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DeVos-led GR A250 group is offering a class from the National Constitution Center on “Happiness in America’s Founding”

May 2, 2026

We are roughly two months away from the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States of America. The GR A250 group, which is significantly influenced by the DeVos family, is gearing up for the anniversary celebration and doing everything possible to dictate the narrative around the nation’s founding.

The GR A250 group is using a series of events in the coming months to make sure that people don’t talk about the fact that the US was founded on settler colonialism, genocide and slavery.

On May 11th, the GR A250 group is sponsoring a session on celebrating the history of inventions in the US, followed by a conversation on what it means to practice courageous citizenship on May 19th. In that session the organizers want to get people to not be so divided, but there is no evidence that this will mean coming to terms with a honest assessment of US history.

On May 20th the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum is hosting a workshop entitled, “Defund the Police”, which will involve leaders from across perspectives on this topic. I seriously doubt that this will involved the very groups that have been demanding defunding the police in Grand Rapids, such as Defund the GRPD, the Comrades Collective or ACAB. “Through a structured process, participants will explore differing viewpoints, identify shared values and uncover areas of agreement that can inform future collaboration.” Sounds like a highly managed conversation that will steer people away from the Movement for Black Lives call to Defund the Police.

Then on May 30th there will be a “one-day civics camp to prepare middle school and high school youth to join the American adventure as active citizens.” This event will take place in the DeVos Learning Center, which will include “guest speakers”, even though none of these guests are named.

More importantly the GR A250 group is offering a class entitled, the Meaning of Happiness in America’s Founding. The first question that comes to mind for me is who does or is going to feel happiness when learning about the founding of this country?

This class is based on a book by Jeffery Rosen who is the president of the National Constitution Center. It is instructive to note that Doug DeVos, one of the leaders of the GR A250 group, is also a trustee of the National Constitution Center. Not only that, but Doug DeVos has contributed $10 million to the National Constitution Center between 2022 – 2024 from his foundation.

The conclusion is that the most influential co-founder of GR A250, Doug DeVos, has personally given $10 million over a three year period to the National Constitution Center (NCC), where DeVos is also a trustee and has invited the former President of the NCC to facilitate a class on how the founding of the US is akin to happiness. This is some slick Orwellian shit indeed.

The Cosecha organized May Day march was inspiring and powerful, but where the hell were all the white allies?

May 2, 2026

Yesterday, an estimated 250-300 people showed up to participate in the 9th annual May Day march for immigrant justice organized by Movimiento Cosecha.

The energy was high despite there being a chill in the air. People gathered at Garfield Park greeting old friends and making new acquaintances. Eventually Cosecha organizers began to teach people a series of chants that would be used throughout the march, along with a rundown of information on safeties, street medics, those acting as police liaisons and those driving vehicles with supplies and offering rides to those who needed a break. Like most actions people are generally unaware of all the meetings, conversation and prep time it takes to make these kind of actions happen.

I am always amazed by the courage and commitment of the Cosecha organizers, their constant calls for immigrant justice, their demands to have the city and county adopt sanctuary policies and the call to abolish ICE. Cosecha organizers deserve our respect and solidarity.

Just before the march started a GRPD cruiser pulled into Garfield Park. A single officer exited the car and was met by some of the police liaisons. The cop asked the usual questions, like “will you be marching”, “what is the route”, and “ can I speak with the organizers.” No information was given. The cop then said the if people do march that they needed to stay on the sidewalk, since walking in the streets would be “unlawful.”

It is always instructive to hear how the state frames what is unlawful and what is lawful. Currently, it is lawful for ICE to arrest and detain people, causing family separation and family trauma for immigrants that are undocumented. However, immigrants marching in the streets demanding dignity, respect and permanent protection for all 11 million undocumented immigrants is unlawful?

Just before 1:00pm the march got underway and within the fist block we saw GRPD cruisers on side streets just off of Burton St, keeping an eye on the march and making sure that we did not disrupt business as usual. In fact, throughout the march there were about 6 different GRPD cruisers that followed the march, leapfrogging side streets and trying stay ahead of the game since they had no idea what the route was.

The march route itself was deliberate and well planned. For the first time Cosecha organizers decided that the march route would be determined based on locations in the SW part of Grand Rapids where ICE had abducted immigrants – one on S. Division near the railroad tracks, one on Century SW along US 131, and a 3rd location in front of a small, locally owned store on Burton Street SW. In many ways this was the most powerful aspect of the Cosecha organized march, since it provided concrete examples of how ICE is terrorizing immigrants in Grand Rapids at space they we have all passed by, spaces that can now remind us of how state violence will destroy families and terrify entire communities.

The march eventually made its way back to Garfield Park where people celebrated the May Day action by sharing food that the community provided and building community that can sustain us in this fight. I was proud to be a part of the action and to celebrate the people that made it possible.

Where the hell were the white allies?

A day after the No Kings rally in Grand Rapids in late March, where thousands showed up, I wrote the following:

It is imperative that allies, especially white allies, show up on May 1st this year in large numbers to support the demands of the immigrant communities, Movimiento Cosecha and those being targeted by ICE.

We just saw thousands of people show up for the No Kings rally in Grand Rapids, so it would be fabulous if people showed up to the May Day march. It is vitally important that those of us who call ourselves allies show up now and not wait for Grand Rapids to become another Minneapolis. Immigrants in this community are being arrested, detained and deported and have been since 2003, when ICE was created.

Yes there were some white allies who showed up to the May Day march organized by Cosecha, but it was a paultry number compared to the No Kings event. So where were the white allies who were mad about what ICE was doing in Minneapolis earlier this year? Where are all of the white allies who were so outraged over the ICE shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti? Where were the white allies who started holding marches in downtown Grand Rapids in February calling for ICE out of this city? Where were the white liberal groups, the Indivisible groups, the politicians and political candidates who claimed to oppose ICE?

This is the only big annual event that Cosecha organizes so where the hell were the white allies? You can’t claim to be opposed to ICE, to want ICE to be out of Grand Rapids or to abolish ICE if you don’t showed up for those who are the  primary target of ICE. I am so over white liberals and their bullshit excuses. If you what to practice immigrant solidarity you need to show up for immigrants and follow their lead!

GRIID will be facilitating a two part Grand Rapids Power Analysis workshop in May at Fountain Street Church

April 30, 2026

For anyone who reads my blog you know that for years I have been monitoring, investigating and writing about what I call the Grand Rapids Power Structure.

I have been doing this kind of work for years because I believe that it is vitally important to understand which families, organizations and institutions wield economic, political and social power in Grand Rapids and what that means for this community. I also believe that for those engaged in social change and social movement work it is critically important to have a robust Grand Rapids Power Analysis, since the Grand Rapids Power Structure is likely to be one of the major reasons we can not achieve social justice and collective transformation in this community.

The workshop is in two parts, with Part I being on May 17th and Part II on May 31st at Fountain Street Church. In Part I, I will be presenting slides and analysis on the Grand Rapids Power Structure. You can find the current version of the slides here, but I will be updating many of these slides and adding new ones for the 2 part workshop.

In Part II, I will be looking at how we can organize and resist the economic, political and social power that the Grand Rapids Power Structure has in this city. This will be the first time that I have had the opportunity to talk about how we can engage in collective resistance to the Grand Rapids Power Structure.

Both of these session will take place at Fountain Street Church and are free to those who attend. Each of the sessions are 90 minutes long and will take place on Sunday, May 17 and Sunday, May 31st, starting at 2:00PM.

The two part workshop is being offered through the Social Justice Committee at Fountain Street Church and SPARC – Solidarity Progress Action Resistance Collective.

West Michigan Foundation Watch: The Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation

April 29, 2026

“In any case, the hidden hand of of foundations can control the course of social change and deflect anger to targets other than elite power.”

– Joan Roelofs, Foundations and Public Policy

Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation

GRIID has always begun our Foundation Watch work by looking at the foundations associated with the most powerful family in West Michigan, the DeVos family. Last week I posted an article on the Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation, and today I am focusing on  the Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation, which has been one of the largest in West Michigan. Doug DeVos is currently one of the CEOs of Amway, along with operating Continuum Ventures LLC, which is their investment management company.  According to the Candid website, in 2024, the Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation contributed $10,462,588,00 leaving them with $66,723,450.00 of funds left in their foundation account.

The Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation made contributions to dozens of entities in 2024, but there are some clear categories of groups they contributed to, such as the Religious Right, Think Tanks, Education-centered groups, and social service entities, to name a few. Below is a listing of each from these categories, with a dollar amount and a brief analysis.

I also include groups that are DeVos owned or created, along with liberal non-profits. With the liberal non-profits, we believe that funding from foundations like the DeVos family foundations is a form of hush money. When we say hush money, we mean that these entities will not publicly challenge the system of Capitalism, the wealth gap, structural racism and other systems of oppression, which the DeVos family benefits from and perpetuates through their own political funding.

However, before I get to how they distributed their foundation funds for 2024, I think it is important that the Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation paid three DeVos-owned entities and two independent businesses to manage how their foundation money was used in 2024. Highlighted groups are DeVos groups.

  • RDV Corporation – $483,259
  • RDV Staffing Inc. – $209,780
  • Highland Group of Grand Rapids – $131,262
  • Ottawa Avenue Private Capital – $125,322
  • Datawise Consulting LLC – $100,000

Religious Groups

  • Bethany Christian Services – $117,000
  • Christian Leaders Ministries – $50,000
  • Crossroads Bible Church – $100,000
  • Degage Ministries – $25,000
  • Guiding Light Mission Inc. – $10,000
  • Keystone Community Church – $125,000
  • Life International Inc. – $30,000
  • Luis Palau Association – $150,000
  • National Christian Foundation West Michigan – $213,800
  • Pregnancy Resource Center – $30,000
  • Young Life Central Grand Rapids – $25,000

These religious groups practice varying degrees of conservative politics, which fit into the ideological framework that the DeVos family is committed to. For instance the Pregnancy Resource Center is an anti-abortion group, while Bethany Christian Services is anti-LGBTQ.

Far Right Think Tanks and Pro-Capitalist groups

  • Grand Action Foundation – $325,000
  • Mackinac Center – $125,000
  • National Constitution Center – $1,325,000
  • Philanthropy Roundtable – $25,000
  • The Seminar Network/Stand Together – $1,000,000

These Think Tanks influence public policy in individual states, like the Mackinac Center for Public Policy does here in Michigan. The Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation also funds Grand Action 2.0, which promote policies that use millions in public dollars for private projects that the DeVos family benefits from in Grand Rapids. The Seminar Network Inc. is part of the Koch family ultra-conservative network.

Business entities

  • Arts Marketplace at Studio Park – $244,080
  • Construction Allies in Action – $100,000
  • Strategic Workforce Solutions – $150,000

These groups all benefit business interests.

Political Organizations

  • Ada Township – $1,000,000
  • Downtown Grand Rapids Inc. – $25,000
  • Gerald R Ford Presidential Foundation – $500,000

Education-centered groups

  • Calvin University – $320,000
  • First Steps Kent – $75,000
  • Grand Rapids Christian Schools. – $30,000
  • Grand Rapids Public Schools Foundation – $125,000
  • Living Stones Academy  – $87,250
  • Potters House – $50,000
  • Purdue Research Foundation – $5,175,000
  • Rehoboth Christian School Association – $100,000
  • Wake Forest University – $250,000
  • Vela Education Fund – $100,000

Half of the Education groups that the Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation contribute to are conservative Christian Schools. Some of the other groups are a mechanism to insert influence in the Grand Rapids Public Schools, such as the Grand Rapids Public Schools Foundation and First Steps Kent bring a religious component into the GRPS.

DeVos-owned, created or connected groups

  • Corewell Heath Foundation – $270,000
  • Grand Action Foundation – $325,000
  • Grand Rapids Initiative for Leaders – $30,000

Groups receiving Hush $

  • Access of West Michigan – $20,000
  • Baxter Community Center – $40,000
  • Boys and Girls Club of Grand Rapids – $50,000
  • Children’s Healing Center – $105,000
  • Heart of West Michigan United Way – $325,000
  • KCONNECT – $162,500
  • Literacy Center of West MI – $25,000
  • Oakdale Neighbors – $22,000
  • Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Services – $250,000
  • Public Museum of Grand Rapids – $250,000
  • Safe Haven Ministries – $70,000
  • Urban League of West MI – $142,000
  • YMCA of Greater Grand Rapids – $500,000

These groups all provide some sort of social service – people fleeing domestic violence, those who are housing insecure, people with disabilities, adoption and immigration. There are root causes to all of these issues, but these groups are not likely to address root causes and larger systems of oppression. When the DeVos family foundations make contributions, this will increase the likelihood that systems of oppression will not be addressed by these groups.

Foundations rarely make contributions without strings attached. The Doug and Maria DeVos has a long history of funding far right and religious right groups, which GRIID documented 10 years ago when we started this project. Lastly, it is worth noting that the Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation, like all of the DeVos family foundations, compliments the campaign contributions they make to further impact public policy and promote their religious and capitalist ideologies.

Twenty Five years ago this week people from Grand Rapids participated in the anti-Free Trade Area of the Americas protest in Canada

April 29, 2026

Just days after the anti-IMF/World Bank protest in downtown Grand Rapids, some 15 local activists traveled to Quebec City, Canada, to participate in the hemispheric resistance to further economic austerity measures being made into policy at the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) Summit.

The FTAA summit was an attempt to create a trade policy, similar to NAFTA for the entire Western hemisphere. Labor groups, indigenous communities, environmentalists, anarchists and other members of civil society converged on Quebec in April of 2001 to say no to the heads of state that were meeting in the old part of Quebec City, in an area that was completed walled off to the public.

During those few days in Quebec City, those in power did everything they could to prevent a shutdown of their meetings.  They put up a 10-foot fence around the summit venue; several thousand cops beat back protestors; and the cops used tear gas and water cannons on the unarmed crowd. In fact there was so much tear gas used that the heads of state that were meeting had to evacuate the building they were in, since tear gas was coming in through the ventilation system.

We later found out that the tear gas guns they were using were a new prototype, which allowed them to launch tear gas canisters further than expected, which caught those protesting off guard. I remember filming hear the fencing and witness the Medieval Black Block that had constructed it’s own catapult to launch stuff animals at the cops. I distinctly remember this since while I was filming I got knocked on my ass by a water cannon.

The thousands of FTAA protestors who traveled to Canada hosted their own summit, with workshops and sessions to craft their own economic plan for the Americas. Erica Freshour, one of the activists from Grand Rapids, said, “The corporate media hasn’t been reporting on the real issues of the anti-globalization protests. They are too focused on violence that may or may not have occurred, instead of talk about labor, environmental and human rights issues that people are fighting for. This is why we need an independent media.” Here is a video created by some of those from Grand Rapids who participated in the anti-FTAA protests in Canada in 2001.

It took another 4 years of resistance against the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), but it was eventually defeated in 2005. This defeat came at the hands of the organized resistance, not because of politicians.

Unfortunately, the anti-globalization movement came to an abrupt halt on September 11, 2001, when planes were flown into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon. Many of the same people who had built connections and strategies in this movement redirected their energies to resisting the US military occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq.

Grand Rapids City Commission meeting dominated by demands to adopt 6 sanctuary policies as activists shut down the commission chambers

April 29, 2026

One a night that was filled with irony and poor facilitation, during the last public comment period the primary topics were GRPD collaboration with ICE and Flock cameras.

I counted at least 21 people who spoke about the 6 sanctuary policies that Movimiento Cosecha and GR Rapid Response to ICE have been demanding over the past 15 months. People talked about ICE terrorism in Grand Rapids, how the GRPD has been not only cooperating with ICE, but stoping people from attempting to interfere with ICE attempts to arrest and detain immigrants.

Other people spoke about public safety, about harm reduction, about supporting immigrant families and addressing the use of Flock cameras and how that type of surveillance systems puts everyone at risk.

The last person to speak read a statement on behalf of GR Rapid Response to ICE (see below) and when they finished the statement about 40 people stood up hold an enlarged photo of a GRPD officer collaborating with ICE to detain an immigrant, along with alternating chants “ICE and Cops go hand in hand” and “get the Flock off my block.”

After the activist refused to leave and continued to disrupt the City commission meeting, Mayor LaGrand decided to adjourn the meeting.

Statement by GR Rapid Response to ICE

As a volunteer organizer with GR Rapid Response to ICE, I, along with thousands of other people have been asking the City Commission to adopt the six sanctuary policies since January of 2025.

Since that time ICE has caused tremendous harm and separated hundreds of immigrant families living in Grand Rapids. We know this because we work directly with these families to provide Mutual Aid. We also know that ICE has attempted to arrest and detain many more immigrant families, but because of the work GR Rapid Response to ICE does, which is to disrupt the violence that ICE perpetrates, there have been fewer family separations and less family trauma.

By adopting the 6 sanctuary policies this commission would essentially be adopting harm reduction policies.

Unfortunately, since January of 2025 we have heard that adopting these sanctuary policies it would make Grand Rapids a target, we have also heard that there are likely pro-ICE people who haven’t communicated with this commission. We have also heard from the Mayor that he didn’t want to give immigrants a sense of false hope, and at other times we have heard that the city is already meeting some of these demands. Then at a recent commission meeting the Mayor said that even if they wanted to sign a 287g agreement city lawyers have told him that they couldn’t legally sign a 287g agreement. GR Rapid Response to ICE even sent an Email to the Mayor to provide some concrete evidence that signing a 287g agreement was not possible, but to date the Mayor has failed to respond to this simple request.

We have also heard from this commission that the GRPD is not collaborating with ICE, but we have witnessed on numerous occasions that they have, such as when a GRPD officer showed up at the same time as ICE to arrest and detain Byron Martinez, which we have on video that shows the GRPD officer directly assisting ICE. Mayor LaGrand has said repeatedly to let him know if GRPD is violating policy and directly cooperating with ICE. Countless community members have and he’s done nothing. But moreover, current policy has giant loopholes in that there are exceptions for “emergencies and supporting public safety”.

Now, we are fully aware of the fact that adopting the 6 sanctuary policies will not eliminate ICE violence in Grand Rapids, but we do believe that if the City of Grand Rapids doesn’t cooperate with ICE in any way and the GRPD doesn’t interfere with our efforts to prevent ICE from arresting and detaining immigrants that there will be less harm done by ICE in Grand Rapids.

Therefore, we are asking you once again to adopt these 6 sanctuary policies, to adopt these harm reduction policies, to practice immigrant solidarity and to be on the right side of history!

Rick DeVos and his family have been coming for you and your children for a very long time

April 28, 2026

Rick DeVos, the son of Dick & Betsy DeVos, recently shared on X some video of the Cosecha action at Long Road Distillers. However, DeVos shared it from the Grand Rapids Businessman Facebook page – the Grand Rapids Businessman was formerly known as Commies of Grand Rapids and is a MAGA-like page that hates on people.

Here is the language from the Grand Rapids Businessman post:

Grand Rapids anti-ICE activist group, Movimento Cosecha, protests inside Long Road Distillery owned by Mayor David LaGrand and former commissioner John O’Connor.

The group was led by paid activist Jeff Smith and demands Mayor LaGrand adopt sanctuary city status.

One clarification on the GR Businessman language is that Movimiento Cosecha is not demanding that Mayor LaGrand adopt sanctuary city status, rather to adopt 6 sanctuary policies which will prevent the City of Grand Rapids from sharing information or allow the GRPD to cooperate with ICE.

More importantly, Rick DeVos adds his own commentary in his sharing of the action at Long Road Distillers, saying:

“You only have to read a tiny bit of revolutionary history to realize that even when you’re nominally on the side of these lunatics they will eventually come for you.”

My initial response to this is, so Rick how much revolutionary history have you read? Do you think that Rick DeVos is referring to the history of the French Revolution, the Algerian Revolution, the Cuban Revolution or perhaps the Bolivarian Revolution. It’s impressive that Rick found time to read up on revolutionary history while he has been busy doing projects like ArtPrize or figuring out ways to expand his wealth through Wakestream Ventures.

The more important aspect of Rick’s comment is the part that says, “even when you’re nominally on the side of these lunatics they will eventually come for you.

People with the kind of power and privilege that Rick DeVos has will always refer to those who oppose injustice as “lunatics” since you always have to demonize people you don’t agree with. Second, Long Road Distiller co-owner Jon O’Connor can yell fuck ICE, but he doesn’t give a shit about the fact that in Grand Rapids ICE has been arresting and detaining immigrants since 2003 and he as a former GRPS School Board member and former Grand Rapids City Commissioner did nothing to prevent ICE from terrorizing immigrants. In fact, O’Connor was a City Commissioner when a GRPD Captain called ICE to tell them to arrest Jilmar Ramos Gomez, a former US Marine and US citizen. So Rick, Jon O’Connor is not now and has never been nominally on our side.

Then there is the matter of Rick DeVos saying “they will come for you.” What exactly does he mean here? If he means that people will confront injustice and challenge systems of power and oppression, then that will absolutely happen. However, those of us who are fighting oppression aren’t coming for those with power and privilege, at least not the way that Rick DeVos and his family has been coming for people.

The DeVos family has contributed to the election campaigns for Donald Trump in 2016, 2020 and 2024. During President Trump’s first administration and 16 months into his second administration the federal government has been coming for people and their children, which includes:

  • Arresting, detaining and deporting immigrants causing lots of family trauma and economic hardship.
  • Adopting economic policies that have made it hard for working class families to survive in the system of Capitalism that Rick DeVos and his family has made billions off of.
  • Adopting anti-trans policies that has lead to physical violence against those identifying as trans, along with emotional harm, discrimination and other horrendous consequences from adopting anti-trans policies.
  • Increasing the US military budget with continued support of Israel’s genocide against the Palestinians, an assault against Iran, kidnapping the President of Venezuela and his family, etc.

The DeVos family has also been the largest contributor to the Republican Party in Michigan since 1990. This has resulted in attacking labor unions in Michigan, undermining public education in Michigan, providing further tax breaks for the Capitalist Class, reducing Government funded safety nets, and providing billions in public money for developers to expand their wealth.

Rick DeVos and his family also hides hundreds of millions of dollars from being taxed in their foundations and then re-directs that money to far right think tanks, the religious right and to other entities that support their ideological stance on numerous issues. You can read about all of this in 830 pages of the DeVos Family Reader.

Rick DeVos wants people to think that he and his family have high moral standards, but the truth is that the DeVos family has been coming for you and your children for decades and that they are exponentially more threatening to your well being than immigrants dancing and demanding and end the ICE terrorism in Grand Rapids.

Cosecha’s direct action on Friday confronts business as usual politics and West Michigan Nice

April 27, 2026

“We do not need allies more devoted to order than to justice. I hear a lot of talk these days about our direct action talk alienating former friends. I would rather feel they are bringing to the surface latent prejudices that are already there. If our direct action programs alienate our friends … they never were really our friends.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

It has been rather instructive to see all of the responses on social media after the Cosecha action at Long Road Distillers last Friday.

There have been reactions from conservatives, MAGA fanatics, and those who embrace a white supremacist and pro-ICE ideology. These reactions have all been predictable and expected.

The reactions I find most instructive are those that are coming from liberals and so-called progressives. These responses have been littered with phrases like “this is not the way to protest”, “going into the business to disrupt was disrespectable” or “if you want to protest, do it outside.”

Engaging in disruptive tactics has long been part of social movements. Here are just a few examples:

  • Black people who were enslaved didn’t protest, they would burn the plantation owner’s home, sometimes kill the white people in charge of those who were enslaved or simply fled the plantation in an act of self-liberation. Those who freed themselves didn’t go to the local city council to plead their case, nor did they seek help from the sheriff. In fact, the local laws and the local sheriff supported slavery and even sent men to catch those who had freed themselves.
  • Workers have used the tactic of occupying the business they worked at to demand better wages, working conditions or the right to form a union affecting the ability of the business to make money. The 1936-37 Flint Wildcat Strike is a great example, which taught other workers to use the same tactic, even here in Grand Rapids.
  • During the Civil Rights Movement people would disrupt businesses through boycotts (like the Montgomery Bus boycott) or by disrupting businesses by engaging in lunch counter sit-ins to protest segregation.
  • Anti-War movements have also engaged in boycotts or occupied businesses that were profiting from war.
  • The South African Anti-Apartheid movement also disrupted businesses that were profiting off of the apartheid system in South African. Those involved also boycotting business and disrupting businesses as I have documented locally.
  • Environmental Justice movements have also occupied businesses and disrupted their ability to make a profit, like in the case of groups like GreenPeace, the Sunrise Movement, Extinction Rebellion and Rainforest Action Network.

Therefore, the Cosecha action Friday at Long Road Distillers is using a tactic that movements all around the world have used for the past 2 centuries.

However, there are plenty of people who would not be convinced by the fact that disruption is a standard tactic for social change. Some people might argue that the Cosecha action disrupted the patrons who were at Long Road Distillers. However, what we know is that not one customer left during the action, and many of the patrons took flyers from people taking part in the action. People didn’t leave until the own showed up and started yelling at people and tell them to get the fuck out.

Other people might say that the Cosecha action only alienated people from their cause. Again, there was no evidence that this was the case for the people who were present during the action. The white supremacists and pro-ICE people on social media were never going to be an ally to this movement, plus there were plenty of people who either wrote favorable comments or hit the like button in support.

What Movimiento Cosecha actions often do are to polarize people, which is to get them to think about an issue and then choose a side. With polarization you can get people to think about something that they have not really thought much about before. In addition, you often can get people to not only agree with you, but get them to decide to be involved in the movement. If they are already involved in the movement, a polarizing action might get then to decide to become more involved and even be willing to take risks for the movement.

This is exactly what happened with the Cosecha action at Long Road Distillers. The action used a disruptive tactic at a business that is part owned by Mayor LaGrand to potentially impact his ability to make money, especially since he has not agreed to adopt the demands from Cosecha. People were also potentially polarized during the action, along with the polarization that has happen during in person conversations and because of the information shared on social media.

Now, not everyone has to agree with Cosecha’s use of Direct Action tactics. However, just because you don’t agree with them, people shouldn’t be undermining the important work that Cosecha does. I don’t find hold signs as a terrible effective form of resistance, but I will never tell people to not do it. The same should apply with Direct Action tactics. Cosecha’s goal is to fight for immigrant justice and to abolish ICE. If you support these goals, even if you don’t agree with all of the tactics, please stop discrediting those doing this work.

I agree with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. when he said, “If our direct action programs alienate our friends … they never were really our friends.” Hasta La Huelga!

Nine years of demanding immigrant justice: Movimiento Cosecha May Day march in Grand Rapids in this Friday

April 26, 2026

Just after the last No Kings protest in Grand Rapids I wrote an article entitled, An invitation to allies and accomplices to show up for the May 1st march in Grand Rapids organized by Movimiento Cosecha. In that article I stated:

We just saw thousands of people show up for the No Kings rally in Grand Rapids, so it would be fabulous if people showed up to the May Day march. It is vitally important that those of us who call ourselves allies show up now and not wait for Grand Rapids to become another Minneapolis. Immigrants in this community are being arrested, detained and deported and have been since 2003, when ICE was created.

Since 2017 Movimiento Cosecha has been organizing May 1st marches in Grand Rapids. What follows is a summary of those May Day marches.

May 1st 2017 Action – Movimiento Cosecha started their circle in 2017 and one of the first action they did was to organize a May 1st march from Garfield Park to downtown Grand Rapids. We wrote the following:

Those marching were mostly Latinos, Latinx, and indigenous people from Mexico, Central America and numerous Caribbean nations. Some proudly displayed flags from their country of origin, while other carried signs with demands to stop Separating Families because of the decades-long policy of deporting those without documentation.

The march organizers did not obtain a permit, since they felt that it was their right to march for what they were demanding. The GRPD was frantic before the march, calling organizers and others connected to the movement, but no one was giving up any information. The GRPD decided to close down roads on their own to clear a path for the march, but the march organizers were clear in that they were providing enough protection for marchers on their own.

May 1st 2018 Action – The 2nd annual May Day march by Movimiento Cosecha, began in the southwest part of the city, at Roosevelt Park, marching down Grandville Avenue and ending up in downtown Grand Rapids. We wrote:

There were other beautiful moments during the march. First, when people didn’t comply with the GRPD route, it clearly showed people that police do not need to be obeyed, based on how animated people got when they changed their route.

Second, when the march was going under the 131 s-curve on Market Street, the echo provided a great opportunity for those marching to get even louder. The marchers stop for a few minutes to revel in their excitement.

Third, the march organizers who were talking through a sound system during the whole march, not only led chants, but provided important information about the realities that immigrant families face on a daily basis. They talked about the constant fear that the community lives in and how people are being detained and deported by ICE agents. Those leading the march also addressed the oppressive role that the GRPD plays in their struggle and made numerous comments at the exact same time that Police Chief Rahinsky was present on Grandville Avenue.

May 1st 2019 Action – The 3rd annual May Day march organized by Movimiento Cosecha GR, began again at Garfield Park. This time the GRPD was threatening to arrest people if they marched in the street. We wrote:

Despite the weather and despite the levels of state violence that the immigrant community has endured, there was no indication that those who were slowly gathering at Garfield Park would be anything but intimidated by the threats of arrest. Movimiento Cosecha GR organizers and volunteers did an amazing job preparing for this march, making connections with people and following the lead of those in the community who have told them over and over again that the ability to obtain a drivers license would be a huge win.

The insurgent hope that grew as we got closer to noon could be felt in the crowd that was gathering, it could be heard in the excitement in people’s voices as they began to chant and urge each other on in this struggle and it could felt in the deep affection and solidarity being exchanged in the embraces people gave each other.

2019 Addendum – Because the GRPD was so bent on arresting people if they marched in the streets, we decide to submit a FOIA request to see what the GRPD was doing prior to the 2019 march.

It should be stated that since Movimiento Cosecha GR and it’s ally group, GR Rapid Response to ICE, began organizing in early 2017, the GRPD has consistently engaged in surveillance, monitoring, harassment and intimidation tactics of this movement. On many occasions, when organizers engaged in specific actions, there were as many, and at times, more police officers present than there were those protesting.

In what follows, you will see that the GRPD spent a great deal of energy, resources and taxpayer money to monitor, harass and threaten a consistently non-violent movement for immigration justice.

The FOIA documents we obtained can be viewed at this link, with 271 pages of e-mail communication, text messages, photos, and other documents related to the 2019 May Day action that Cosecha GR had planned.

On pages 269 – 271, you can see the final cost of the FOIA request, which was $551.01. However, if one goes through the pages, it is clear that 90-95% of the documents were redacted by the GRPD. Here is the explanation they provide on the redaction:

Your request for these records is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Please be advised that information has been redacted from the documents under MCL 15.243(1)(a)(information of a personal nature release of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of an individual’s privacy) and MCL 15.243(1)(b)(iii) (law enforcement records release of which would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy). It is the City’s position that the public interest in the disclosure of this information is outweighed by the public interest in keeping this information private. The core purpose of the FOIA is to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the government. Requests for information that involve private citizens in government files that reveal little to nothing about the inner working of government do not serve the core purpose of the FOIA.

Apparently, the GRPD does not want the public to know what they did, and more importantly, how they operate. So much for transparency.

May 1st 2020 Action – Because we were in the midst of a pandemic, Cosecha organizers decided to do a car caravan and keep people safe. Here is what we wrote about that day:

Movimiento Cosecha GR was once again demanding driver’s licenses for all, but they also emphasized the fact that immigrant workers are essential workers, particularly migrant workers. Migrant workers do the back breaking work in the fields that puts food on all of our tables, work that is so essential, that without them the food system would collapse. Another important point that Movimiento Cosecha GR made yesterday was that the 11 million undocumented immigrants in the US are not eligible for any of the COVID-19 relief funds coming from the federal government, thus causing even extra hardship for the immigrant families that are already terrorized by law enforcement.

May 1st 2021 Action – Since there was a Democratic Party controlled Congress and White House, Movimiento Cosecha decided to do their May Day action in Washington, DC. They wanted to make the point that Democrats also Deport us!  We interviewed two of the volunteer organizers just after they got back from their time in Washington, DC. We wrote:

We sat down with two of the Cosecha GR organizers, Gema and Idalia, both of who went to DC last weekend. We asked them four questions: 1) What was the main focus of going to Washington DC, since during the past 4 May Days, the actions have been local; 2) What kind of actions did you organize and take part in during the two days in Washington, DC; 3) There has been a clear drop in attention and support by the ally community since the November Election, what message do you have for allies about why it is important to continue supporting the immigrant justice movement; and 4) Those who went to DC were very energized, so how do you maintain that kind of energy and how do you get more people involved for the fight ahead?

May 1st 2022 – I ended up not writing a post about this march, since I was part of a separate action to shut down US 131, while the standard march acted as a decoy. Here is a picture of the highway shutdown!

May 1st 2023The participation of the immigrant community, as always, was amazing. The energy and commitment they bring is always an inspiration for anyone who pays attention to movement work. Granted, movements like the Immigrant Justice movement need allies to create enough political pressure to make the necessary changes in policy. However, this movement must be lead by those most affected and those of us who carry a whole lot more privilege need to take our cues from movement organizers if we truly want to be in solidarity with them. Hasta La Huelga!

May 1st 2024 – The Democrats controlled the Governor’s office, the Michigan State House and the Michigan State Senate, so Cosecha decided to do their annual march action at the Lansing State Capitol, specifically to pressure the Democrats to pass a Driver’s Licenses for All bill. I wrote:

First, the roughly 100 participants marched down Michigan Street, passed the Lansing Police Station and around the roundabout. However, instead of just walking around the big traffic circle, those holding banners were strategically placed at all four exits of the roundabout, which prevented vehicles from entering. This allowed the rest of the marchers to take the streets for the next half hour, which included chants and caused traffic to back up, or in some cases, motorists just turned around and went in the opposite direction. Interestingly enough, the police didn’t even bother to show up and force the marchers off the street.

May 1st 2025The Cosecha march arrived at the corner of Wealthy and Division, where people gathered in front of the Catholic Diocese building. There were a few speakers at this point, with the main speaker being from Cosecha. The immigrant-led organization chose to stop in front of the Catholic Diocese building to challenge them to take action in favor of immigrants and to publicly oppose the threat of mass deportation coming from the Trump Administration. After reading a statement, Cosecha organizers then took a copy of the statement, in both Spanish and English, and taped them to the front door of the Catholic Diocese building, Martin Luther-like.

Let’s practice some real solidarity this year by showing up on May Day and march with Movimiento Cosecha. Let’s also remember this is a three day strike, so besides marching we are not going to work, not sending our kids to school and no spending money. It is imperative that allies, especially white allies, show up on May 1st this year in large numbers to support the demands of the immigrant communities, Movimiento Cosecha and those being targeted by ICE.

GRIID Interview with Pastor/Rev. Greta Jo Seidohl on the solidarity fast being organized by religious leaders to draw attention to the detainee hunger strike at the ICE detention facility in Baldwin

April 25, 2026

GRIID – We recently saw each other at a solidarity action outside of the North Lake Processing Center in Baldwin, MI to support detainees who went on a hunger strike on Monday. What prompted the Michigan Multi-Faith Clergy Rapid Response to call for the solidarity fast?

Greta Jo – When we heard about the Hunger Strike, we wanted to act quickly to amplify detainees’ demands and encourage people to advocate for their well-being. The Michigan Multifaith Clergy Rapid Response is a network of faith leaders mobilizing quickly for coordinated action to protect vulnerable communities and uphold human dignity.

We meet regularly to discuss current concerns and potential responses. At the moment we were gathered outside of North Lake, a group of clergy were participating in an already scheduled meeting to discuss an action in solidarity with the people detained at North Lake. So with the news of the hunger strike, the group shifted gears from other ideas to addressing this moment.

GRIID – Can you say something about the practice of fasting as a mechanism for solidarity, specifically in religious traditions?

Greta Jo – Across religious traditions, there are a lot of ways people fast. It can mean going entirely without food for a period of time or eliminating certain foods. Fasting can indicate mourning and repentance, it can be a practice of self-discipline and obedience, and it is also a way to act in solidarity with the poor and hungry. For example, in Christian tradition, meat, wine, eggs, dairy, fish, and olive oil are items that are traditionally fasted from. In part, this is because they were luxuries. In the Islamic tradition, there is the yearly fast of Ramadan of abstaining from food from sunrise to sunset. And in the Jewish tradition, Passover is a time of abstaining from certain foods and deeper attention to how food is prepared and consumed.

At the same time, fasting is usually coupled with the encouragement to increase our giving and to increase reflection and prayer. In this case, as there is a Hunger Strike at North Lake, and detainees are standing against their oppression by abstaining from food, we felt that the religious tradition of fasting was an appropriate act of solidarity. Even so, we don’t encourage fasting on its own—but also a commitment to learn, reflect, and act during the time of fasting.

It’s also important to note, that how much, or what you give up (or don’t give up), is personal. The meaning is to intentionally align with and support these detainee’s demands. How we do that through fasting will be personal, but it must also include action.

GRIID – Can you also say something about the women who have a class action lawsuit that was filed last fall?

Greta Jo – I was personally not aware of that lawsuit until last Tuesday at North Lake. But hearing their stories read aloud as we stood in witness was heart wrenching. As we’re crafting out communication around the fast, we’re intentionally drawing from those written stories to not only lift up the hunger strikers but the brave women sharing their truths too.

GRIID – What outcomes are the clergy group that is calling for the fast hoping for and besides fasting what other ways can people support the detainees at the North Lake Processing Center?

Greta Jo – We hope to see the demands and needs of the detainees met – specifically around medical care and legal due process. We hope to see an end to inhuman treatment. Ultimately we want to see immigrants safely returned to their families and a clear, timely path to citizenship.In addition to the fast itself as an act of solidarity, witness, and amplification, those who have committed to the fast are going to receive daily action invitations such as donating to mutual aid/bond funds and writing letters of support to detainees. The hope being that the fast is a catalyst for continued acts of solidarity.

GRIID – There has been less attention to the repressive tactics that ICE engages in now that Minneapolis is “old news”. How can the solidarity fast be a tool to rekindle the urgency around how undocumented immigrants are being targeted/treated and why it is critical that we center their lived experiences?

Greta Jo – It’s frustrating that the public’s compassion feels dependent on the news cycle. Actions like the fast are personal for the people participating but they are also inherently about raising awareness and gaining public attention to the root issue. I find that when someone hears the word ‘hunger strike’ or ‘solidarity fast’ there is an emotional reaction rooted in an embodied understanding of the severity of the situation that would cause people to take such an action. What is happening to our neighbors deserves that level of recognition. I think that solidarity fast can be a tool to help the general public remember that those impacted by ICE violence are real people – people with bellies that grumble, eyes that cry, and hearts that break. If our solidarity fast can help elicit an emotional response from a larger portion of the public and help re-humanize the people detained for those with privilege, then our witness will have had an impact.