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Indigenous Activist/Scholar Winona LaDuke says Making America Great would be growing 8,000 varieties of corn

March 3, 2017

Last night Indigenous Scholar/Activist Winona LaDuke spoke to a crowd at the GVSU downtown campus as part of the annual Women and the Environment event.winona_slider

This was no lecture. It was a series of story tell and truth bombs.

LaDuke began by saying that in her tradition there are two paths; one that is scorched, where devastation has occurred and one that is less worn and green, because it is a path that fewer have taken.

The Native activist also pointed out the need to reflect on the future. “We should always be looking to the future and asking, what will we look like and who will be in charge?

That future depends upon us and what we chose to do. LaDuke said that right now, there are places near her home on the White Earth Reservation where you can still drink from the lakes. This is the future that we can have.

Winona then showed a slide of a canoe that had many people in it, saying, “We are all in this together. Sitting Bull said lets put our minds together to see what future we can make for our children.”

Another slide she presented to the audience had a statement we have all become familiar with over the past year, Making America Great Again. However, what she meant by this is when we have 8,000 varieties of corn that are being grown, corn that is nutrient rich and resilient. She said that American was great when we had 50 million buffalo and when had a billion passenger pigeons in the sky.

The next slide she showed spoke volumes. There were two photos, one with Sitting Bull and the other was of Col. George Armstrong Custer. Under Sitting Bulls image it said Organic and under Custer’s image it said GMO. The slide needed no explanation.9781552669594_300_464_90

LaDuke then talked about how Enbridge had proposed a pipeline through her reservation, the Sand Piper, right through their wild rice harvesting grounds. She said they forced the state of Minnesota to hold public hearing and to get the government to require an Environmental Impact statement.  Winona said, “We rode on (on horses) the route of the proposed pipeline for 4 years and then Enbridge pulled out!

After that Enbridge bought 28% of the Dakota Access Pipeline. LaDuke then reflected on the realities of North Dakota, about how many people have left the state and how depopulated it was. She said that the Sierra Club has one person for all of North Dakota and the ACLU has one person for both North and South Dakota.

standing_rockInitially the pipeline was scheduled to go near the city of Bismark, which of course said no. So what they did was to put it through Standing Rock. North Dakota then became militarized. She showed a slide with a Mine Resistant Ambush Protection vehicle, an MRAP that you can see in the upper right corner. LaDuke said that the militarization of Standing Rock also included the use of water cannons, pepper spray, and sound machines that would disorient people. Winona then said, “Standing Rock was our Selma moment.”

There are currently 750 people are facing charges because they dared to stand against the pipeline at Standing Rock. 8LaDuke said there was a survey done in North Dakota and 82% of the jury pool believes that Water Protectors are guilty. “Maybe what we need are Freedom Riders to go to North Dakota to sit in the court rooms,” LaDuke said, with yet another reference to the Freedom Movement of the 60s.

The speaker then said that we suffer from Ecological Amnesia, which is when we don’t remember what we once had.

Our economy is based on consumption. All we do is consume. We are like a T-Rex, consuming like crazy and leaving nothing but destruction behind.”

LaDuke then made the link to our consumption of fossil fuels and how that related to addiction. Someone once told her that they would rather have oil delivered on a railway instead of pipelines. LaDuke responded by saying, “Would you rather have some heroin delivered by pipeline or rail? The problem with being an addict is that you end up doing bad things. Being an addict is like going to your drug dealer to get policy written. This is how much influence the oil companies have over policy.

Forever the economist, LaDuke then breaks down the money spent on defending the pipeline at Standing Rock and how that money could have been spent on renewable energy and retro fitting people’s homes.

She talked about the Dine solar project and about the need for all of us to work on a local food economy. She told the story of when she was studying at Harvard and her father came to see her and said, “I know you are a really smart person, but I don’t want to hear about your philosophy unless you can grow corn.

LaDuke concluded her comments by giving some examples of how we fight back and how we make the changes we want to see in our communities.screen-shot-2017-03-03-at-8-10-04-am

She said that what justice looks like for Standing Rock is getting wind turbines, solar power,  supporting local food, energy efficient homes, a new hospital for the people. This is what the people need. Not a pipeline.

LaDuke showed slides of what they are doing in their community. Here is an image of a project, where artists have been coming to paint homes in such a way as to celebrate their history and their resistance.

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Here is a picture of solar panels that are connected to her home and how so much of this could be done with people. In the end she said, “be passionate about what you do. Find out what your gifts are and utilize them. Live your life intentionally and with integrity.”

Down the Memory Hole: The Trump administration, Banned Countries and Historic Amnesia

March 2, 2017

The Trump administration announced a ban on people traveling from seven countries in late January, claiming these countries have Islamic terrorists. Those countries include Syria, Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia and Libya.trump-ban-810204

Shortly after this executive order was announced, several major media sources made the claim that President Trump has no business dealings with these seven countries. At the same time, they claimed that other majority Muslim countries, where Trump does have businesses dealings, also are home to terrorist groups.

The Washington Post stated on January 28, “But without divesting from his company, as bipartisan ethics ­experts had advised, Trump is now facing questions about whether he designed the new rules with his own business at least partly in mind.”  

While it may be true that President Trump has no business dealings with the seven countries with the travel ban in effect, this is hardly the primary motive for choosing these particular countries.

Syria, Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia and Libya are all countries that have been seen by US foreign policy officials as enemy states for for years and in some cases decades.

The suggestion that Trump chose these countries because of his business dealings is ridiculous and the fact that many commercial media source went out of their way to make this point only underscores the foreign policy amnesia we all struggle with when it comes to the United States and the rest of the world. Let’s take a look at the historical record and these seven countries.

Iran – The US has had issues with Iran since the early 1950s. The popular president, Mohammad Mossadegh, nationalized Iran’s oil, which was unacceptable to the west. In 1953, the CIA overthrew the Mossadegh government and put in power a brutal dictatorship, know as the Shah. The Shah ran the country with an iron fist, with the use of his death squads, known as SAVAK, which were trained by the Israelis and armed by the US.

The Shah of Iran has close relations with US Presidents from Dwight Eisenhower through Jimmy Carter, but growing internal opposition to the repressive policies of the Shah eventually led to his overthrow in 1979. The new government was led by a Muslim cleric named the Ayatollah Khomeini.images

The Khomeini government began with lots of support, but soon adopted repressive tactics. The US began to isolate Iran diplomatically and quickly turned to the Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein, who was eager to pick a fight with Iran. From 1980 – 1988, the US government provided millions of dollars to the Iraqi government to fight a war against Iran, even supplying the Iraqi government with chemical weapons that were used against Iranians. There was a period of time during this eight year war, that the US was actually providing military aid to both Iraq and Iran, with the hopes of destabilizing both countries and allowing the US greater control in the region.

During the Clinton administration, Iran continued to be a terrorist state, especially because of it’s relationship with Israel. After 9/11, the Bush administration referred to Iran as part of the Axis of Evil, along with Iraq and North Korea. Ever since then the US has claimed that Iran possesses nuclear capability and punished them through diplomatic means and by supporting internal opposition forces that have threatened to overthrown the Iranian government for years.

Iraq – The US had supported Saddam Hussein since the early 1960s when the Ba’ath Party overthrew the government. Saddam would eventually become President of Iraq in 1979, just in time to be an ally in the US isolation of Iran.

As was mentioned in the section on Iran, the US government supplied Iraqi with millions of dollars of military aid, including chemical weapons that Iraq used against Iran and against the Kurdish population.

After the Iran-Iraq war ended in 1988, the US soon began to distance themselves from Saddam Hussein. Beginning in 1990, the US needed a new rogue nation threat, especially after the collapse of the former Soviet Union. The US told Iraqi diplomats that they didn’t care about their border dispute with Kuwait, but within months to US was deploying its military to Saudi Arabia in the Fall of 1990.

In order to justify a war with Iraq, the US claimed that Iraqi soldiers were killing babies who were still in incubators in Kuwait. This was later revealed to be a fabricated story that was developed by a US PR firm, Hill & Knowlton. 

In January of 1991, the US began a massive bombing campaign against Iraq, a campaign which lasted 40 days until Iraq finally surrendered. However, the US left Saddam Hussein in power and according to declassified documents, wanted him to stay in power because he would provide the best opportunity for the US to intervene in the future when necessary. 

The US imposed the most severe sanctions ever applied to a country from 1991 to 2002, just before the US invasion and occupation of Iraq beginning in March of 2003. During the Clinton years, in addition to harsh sanctions, the US bombed Iraq on a regular basis and funded armed groups with the hope that they would overthrow Saddam Hussein. In a 1996 interview by 60 Minutes, then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was asked if the 500,000 Iraqi children that had died because of the sanctions was worth it. Here is what Albright had to say. 

The US occupation of Iraq lasted from 2003 through the early years of the Obama administration. During those years several anti-American movements grew because of the US military occupation and the re-writing of the Iraqi constitution to favor US-based corporations. These insurgent movements despised the US occupation, with the most recent insurgent manifestation being ISIS. According to author and scholar Patrick Cockburn (The Rise of Islamic State), the US is directly responsible for creating a political climate that gave birth to ISIS in Iraq.

Syria – The US government has played an active role in Syria, ever since the 1949 CIA sponsored military takeover of that country. Beginning in 1950, the US worked to put in power various leaders, again with the CIA’s involved throughout much of the 1950s.syria-usa-russia-syria

In 1967, during the Israeli war against Egypt, Syria also engaged in a military campaign against Israel, because Israel wanted the Golan Heights, territory that the Syrians claimed was theirs.

In the 1970s, Syria invaded Lebanon during the Ford administration, with support directly from Henry Kissinger. President Assad was an ally to the US, mostly because of his contempt for PLO leader Yassir Arafat.

Beginning in the 1980s, Assad turned a blind eye towards Islamic extremists who were committing atrocities. The US continued to see Assad as an ally and supported his regime throughout the 80s and 90s. Just after 9/11, the US recruited Syria in its war against al Qaida, despite the fact that the US kept Syria on their list of countries sponsoring terrorism.

During the Obama administration, the policy has been to provide military support to opposition forces with Syria, but not enough for them to overthrow the Assad regime. The administration hoped to demonstrate just enough disgust with the Assad regime, while quietly unwilling to actually overthrown the dictatorship. 

Sudan – Sudan has been engaged in bloody internal wars since 1955, when it obtained independence from Britain. With massive oil reserves, the West and particularly the US has had an interest in that country.

By 1980, Sudan had become the sixth largest recipient of US military aid. Islamic militants eventually came to power in 1989, but the US chose to maintain close relationship with Sudan until they decided to support Iraq during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.a891f3f7c19d3c532b5ba6dcbe68ced0

Osama bin Laden fled his native Saudi Arabia and landed in Sudan in 1990 in opposition to the US military build up in just before the Persian Gulf War. Bin Laden was collaborating with the National Islamic Front (NIF) and after years of operation, the Clinton administration lobbed 75 cruise missile into the Sudanese city of Khartoum. The bombs destroyed the only pharmaceutical factory, which led to the deaths of tens of thousands of children, since they were not able to provide basic medicines. The US eventually admitted to wrong doing and they settled after a lawsuit was brought forth for the factory bombing.

After 9/11 Sudan’s status increased as a country that supports state terrorism, although the US hasn’t demonstrated any urgency in dealing with their role in foster Islamic fundamentalists groups. The Bush and Obama administrations maintain sanction against Sudan, up until the last few weeks before Trump took office, when President Obama lifted sanctions.

Libya – The US relationship with Libya has been primarily about oil since the north African country obtained independence. Thus, the relationship the US has had with the Qadaffy regime over the years has been mixed.d3d42bd9cec1e3587c

The US has always tried to present itself as being in opposition to the Qadaffy government, but for years the US government through the CIA always assisted him in fighting off attempted coups. beginning in the 1980s, Libya began to be seen as an enemy state, especially during the Reagan years, with attempts to assassinate Qadaffy in 1986. Sanctions were also imposed on Libya during the 1980s.

The sanctions continued through the Clinton years, until they were eventually lifted in 1999. Cordial relations continued after 9/11, when Libya condemned the attacks on US soil. However, in 2011 the US led campaign to get the United Nations to go to war against Qadaffy demonstrated that the US no longer had use for the dictator. The US disposed of Qadaffy in a brutal war that is well documented in books like The Illegal War on Libya and Arab Spring, Libyan Winter, despite the fact that the war was presented to the American public as a war of liberation. 

Somalia – Somalia is a great example of how flooding a country with small arms can eventually come back to haunt the country that provides the weapons. This is what happened in Somali in the late 1980s and early 1990s, even before Siad Barre came to power.somalia460

As the United States poured in more than $50 million of arms annually to prop up the Barre regime, there was virtually no assistance offered that would have helped build a self-sustaining economy which could feed Somalia’s people. In addition, the United States pushed a structural adjustment program through the International Monetary Fund which severely weakened the local agricultural economy. Combined with the breakdown of the central government, drought conditions and rival militias disrupting food supplies, there was famine on a massive scale, resulting in the deaths of more than 300,000 Somalis, mostly children.

The tensions built up and eventually the US sent troops to engage in a counter-insurgency war that lasted for about 18  months and wound up being a nightmare for the US troops and US diplomats.

The country continued to suffer from civil war and repression, with Islamic group eventually coming to power in 2006. Since 2006, the US has viewed Somalia as significant terrorist threat, but has never really acknowledged the role in has played in the history of violence over the past 40 years.

Yemen – Yemen is another country where the US has been a major supplier of weapons over the years, eventually resulting in destabilization and anti-American sentiment. In addition to the history of US weapons trafficking in Yemen, the Obama administration escalated its drone war campaign in Yemen, with numerous targeted assassinations, often resulting in civilian deaths.

Author Jeremy Scahill writesyemen_map_drone_620x350_0_0

For years, the elite Joint Special Operations Command and the CIA had teams deployed inside Yemen that supported Yemeni forces and conducted unilateral operations, consisting mostly of cruise missile and drone attacks. Some of the unilateral strikes have killed their intended targets, such as the CIA attack on Awlaki. But others have killed civilians—at times, a lot of civilians. And many of these have been in Abyan and its neighboring province of Shebwa, both of which have recently seen a substantial rise of AQAP activity. President Obama’s first known authorization of a missile strike on Yemen, on December 17, 2009, killed more than forty Bedouins, many of them women and children, in the remote village of al Majala in Abyan. Another US strike, in May 2010, killed an important tribal leader and the deputy governor of Marib province, Jabir Shabwani, sparking mass anger at the United States and Saleh’s government.

This brief overview of the history of US relations with the seven countries that the Trump administration has issued the travel ban against, demonstrates that the US has for decades seen these countries as enemy states regardless of which political party sits in the White House.

Sources used for this article:

Imperial Alibis: Rationalizing US Intervention After the Cold War, by Stephen Shalom

Crusade 2.0: The West’s Resurgent War on Islam, by John Feffer

Boomerang? How Covert Wars Have Created Enemies Across the Middle East and Brought Terror to America, by Mark Zepezauer

Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions since WWII, by Bill Blum

Devil’s Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam, by Robert Dreyfuss

Marchers call for Dignity and Respect for all Immigrants

March 1, 2017

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On late Tuesday afternoon, people started to gather at the Calder Plaza in Grand Rapids for another action promoting immigrant justice.

The action today was on the heels of a February 16 march that began on 28th Street near division and even though today’s turnout wasn’t as big, the energy level was high. 

Before the march began there were several speakers with stories about family members being deported and a DACA student’s inspiring message. Organizer Gema Lowe, with the Workers Center in Grand Rapids, also led people in chants, talked about upcoming actions and made it clear to those present that this was a movement that was growing.

The march departed from Calder Plaza and made it’s way north on Ottawa towards Michigan. There were several large banners used by the marchers, along with signs and the use of a megaphone to lead everyone in chants.

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What was interesting about the march was that it was not only targeting the traffic on Michigan Avenue, it also made it difficult for those attempting to access the highway at Ionia during rush-hour. The marcher walked in a big square along Michigan, crossing at Ottawa and Ionia, making several rounds before the police told them that the next time they prevented cars from moving people would be arrested. This video gives you a better idea of how traffic was backed up on Michigan.

Police presence began at the Calder Plaza and then moved over to Michigan Avenue. The marchers were not confronted by police for the first 30 minutes, but more cops showed up and eventually threatened people with arrest if they didn’t stop making it difficult to move about.screen-shot-2017-02-28-at-7-21-07-pm

Marchers did make it very clear that they would stop disrupting the lives of motorists when the government and law enforcement agencies would stop disrupting the lives of immigrants by detaining, arresting and deporting members of their families. People in their cars were delayed by several minutes, while immigrant families are having families members taken from them and often deported thousands of miles from loved ones. The organizers of the march wanted to make this clear to people that they will not stop with these kinds of actions until the US government stopped terrorizing the immigrant community.

Grand Rapids Acton Institute on Trump Administration’s Immigration Policies: Promoting Hate Against Immigrants

February 27, 2017

screen-shot-2017-02-27-at-2-06-56-amThe Grand Rapids-based Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty has historically promoted Neo-Liberal Capitalist economic policies and practices, by using Christianity as its main justification. 

Over the years as the Grand Rapids organization has evolved, they have expanded their scope by taking on both US foreign and domestic policy. Along with their expansion of issues, they have added more staff and more researchers to fill the expansion of their scope.

One of those added staff is Paul Bonicelli. According to the bio provided on the Acton Institute website, Bonicelli worked in the George W. Bush administration with the US Agency for International Development (USAID), often working collaboratively with the National Security Council and the State Department. Bonicelli also appears on numerous media outlets and serves as a Senior advisor to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). CSIS is a DC-based think tank board of advisors is made up of former Republican and Democratic administration cabinet members, such as Richard Armitage, William Cohen, Henry Kissinger, Leon Panetta and Brent Scowcroft, all of which have been committed to furthering US world dominance through economic and military means.  

As the Director of Programs and Education for the Acton Institute, Paul Bonicelli was recently on Fox News, talking about the most recent Trump Administration Executive Orders regarding immigration. Here is the clip from Fox News. Pay attention to the language used and the calmness to which the guests and the Fox News pundit refer to immigrants as illegal and criminal.

This video commentary is indicative of the current political climate around seeing undocumented immigrants as criminal and in violation of the law. There is no discussion on why people are coming to the US and what are the factors in determining their departure from their countries of origin.

The news clip only includes two white male “experts,” which means that immigrant voices are excluded from the conversation and irrelevant when it comes to most major news outlets.

Just another example of why the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty is a dangerous organization that promotes hate and White Supremacist values. Those who live in West Michigan need to pay attention to how they influence regional and national policy debates.

New Michigan House bill would punish undocumented immigrant workers

February 24, 2017

logoOn January 31st, House Bill 4130 was introduced, a piece of legislation that is seen by the immigrant community as another attack against those who are most vulnerable. 

HB 4130, “would require public employers to verify the legal residency of employees to determine eligibility for employment through “E-Verify”. Currently, the E-Verify program is a largely voluntary program that allows employers to verify employment eligibility with the Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration. This bill would make it a felony in Michigan to make a false statement about one’s work authorization, punishable by imprisonment for up to fifteen years.”

This is according to an recent campaign to defeat the legislation, a campaign that includes a simple mechanism for people to contact their state legislators

The person who took the lead on introducing this bill, is Rep. Jim Runestad, who represents the 44th District in Michigan. Runestad has also recently come out against refugee resettlement in Michigan, thus demonstrating his opposition to immigrants and refugees, much like the current administration. 

Runestad is primarily a self-financed candidate, but he also has received funds from various Political Action Committees like the Michigan Association of Realtors and Auto Dealers of Michigan.

Joining Runestad in this most recent legislative proposal to punish immigrant workers are Representatives Hank Vaupel, Tim Kelly and Peter Lucido. By clicking on their names you can get campaign finance information.

It is interesting to note that Hank Vaupel received $8,250 from the Michigan Farm Bureau PAC, which represents the agribusiness sector, a sector that relies heavily on migrant farmworkers. The question to ask them is, “who is going to do the pick crops in Michigan, under awful conditions and for little pay, if the politicians want to punish those who are undocumented?”

Again, the link to the online campaign to voice your opposition to this bill is here. However, much more will be needed to stand in solidarity with immigrant workers.

Grand Rapids Stands in Solidarity with the Water Protectors

February 23, 2017

screen-shot-2017-02-23-at-12-24-59-amYesterday, about 100 people gathered at the Calder Plaza in downtown Grand Rapids to offer songs, prayers and stand in solidarity with the Water Protectors at Standing Rock.

February 22nd was the day that the Water Protectors had to leave the OCETI SAKOWIN encampment. We now know that there were several arrests of Water Protectors at the encampment. For up to date analysis and reporting on what is happening at Standing Rock, check out the reporting from Unicorn Riot, both narrative and video. screen-shot-2017-02-23-at-12-29-32-am

The Grand Rapids Water is Life action began with songs and prayers being offered by members of the local Native community. Jonathan Rinehart welcomed those in attendance and provided some context for the action and what it means to the Native community. Here is a video of the open song.

After the welcoming, several Native speakers addressed the crowd, with most of them having spend a fair amount of time at Standing Rock, including Nancy Gallardo, Holly Lin Wood-Jones and Regis & Amos Ferland.

Each of these speakers had very moving stories to tell about their time at Standing Rock and why they believe that the resistance will continue and that they will win. Other Native speakers made the point that because of the resistance at Standing Rock, indigenous issues have been part of the public discourse in ways that has not happened for several decades. Words like sovereignty and treaty rights have now entered a larger part of the consciousness of Americans because Standing Rock has brought those issues to the forefront.

There were also some Native speakers who addressed environmental issues around renewable energy and how we treat the water and land. One Native speaker implored the crowd to vote with their dollars by making sure that how people spend their money or where they have their money doesn’t support oppression and exploitation. This point was emphasized, since the No DAPL campaign has been targeting the banks and other financial institutions that have provided the funds for the Dakota Access Pipeline to be built.

After the speakers were finished at the Calder Plaza, people were invited to march through downtown and to cross the river and gather again at Ah Nab Awen Park. During the march people chanted and sometimes marched in the streets. Here are a few videos of the march:

Once people reached the Ah Nab Awen Park they were invited to take some tobacco and offer up their own prayers. The tobacco was then put in the water as an offering in solidarity with those at the OCETI SAKOWIN encampment facing eviction.

Another Native speaker talked about the importance of water in Native culture and spirituality.

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Once this part of the action was over, people marched back to other side of the river and ended up in front of the Chase Bank building, since JP Morgan Chase is one of the financial backers of the Dakota Access Pipeline.

The Grand Rapids Police were present throughout the entire action, but were particularly present when people gathered in front of the bank, since they anticipated that people might try to go in. This same action was attempted back in late December on the anniversary of the US Army massacre at Wounded Knee in 1890. 

Grand Rapids Econ Club hosted the President of the American Enterprise Institute: The most influential Right Wing Think Tank in DC today

February 21, 2017

screen-shot-2017-02-20-at-7-18-13-pmThe President of one of the most influential right wing think tanks, the American Enterprise Institute, spoke to a crowded room at the JW Marriott in downtown Grand Rapids today.

Hosted by the Econ Club of Grand Rapids, Arthur C. Brooks, spoke to a room full of business people and other members of the power structure today about an idea they all love, which was entrepreneurship. Nothing that Brooks had to say was terribly interesting, rather it was just a 30 minute cheerleading session about how great starting businesses are.

However, the American Enterprise Institute is something worth talking about and something that everyone who cares about social justice and collective liberation ought to pay attention to.

Here are just some of the positions that the American Enterprise Institute has taken in recent decades:

  • Opposes minimum wage laws and living wage campaignsscreen-shot-2017-02-20-at-7-24-45-pm
  • Opposes any regulation of Wall Street
  • Questions Climate Change and promotes the use of fossil fuels
  • Promotes and endorses US foreign policy that perpetuates imperialism
  • Was a big proponent of the US invasion/occupation of Iraq
  • Endorses the privatization of public education and was a big cheerleader for Betsy DeVos
  • Promotes corporate trade policies
  • Opposes government welfare programs
  • Opposes and makes fun of the Water Protectors at Standing Rock

downloadCheck out the information that the American Enterprise Institute has at their own site, as well as the resources available from SourceWatch to get more information on what this right wing think tank is all about.  

Protecting Betsy DeVos: On the Nature and Function of Power

February 20, 2017

It has been reported in many news sources that the new Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, now is receiving protection from the US Marshal Service. 

This news comes just days after Betsy DeVos was confronted by protestors who preventer her from entering a public school in Washington, DC, as can be seen in this video. 

The decision to provide US Marshals to accompany Betsy DeVos, should come as no surprise to those who are familiar with the nature and function of power in US politics.

Those who have power over others, those with political and economic power, will always be the beneficiaries of protection from state agents, like the US Marshal Service.  The nature and function of power in the US is such that those who have power will be protected at all costs and anyone who threatens that power will suffer the consequences.

Whether you are protestors trying to non-violently prevent a government official from entering a public school, water protectors trying to stop an oil pipeline from entering the land you care for or fast food workers fighting for a living wage, you are threatening power. When power is threatened, it will engage in various forms of repression to suppress those engaged in whatever form of resistance they chose to employ.

  • When was the last time you saw cops defend people from corporate greed?
  • When was the last time you saw ICE officials defend immigrants who are fleeing political or economic repression?
  • When was the last time you saw an FBI agent defend those fighting against Islamophobia and hate crimes?
  • When was the last time you saw a member of the Grand Rapids Police Department defend a black person from other law enforcement agents who wanted to do them harm?screen-shot-2017-02-20-at-2-50-09-am

The fact that Betsy DeVos is now receiving protection from federal law enforcement agents, is based upon how power functions in this society. She represents power and any threat to that power will not be tolerated.

Here we can turn to the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass, who has some very astute things to say about power, from an 1857 speech

“This struggle may be a moral one, or it may be a physical one, and it may be both moral and physical, but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress. In the light of these ideas, Negroes will be hunted at the North and held and flogged at the South so long as they submit to those devilish outrages and make no resistance, either moral or physical. Men may not get all they pay for in this world, but they must certainly pay for all they get. If we ever get free from the oppressions and wrongs heaped upon us, we must pay for their removal. We must do this by labor, by suffering, by sacrifice, and if needs be, by our lives and the lives of others.”

Un Dia Sin Inmigrantes march in Grand Rapids: We are here and we are not leaving!

February 17, 2017

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Yesterday, over 1,000 people marched in Grand Rapids for immigrant rights and to send a clear message to people in power, Aqui Estamos y no, nos vamos – We are here and we are not leaving!

People gathered near a store owned by Latinos on Division, just a few blocks north of 28th street. There were a few people who spoke, which energized the crowd and then the march began at about 5:20.

There were no permits obtained, people just simply went out into the street and took up the 2 south-bound lanes on Division and the middle turn lane. People march we great enthusiasm, using horns, drums and chanting all throughout the march. One chant said, Grand Rapids, escucha, estamos en la Lucha! – Grand Rapids, Listen Up, We are in the Struggle!

There were also lots of flags being carried or waved, some American flags, but mostly Mexican and Guatemala flags. I asked a few people about why they were carry their home country flags. One person said it was because they wanted to demonstrate the pride they have in their country of origin. Another person said they were angry at the US government for wanting to build a wall along the US and Mexican border and because of the recent ICE raids being conducted in the country, even in West Michigan.

Once the march got to 28th street, those marching turned right and began going west on 28th street towards US 131. Again both west-bound lanes were taken up by marchers and the middle turn lane. Despite blocking traffic, lots of people were honking their horns in support of the march, with people waving and taking pictures with their cell phones.

Just as we crossed US 131, the march made a big u-turn and then went east-bound on 28th street, back towards division, as can be seen in the video below.

dsc00261The police response to this was surprisingly slow, since the first cop cars did not appear until the march was headed back towards Division on 28th street. The police tried to block the center turn lane and get people to stay in the right two lanes, but lots of people didn’t comply, especially since we were turning left back onto Division to the place where the march began. You can see in the video below people turning onto Division and how long the march was, backed up to 28th street.

The march was the culmination of actions taken throughout the day. People were encouraged not to shop or spend money, not to go to work and to not attend classes or send their children to classes. We have as yet to know what impact the Say Without Immigrants action had economically, but we know for sure that so many students that make up the Grand Rapids Public Schools didn’t show up, forcing the GRPS administration to declare a “snow day.” 

Lastly, it should be noted, that unlike the marches held out at the Kent County Airport in recent weeks, the number of allies at this march was significantly smaller.

Grand Rapids Right Wing Think Tank President Praises Betsy DeVos after Confirmation as Secretary of Education

February 16, 2017

The Acton Institute President Robert Sirico said last week on a blog post, that Betsy DeVos was the best choice for Secretary of Education. betsy-devos-and-priest_1484681039527_7704948_ver1-0

The blog post does acknowledge early on that the Betsy and other members of the DeVos Family have played an intricate role in supporting the work of the Acton Institute over the years.

Betsy DeVos is a former board member of the Acton Institute. She and her family also have been loyal philanthropists for the Grand Rapids, Mich., area of which Acton faithfully belongs. That written, it must be added that Acton’s relationship with the DeVos family and Betsy specifically and personally shows the passion and intellect that she brings to bear on those issues upon which she has been focused for decades. Among those issues is school choice so direly needed for students forced to suffer the failures rampant in our public schools.

However, Fr. Sirico fails to mention the vast amounts of money (over a million dollars) the DeVos family has contributed to the right wing think tanks since its founding, nor does he mention that other members of the DeVos family have served on the Acton Board or that Betsy’s mother, Elsa Prince Broekhuizen, currently serves on the Acton Board.

The founder of the Acton Institute then goes on to say:

The hue and cry from Betsy DeVos’ detractors has been, frankly, disingenuous. She has shown time and again her mastery of intricate details of the many problems facing our country, and now has an opportunity to reverse the unfortunate circumstances facing many of our nation’s public schools.

I’m not sure of her mastery of intricate details, but I do agree with Fr. Sirico that Betsy DeVos intends to reverse the circumstances of the nation’s public schools.

For a significantly different take on what Betsy DeVos’ confirmation as Secretary of Education means check out this interview by Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting that was posted last week. 

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