and seen videos of people of other styles who look no better lauded as being technically gifted.
By and large, I think that the 'hate' comes from the fact that the ATA promotes itself as a family organization and makes no pretenses about being the 'uber tough style'. The ATA demographic reflects the demographic that I see in most of the MA schools in my area: kids, moms, and some dads, along with a smattering of suburban teens and adults. And they seem to embrace the image.
Perhaps some see themselves reflected in that image a bit too clearly for their own liking?