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Labor Bureaucrats Endorse Obama, but will Rank & File workers do the same?

March 16, 2012

Within the past few days several of the larger US labor unions publicly endorsed President Barack Obama in his bid for re-election.

For many, this is disturbing news, not just because unions have been under attack throughout the first three years of his administration, but because Big Labor has suggested in the past year that they would not put their money and hopes into an increasingly corrupt electoral process.

On Wednesday, Brian Tierney, a labor journalist, writing on CounterPunch, had this to say about the Labor endorsements:

Both Republicans and Democrats have been ratcheting up the war against unions, a fact that is making it increasingly difficult for union leaders to justify their support for Obama to their rank-and-file members.

“Notwithstanding all our disappointment with the Obama presidency, it’s clear that the clowns on the Republican side would be devastating to working people,” a Communication Workers of America (CWA) official told In These Times last month. “But we’re anticipating a tougher challenge motivating people because there is a lot of disappointment and letdown,” he admitted.

That’s probably because workers are hard-pressed to imagine what could be more “devastating to working people” than what they’ve seen in the last year alone. Workers have faced the erosion of collective bargaining rights, the first state in the Midwest passing “Right to Work” legislation, an FAA reauthorization bill signed by Obama that makes it more difficult for airline workers to organize, plans for massive layoffs of postal workers nationwide, and ramped-up attacks on public education.”

This morning on Common Dreams, Trade Unionist Shamus Cooke wrote an excellent piece on why many Rank & File workers will not work for Obama’s re-election. Cooke was particularly responding to comments made by AFL-CIO leader Richard Trumka.

If the AFL-CIO President really wanted to assess Obama’s first four years in relation to working people, he should have included the following points:

1) He bailed out the bankers, and his administration has refused to prosecute any of them for the crimes they committed.

2) The shameful lack of action to create the 25 million full-time jobs the AFL-CIO demanded, until recently, to address the jobs depression.

3) The truth of Obama’s health care plan; it slashes hundreds of millions of dollars from Medicare; forces working people to buy shoddy corporate health care, and taxes the health care of union workers (so called “Cadillac” health care plans).

4) The Wall Street “reform” bill was weak enough to allow Wall Street to continue acting as it had been before the crisis, thus re-creating the conditions that will inevitably lead to another crisis.

5) Obama was complicit as Democratic governors attacked the wages and benefits of public sector union workers across the United States, rather than raising taxes on the wealthy to handle state deficits. The continuing attack on public sector unions aims at the heart of the labor movement.

6) Obama’s national deficit reduction plan threatens to cut additional hundreds of millions of dollars from Medicare and reduce Social Security benefits.

7) Obama’s badly named Race-to-the-Top education program is a direct attack on public education and unionized teachers, since it rewards states for creating privately administered and non-union charter schools, while attacking the seniority of union teachers in publicly administered schools through new “teacher evaluation” schemes.

8) Obama pushed to pass the pro-corporate South Korea, Colombia, and Panama free-trade deals.

9) Obama promised to pass the pro-union Employee Free Choice Act, but never aggressively promoted it. A broken promise.

10) He promised to renegotiate NAFTA, another broken promise, because he did not even go through the motions of pretending to try.

11) He promised to make immigration reform a top priority and did nothing, again without trying.

12) He campaigned against the Patriot Act and then turned around to support it when he was elected.

What is Obama promising unions this election? Nothing. Why make promises to organizations like labor that don’t seem to care if you break them?”

New Media We Recommend

March 16, 2012

Below is a list of new materials that we have read/watched in recent weeks. The comments are not a “review” of the material, instead sort of an endorsement of ideas and investigations that can provide solid analysis and even inspiration in the struggle for change. All these items are available at The Bloom Collective, so check them out and stimulate your mind.

Hollywood 9/11: Superheroes, Supervillians, and Super Disasters, by Tom Pollard – If you wanted to read a solid analysis of how 9/11 has impacted film making in the US, then Tom Pollard’s Hollywood 9/11 is a great source. Part resource guide, part critique, Hollywood 9/11 takes a look at recent films through the lens of primal human emotions such as grief, horror, rage, vengeance, terror and paranoia. Analyzing blockbuster films since 9/11 provides us with an interesting take on films such as Cloverfield, Iron Man and Transformers. Pollard also uses an intersectional lens in his analysis, pointing out racial and gender representations in these films and how that plays into certain social norms, particularly social norms about “the other.” This book is not only interesting for those who love film, but for anyone who wants to critically assess how popular culture images and message impact society.

A People’s History of World War II: The World’s Most Destructive Conflict as Told by the People Who Lived Through It, edited by Marc Favreau – This new volume in the People’s History Series is a refreshing first hand account of WWII that is in sharp contrast to jingoistic books like The Greatest Generation. Editor Marc Favearu has put together an amazing collection of commentary and reflection by US soldiers who struggled to cope with some of the horrors they had committed in Europe and the Pacific, Nazi death camp survivors, Japanese Americans interned in the US during the war, Russian soldiers who fought on the eastern front and scientists who worked on the first nuclear weaponry. Each story provides us not only with the complexity of WWII, but the scope of human suffering committed by Axis and Allied nations alike. An excellent resource to counter the official version of WWII.

Not Written in Stone: Learning and Unlearning American History Through 200 Years of Textbooks, by Kyle Ward – A few years ago Kyle Ward wrote History Lessons, which was a fascinating look at how textbooks from around the world portrayed US history. Not Written in Stone is a fabulous sequel, with the focus on US history as seen through US history books over the past 200 years. Ward looks at major themes such as the European Conquest of Native people, the Revolutionary War, Slavery & the Civil War, Westward Expansion and Industrialism in the US. Each section includes excerpts from various US textbooks over two centuries that amazingly present a rather hegemonic perspective on US history. Ward demonstrates not only the necessity for historians like Howard Zinn, but the harsh reality of how US history has been presented by academics for most of this nation’s history.

Monsenor: The Last Journey of Oscar Romero (DVD) – It has been more than 30 years since the assassination of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero. In this new documentary film, viewers get a much deeper understanding of the work and courage of the man Salvadorans affectionately referred to as Monsenor. The film includes new archival material that mixes film footage, audio recordings of Romero’s sermons, pictures and interviews with dozens of people who knew and worked with Romero. Monsenor is an amazing film that not only sheds light on the past, but speaks to the possibility of radical solidarity and love today. Highly recommended.

MoveOn rally turn out small for anti-foreclosure action

March 15, 2012

On a day where hundreds of actions are being organized against Banks that profited from home foreclosures, a Grand Rapids contingent of MoveOn held a rally demanding that President Obama remove the acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Ed DeMarco, appointed by George W. Bush, who oversees Fannie and Freddie and refuses to support homeowners.

The “rally” held on Wealthy St in Eastown turned out only 4 supporters today. MoveOn claims that they have planned actions, similar to this one, in 197 communities across the country.

We spoke with Grand Rapids MoveOn spokesperson Mike Franz about the action. Besides the focus of the action, we asked him with 3 years running of increased home foreclosures across the country, why was MoveOn only now demanding something from the Obama administration on this issue. Franz responded by saying it was in conjunction with Senate Hearings today. There are Senate hearings on this matter, but that does not address the question of why the administration has done virtually nothing to address the millions of American families that have been evicted during his first 3 years in office.

We also asked Franz what he thought about the contrast between what MoveOn was doing, which was appealing to the President or what the Occupy Movement has been doing, which is to join with people facing foreclosure and occupy these homes and tell the banks and the Mortgage companies that they are not leaving.

The local MoveOn spokesperson said he supported the tactic of occupying homes but also said it was their thing. We reported last week that Occupy Grand Rapids had announced their willingness to work with individuals and families facing home foreclosure in West MI by using direct action as a tactic, since there is no evidence that the banks nor the mortgage companies are responding to requests for relief from those facing foreclosure.

Here is the 3 minute interview with the Grand Rapids MoveOn spokesperson.

Calling Women Sluts is nothing new for Rush Limbaugh: Why we need to widen our analysis for the Dump Rush Campaign

March 15, 2012

The recent remarks from Rush Limbaugh directed at Sandra Fluke, where the radio talk show host called her a “slut” and a “prostitute” are not the first time he has engaged in hateful and demeaning speech.

Limbaugh has for years attacked women and feminism on his radio program with a vengeance. Limbaugh coined the term “feminazi” to refer to women who dare to act confidently and challenge male dominance.

One of Limbaugh’s “undeniable truths” is that. “Feminism was established as to allow unattractive women easier access to the mainstream of society. Some of these babes, I’m telling you, like the sexual harassment crowd. They’re out there protesting what they actually wish would happen to them sometimes.”

According to Rory O’Connor’s book Shock Jocks, Limbaugh used to have a sign posted on his office door that read, “Sexual harassment at this work station will not be reported. However, it will be graded!”

Women, however, are not the only demographic that Rush has a history of attacking. Racial minorities have also been a favorite target on his show. In a 2006 program, Rush referred to all Mexicans as a “renegade, potentially criminal element.” 

African Americans have received the majority of Limbaugh’s racist rants. In his early years of radio broadcasting Limbaugh said he told a Black caller whom he disagreed with, “Take that bone out of your nose, and call me back.”

During a short stint as a football commentator Limbaugh once said, “The NFL all too often looks like a game between the Bloods and the Crips without any weapons.” Demonizing Blacks as criminals and thugs is a common practice by Limbaugh. He once said, “Have you ever noticed how all composite pictures of wanted criminals resemble Jesse Jackson?”

After Hurricane Katrina, Limbaugh went out of his way to racialize the rescue by saying, “Once the whites leave town, all you’ve got is overwhelming lawlessness…..it’s a proven, demonstrable fact.” The following February he said, “They oughta change Black History Month to Black Progress Month and start measuring it.”

Limbaugh also regularly attacks anyone or any group, which is critical of capitalism and the business community. Rush often refers to environmentalists and union members as “leftwing wackos” and recently condemned mainstream environmental groups such as the Sierra Club as extremists because they wanted to prevent oil companies from drilling off the coast of Alaska.

In addition to supporting Corporate America, Limbaugh has also been an apologist for US imperialism abroad, whether it has been in Iraq, Afghanistan or the ongoing US support for the illegal Israeli occupation of Palestinian land.

It is important that the public recognized and was offended by the hate speech directed at Sandra Fluke, but if we want to build a campaign that can remove Limbaugh from the airwaves then we need to widen our analysis and invite other sectors of society that have suffered not only from Limbaugh’s words, but the social and cultural climate that he nurtures, which results in hate crimes and violence.

A great resource that looks at Limbaugh’s history of hate speech since 1994 is the Rush archive at Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting. Another useful resource is Rory O’Connor’s book, Shock Jocks: Hate Speech and Talk Radio.

We have also created a Dump Rush Campaign archive on the GRIID site, so you can easily find all postings about the campaign.

Lastly, just a reminder that there is a Dump Rush Protest on Friday, March 16, 1:00PM at 77 Monroe Center in downtown Grand Rapids. 

Gardening where you live

March 15, 2012

Living Soil & Plant Life
9 a.m. to Noon Sat. Mar. 17
Baxter Community Center
935 Baxter St SE,
Grand Rapids, MI 49506

This Saturday, Our Kitchen Table hosts the garden education workshop “Living Soil & Plant Life.” Join biochemist Clinton Boyd, PhD for an enlightening chat about healthy soil, soil testing and how to grow a successful, chemical-free food garden wherever you live.

Do you live in the Eastown, SECA/Southtown, Baxter or Garfield Park neighborhood?  OKT is looking for more folks to join our yard-gardeners program. OKT yard gardeners are provided valuable gardening resources including organic starter food plants, compost, containers for container gardening, garden tools and a garden coach.

Working with neighborhood folks to grow food in their yards or on their porches and patios is one way to bring more healthy food into our urban communities.

For information on signing up to be an OKT food gardener, email OKTable1@gmail.com, visit www.OKTjustice.org or call 616-570-0812.

Social Media Scam Alert: Top Ten Ways to Tell Kony is Phony

March 15, 2012

This article by Bruce Dixon is re-posted from Black Agenda Report.

Thanks to relentless promotion by Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, Bloomberg News, ABC, CBS, Oprah, celebrities and politicians of both corporate parties, along with right wing church groups and foundations, the Kony 2012 video has “gone viral.”  Viewed on YouTube more than a hundred million times by now, it paints a vivid and simple picture, clear enough, its narrator says, for a five year old.

Joseph Kony, the YouTube video tells us, is a bad guy in Uganda, a lawless warlord leading something called the Lord’s Resistance Army, which kidnaps, enslaves and murders innocent children by the tens of thousands. Just why Kony does this is unclear, but we’re told the Ugandan government would gladly shut him down and bring him to justice if only the US would provide the advanced weapons, sophisticated tracking gear, military training and the boots on the ground to help get it done. To make this happen, all that Kony 2012’s promoters ask of us is to help spread “awareness” of Uganda’s “invisible” child soldiers by facebooking, tweeting and repeating the Kony 2012 video, and by emailing influential politicians and the one-name celebrities like Oprah, Bono, Rhianna, Cosby and Lady Gaga (OK, Lady Gaga is two names) to whom they listen. The Kony 2012 video aims to bring the criminal child-enslaving Ugandan warlord to justice by enlisting tens of millions of us little people in making Kony’s name an odious household word around the planet, after which Washington DC will stretch forth its military arm to bring Kony, alive if possible, before the International Criminal Court for trial and punishment.

Almost everything is wrong with this simple picture, from the missing histories and hidden motives of storytellers and players to false statements of processes and problems real and unreal on both sides of the Atlantic. In fact, Kony 2012 is not a search for justice. Kony 2012 is a corporate-style PR and military psy-ops campaign, a cynical hoax engineered to justify US and Western military intervention to control the incredibly lucrative oil, mineral, water and strategic resources of the heart of Africa.  The video tells viewers not to study history, but to make it.  Kony 2012 does not promote “awareness “. It relies on and promotes ignorance and smug racism.   Black Agenda Report is far from the first or the only news source to point that Kony 2012 is a warmongering hoax, and we certainly won’t be the last.  As our contribution, we here offer our top ten reasons why Kony is phony.

Reason #10: Invisible Children is funded by a core of notorious right wing donors including the Discovery Institute, which Bruce Wilson fingered in a March 11 Talk 2 Action piece as the leading funder of efforts to promote the replacement of biological sciences in schools with “intelligent design,”along with the Caster Foundation and the National Christian Foundation, all prominent backers of anti-gay referenda, politicians and initiatives in the United States and around the world. The Ugandan regime of Yoweri Museveni is a favorite of theirs for having passed legislation making it a criminal offense to be gay, punishable by a life sentence.  Credible African journalists like Keith Harmon Snow have also alleged that Invisible Children’s white and male  leaders have direct personal connections to US intelligence agencies.

Reason #9: Invisible Children and Kony 2012 don’t tell us that the Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni, one of the “good guys” in the Kony 2012 universe, shot his own way to power using an army that included child soldiers, according to the same International Criminal Court they want to haul Kony before. Bruce Wilson’s excellent March 8 Talk 2 Action article “Invisible Children” Co-founder (KONY 2012) Hints It’s About Jesus, and Evangelizing links to numerous sources for this and much else. You’d never know it from Kony 2012, Fox News or the New York Times, but Museveni is a brutal, murderous dictator, kletopcrat and genocidaire whom the International Criminal Court accuses of using thousands of child soldiers during its genocidal plunder of neighboring Congo, where Uganda and six other African nations invaded and killed an estimated 5 to 6 million Congolese in the late 1990s and early 2000s, a larger death toll than anyplace on planet Earth since the second world war.

Like his colleagues in enighboring Burundi and Rwanda, Ugandan dictator Yoweri Museveni maintains a ridiculously large army for a country so small, which it rents out as “peaceckeepers” for whatever dirty work Washington needs done. Right now ten or twenty thousand Ugandan soldiers are occupying parts of Somalia to keep that country from assembling a central government of its own unfriendly to Western interests.

Reason #8: Invisible Children and the Kony 2012 video also don’t tell us that Uganda’s Museveni replaced a president and rival general from the Acholi region of northern Uganda, the same ethnic group as Kony’s LRA. The Ugandan government has evicted hundreds of thousands of Acholi from their lands and confined them to desperate and squalid refugee camps since 1996. Kony and his LRA did commit monstrous crimes in previous decades, but by now are said to number only a few hundred combatants. Kony may not even have set foot in Uganda in years, but he and the LRA are useful as convenient bogeymen to justify the continued dispossession of Uganda’s Acholi, whose chief misfortunes besides the LRA itself, are having produced rivals to Museveni and living at the edge of a resource-rich region that stretches across Uganda’s borders for hundreds of miles into Congo and Sudan.

Reason #7: Invisible Children and Kony 2012 are lying when they attribute the disappearance of 30,000 missing northern Ugandan children to the LRA. The truth is that some of the child soldiers the Ugandan government used in neighboring Congo were abducted in northern Uganda, nobody knows how many, and a large but unknown portion of that region’s civilian dead, many of them Acholi, perished at the hands of Uganda’s government, which always had far more firepower and resources than the LRA, and just as little regard for the property and lives of innocent civilians and their children.

Reason #6: Threats of massive foreign intervention into civil conflict do not bring adversaries to the table. Instead they make it unnecessary for those on whose side the foreigners intervene to negotiate at all, and leave nothing for the other side to negotiate over. Uganda needs an end to violence, and resources devoted to building its civil society, not more military aid.

Reason #5: The United States, the other “good guy” in Kony 2012’s imaginary world invented the modern African child soldier in the late1970s and early 80s, so their commitment to “ending child soldiers” is a bit suspect. Apartheid South Africa was bordered Portuguese ruled Angola and Mozambique, with their own vicious versions of apartheid until 1974. In that year, despite massive US and NATO aid, the Portuguese army rebelled, refused to continue fighting against African independence and overthrew its own government at home. White South Africa was deeply threatened by having independent black regimes now at its borders. So, with US funding it helped create and arm “contra” guerilla forces, UNITA in Angolan and RENAMO in Mozambique to burn schools and clinics, to mine orchards and roads, commit mass rapes, mutilations and murders, terrorizing citizens in their own country. Lacking foreign troops or popular support , but with US aid and plenty of firepower, UNITA and RENAMO hit upon the innovation of kidnapping and enslaving child soldiers to carry out their despicable mission. Both were effusively praised and lavishly funded by Barack Obama’s favorite president Ronald Reagan, and their leaders welcomed at the White House.

In his chilling 2003 essay, Barefoot,Sick, Hungry and Afraid – The Real US Policy in Africa, my colleague Glen Ford described how the chaos and social demoralization spread by Western financed armies of nihilistic child soldiers made them an ideal tool for use in whenever the West needs to delay or prevent the emergence of African civil societies and central governments which might succumb to popular demands to develop a country’s resources for its people rather than to benefit foreign interests. This strategy was employed in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Congo, Rwanda, Uganda and elsewhere. “Failed states” infested by murderous child soldiers in the 80s and 90s proved to be incredibly good business environments for (mostly) Western extraction of hundreds of billions worth of timber, gold, diamonds, coltan and other vital African resources, and ultimately excuses to come in and install Rwandan and Ugandan-style dictatorships.

Reason #4: Depending on movie stars and celebrities is the precise opposite of building the backbone and habits of a vibrant and self-aware civic movement. This kind of so-called activism reinforcing a slavish worship of celebrity culture, acceptance of corporate marketers who tell us what to eat, wear, covet, consume or shun and convince us it was our idea, not theirs. The real deal is that FaceBook, Twitter and much of crowd-sourced culture are fundamentally the master’s tools, clicktivism, not activism. It’s never easy, and may not even be possible for slaves to free themselves with the master’s tools. That ain’t wht they were designed for. Most of those forwarding and FaceBooking the Kony 2012 video, including some of the celebrities, as Keith Harmon Snow points out, probably can’t find Uganda on a map.

Reason #3: When both corporate parties, the entire corporate media universe, a constellation of celebrities and movie stars, all the right wing and much of the establishment liberal church along with the whole bag of bipartisan foreign policy experts agree on the need for decisive military action, you can bet the course of wisdom and truth is just about always in the opposite direction. Republicans and Democrats voted to send troops to Vietnam, and only a single congresswoman voted against war in Afghanistan.

Reason #2: Kony 2012 and the campaign to keep US boots on the ground in Central Africa are all about the oil. And the diamonds. And the gold. And the coltan, and the water. Uganda’s northern region contains vast oil reserves, and neighboring Congo is the source of most of the planet’s coltan, a highly conductive compound used in every cell phone, computer, aircraft, automobile, missile, GPS or other electronic device on earth.

Reason #1: It’s all about white people, the white West and their First Black President doing their imperial and colonial thing, running the planet for their benefit at everybody else’s expense and feeling good about it, saving hapless & hopeless black Africans from themselves. Such a deal. If they wanted to take Kony down, they could have done it last week, last year, five or ten years ago. If they do take him down it’ll be cause their Kony tool has outlived its usefulness, and maybe they need to plant a big wet sloppy kiss on Museveni and his gang, a bigger and more important bag of fools and tools.

The good news about Kony 2012 is that unlike the similar “Save Darfur” scam, many voices have been quick to express skepticism, disbelief and flat out ridicule of the Kony 2012 hoax.

The bad news is that US corporate media, Republicans, Democrats, the Obama White House and State Department as well as rabid Tea Party senators and congress creatures are all permanent cheerleaders for war and empire. So few of Kony 2012’s many critics will get on the TV stations that caused Invisible Children’s video to “go viral.” Corporate media don’t cover Africa or the actions of the US in Africa. Thus the Pentagon’s social media propaganda shops are free to spin and promote whatever fables they require to obtain our disinformed consent for the next oil and resource war — in Africa.

Mark Twain said a hundred years ago — talking about genocidal Western exploitation of the Congo, in fact, that a lie can flash across the world in the time the truth takes to put its boots on. But the boots are on. The truth is out here, and you are responsible for helping it overtake the lie.

So forward the link to this article to your friends. Put it on your FaceBook page. Tweet it and repeat it and send it to as many of your family, friends, colleagues, associates, bosses, employees and acquaintances as you can. Tomorrow, when we record a YouTube video of it, do the same with that. The cure for fake “awareness” campaigns that justify US military intervention in Africa is the truth. Don’t be used. Do study history, Africa’s and your own. And do make history.

MLive recycles Meijer Press Release claiming the corporation fights hunger

March 14, 2012

Earlier today, MLive posted a short article praising Meijer Inc. for its commitment in “fighting hunger.” The story is problematic both in its sourcing and its unwillingness to question the claim of the retail giant.

First, the MLive story is just a slightly re-worded version of a Meijer Press Release from March 13. Meijer CEO, Hank Meijer, was cited in the story with the exact same statement he made in the Press Release.

Second, the article highlights some of the charitable food donations that Meijer Inc. has provided in recent years, which is essentially what the Meijer Press Release is all about. Lastly,  the MLive story ends with a short video about Meijer’ “Get Gifted Contest” winner and how part of her winnings would go to area food banks. What the MLive story does not tell you is that the video is produced by Meijer.

The other way that this MLive article fails the public is that it doesn’t question the corporation’s claim that it is “fighting hunger.” The article again merely repeats the claims from the Meijer Press Release with its list of donations to food banks.

What the MLive story doesn’t tell us is that Meijer can use any donation it makes as a tax write-off, which will often result in the company actually making money from the donations in tax savings and benefits.

The article does admit in one sentence where many of the donations came from – the  “2011 Holiday Simply Give program raised record donations thanks to customer contributions.” So, Meijer sets up a charity food mechanism, where lots of individuals donate money and then Meijer takes credit for it.

These customer incentive programs and contests that Meijer and many other retailers engage in are really just a PR stunt to get the public to spend their money at these sponsoring businesses. You can’t go anywhere these days without the checkout clerk asking if you want to contribute money to some local charity, which while it might make people feel good about their donation, it undermines the public sectors ability to ask the hard question of why people in West Michigan can’t afford to feed themselves.

This is the crucial question, which MLive and other news agencies rarely ever ask. Why do so many people go hungry in West Michigan when there is so much wealth? If the MLive reporter had asked that question, the article about Meijer’ food charity would be significantly different. The West Michigan-based retailer could not just say they donate x amount of money to food banks each year, since they would now have to honestly address the causes of hunger in this community.

Chicago Protest Reflections

March 14, 2012

This article by Paul Street is re-posted from ZNet.

Barack Obama was right last week to move the annual rich nations’ confab called the G8 Summit from its originally scheduled venue of Chicago to a cloistered compound outside Washington DC – the president’s official retreat in Maryland’s secluded Camp David – next May. He knew that the Chicago G8 promised to be highly problematic both for his re-election campaign and for the great concentrated power structures he is sworn and predisposed to defend. Conscious that the ruling class hired his expectation-managing brand of “hope” and change” to (among other things) dazzle, dilute, dismiss, delude, divide, de-mobilize, de-fang, and otherwise destroy dissent, he grasped that his “home city” had become the perfect juicy spring protest target for the Left. As Chicago Alderman Scott Waguespack (32nd Ward) said, “Nobody can get near Camp David.”

Some Left Chicago History

Chicago holds rich historical meaning for left activists. It was the site of the 1968 Democratic Convention, when tens of thousands of protestors descended on the city to oppose the criminal Vietnam War being conducted by Democrats Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey. The antiwar movement and counter-culture met a wave of epic police brutality ordered by Chicago Mayor and Democratic Party boss Richard J. Daley, who tried to make his city’s glaring black poverty invisible to visiting delegates by erecting plywood fences on both sides of the route between downtown hotels and the convention site in the South Side stockyards district. A detailed bipartisan investigation (the bestselling Rights in Conflict) found the repression to have been a proto-fascistic “police riot.”

Then there’s Haymarket. May Day, the great international workers’ protest day, finds strong historical roots in the remarkable left-led working class struggle for an Eight Hour Day that emerged in Chicago in the spring of 1886.  On May 1st of that year, 60,000 Chicago workers struck and 80,000 mostly immigrant workers, led by anarchists Albert and Lucy Parsons, marched up Chicago’s downtown Michigan Avenue. The struggle culminated in the tragic Haymarket incident (the throwing by an unknown hand of a bomb that killed one policeman and injured seven others, followed by the police firing indiscriminately and murderously into a dispersing crowd) and a wave of vicious anti-radical and anti-labor repression that included the execution of four Chicago radicals – August Spies, Albert Parsons, George Engel, and Adolph Fischer – on November 11, 1887. In the moments before they were hanged, Spies shouted, “The time will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you strangle today!” The condemned radicals did not die immediately when they dropped, but strangled slowly, a sight that visibly shook spectators. The Haymarket Martyrs and the social-revolutionary struggle they led are still honored by working class and peasant activists the world over.

The site of many epic labor and left struggles to come, Chicago was also home to the most widely read American socialist novel of the 20th century – Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle. Set in and around Chicago’s once giant slaughtering and meatpacking industry, The Jungle still receives mention in U.S. history texts primarily in connection with its role in exposing the unsanitary conditions of the meat industry.  In fact, the novel was meant above all to be a parable on the tragic nature of working class life under the demands of capital and a plea for socialism.  The original edition of the novel concluded with its proletarian protagonist attending a mass rally addressed by the American Socialist Party’s mesmerizing presidential candidate – Sinclair’s fictional representation of Eugene Debs. The candidate, Sinclair wrote:

“was a man of electric presence, tall and gaunt, with a face worn think by struggle and suffering.  The fury of outraged manhood gleamed in him – and the tears of suffering.  When he spoke he paced the stage restlessly; he was lithe and eager, like a panther.  He leaned over, reaching out for his audience; he pointed into their souls with an insistent finger.  His voice was husky from much speaking, but the hall was still as death, and everyone heard him.  He spoke the language of workingmen – he pointed them the way. He showed the two political parties as ‘two wings of the same bird of prey” [emphasis added]. The people were allowed to choose between their candidates, and both of them were controlled, and all their nominations were dictated by, the same [money] power.”

City of Disparity Protest Sites

City Hall

Run by a corporate-Democratic machine that has faced no serious Republican opposition for more than half a century, Chicago is a monument to that power and control. It is home to the authoritarian mayoralty of Obama’s former chief-of-staff Rahm Emmanuel. Dubbed “Mayor 1%” by Occupy Chicago, Emmanuel is a wealthy, militaristic and left-loathing autocrat who worked relentlessly to advance corporate and imperial policies under two Democratic presidential administrations (Clinton and Obama) and during three terms in the House of Representatives (2003-2008). His service to concentrated wealth and power (including his own) continues in Chicago, where he is pushing hard to rollback teacher pay and other public sector union wages and benefits and to privatize schools and city services. Last fall, Emmanuel forcibly prevented the Occupy Movement from pitching a campsite anywhere in the city, which is blessed by a relative abundance of public parks. Last January 4and 5, more than 200 people of all ages staged a sit-in outside his office to demand that Emmanuel and his appointees on the Chicago School Board cease halt plans to close and privatize schools across the city. In May of 2010, roughly 5,000 teachers, students, and parents surrounded City Hall (121 N. LaSalle St.)  to protest then Mayor Richard M. Daley’s plans to lay off more than 2500 teachers, although the event was largely ignored by the local press and meaningfully covered only in left leaning and socialist publications.

Invisible Neighborhoods and Corporate Headquarters

The city’s glaring disparities are a fit target for protest and resistance, with or without international summits taking place downtown. Numerous predominantly black and Latino neighborhoods suffer Great Depression-like rates of unemployment in the forgotten shadows of “global Chicago’s” shining downtown corporate headquarters and its surrounding ring of gentrified residential and recreation zones. Chicago has 15 neighborhoods where more than a quarter the children are growing up at less than half the federal government’s notoriously inadequate poverty level.  As the Brookings Institution reported last November, it is home to 593,000 poor people and to 124 “extreme poverty” census tracts (where more than 40 percent of the population lives below the poverty line) that together house 304,139 people including 140,574 poor. It is also home to 2,550 people identified by the global wealth intelligence firm Wealth X as “Ultra High New Worth” (UHNW) individuals – persons with at least $30 million in worth, “including shares in companies, real estate, cash, art collections, private planes and other investable assets.” As CNBC reporter Paul Toscano gushed last month in a report on “Where the ‘One Percent’ Live”:

“Chicago is a major financial center and home to major financial and futures exchanges, including the Chicago Stock Exchange, the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Major companies in Chicago include the CME Group, Boeing, Groupon, MillerCoors, United Airlines and RR Donnelley. Some of the billionaires that call Chicago home are private-equity titan Sam Zell, media mogul Oprah Winfrey, former CEO of Wrigley William Wrigley Jr., and founder of Morningstar Joe Mansueto” (CNBC, February 16, 2012) at http://finance.yahoo.com/news/where-the–one-percent–live.html)  

The Boeing Corporation (100 N. Riverside), located on the western shore of the south branch of the Chicago River, is an especially good protest target. It is the maker of the B-2 Stealth Bomber, the Blackhawk Helicopter, and the Predator Drone, to mention just three deadly Boeing technologies the Pentagon has purchased and used (at massive cost-plus taxpayer expense) to murder tens of thousands of innocent civilians, including countless  small children, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, Somalia, and Yemen over the last decade. Two summers ago, in July 2009:

“members and supporters of Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) participated in a silent funeral procession that drew attention to Boeing’s role in the production of drones (unmanned aerial vehicles—UAVs) that have killed over 700 civilians in Pakistan and Afghanistan.”

”To a slow, steady drumbeat, the procession of about forty mourners, dressed in black and bearing a coffin, moved through the streets of downtown Chicago from the Federal Building to Boeing during the noon lunch hour.  A large model Predator Drone hovering above…caught the interest of passersby.  Participants carried signs urging Boeing to divest from drones and death and distributed leaflets detailing some of the startling facts about drone warfare.”  

”The procession culminated at Boeing’s world headquarters beside the Chicago River where the mock drone fired a fake missile at the mourners.  At that point, four CPTers, who had entered Boeing through a side door, spread blood-stained sheets on the lobby floor and lay down to simulate those killed in the attack… Boeing security quickly brought out two dogs on leashes that barked and snarled inches away from the faces of the CPTers lying motionless on the floor.  Security whisked the dogs away when another CPTer began videotaping the scene.” (http://www.cpt.org/cptnet/2009/07/31/chicago-vigil-urges-boeing-divest-predator-drones)

University of Chicago Economics Department

Another worthy protest site is the University of Chicago Economics Department (1101 E. 58th Street, third floor of Rosenwald Hall). For more than five decades, the department’s so-called free market doctrines have advanced the triumph of corporate and financial profit over the needs and rights of ordinary people and the common good at home and abroad – from harshly race- and class-divided and hyper-segregated Chicago to the sprawling mega-slums of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. “Chicago school” economists are regularly rewarded with “Nobel Prizes” honoring their role in the infection of the world with the neoliberal disease.  They use abstract and ahistorical formulas and bloodless models to purport to explain why the wealthy few require grotesque fortunes and endless influence in a nation where half the population is now either officially poor (50 million) or low income (150 million) and in a world where nearly half the population – 3 billion people – live on less than $2.50 a day. Training regressive state-capitalist technocrats and ideologues from and for all corners of the world capitalist system, the University of Chicago has long deployed its own large police department to protect students and professors from black South Side residents for whom the “free market” has proved less than beneficial. From 1992 until his election to the U.S. Senate 2004, the future civil liberties executioner Barack Obama taught constitutional law at the University of Chicago’s conservative and elitist law school. The university’s faux-gothic southern skyline marks one heavily guarded boundary of a ghetto-surrounded island of class privilege. Upton Sinclair’s “bird of prey” perches comfortably atop the university’s giant, aptly named Rockefeller Chapel.

The Obama Campaign Headquarters

An especially juicy, pulp-filled and dollar-soaked Chicago protest target is the top corporate Democrat Obama’s 2012 downtown re-election campaign headquarters

(located in the Prudential Building at 130 E. Randolph St.). Obama’s center of operations “looks more like a company than a campaign. For the last year,” the New York Times reported last week, “an office that appears nearly as long and as wide as a football field has steadily grown, with more than 300 workers now sitting bunched together….a payroll of $3 million in January suggests the staff is larger than any ever assembled for a presidential race.”  The Times adds that the 300 workers are having a hard time raising money from the “small donors who gave early and often in 2008.” This is because “Some of the volunteers who went to work enlisting friends and neighbors [in 2008] have been turned off by unmet expectations” and because “they have literally lost track of many reliable Democratic voters, particularly lower-income people who have lost their homes or their jobs or both, and can no longer be reached at the addresses or phone numbers the campaign has on file” (J. Rutenberg and J. Zeleny, NYT, March 8, 2012, A1).

The corporate-like Obama headquarters is a target thanks to the administration’s relentless service to the rich and powerful.[1] That service stands in bold defiance of the hopes for progressive and democratic change that many Americans felt when President Elect Obama gave his victory speech before an estimate 1 million Chicagoans gathered in and around the city’s downtown Grant Park (where antiwar protestors faced tear gas and police batons in 1968). Many who came to hear the charismatic president-in-waiting in person that night are now among those “who have lost their homes or their jobs or both, and can no longer be reached at the addresses or phone numbers the campaign has on file.” They were used and forgotten by a president who has already attended 191 elite fundraisers – a new first-term record with 10 months still to go (F. Schouten, ”Obama Tops Recent Presidents in Fundraising Attendance,” USA Today, March 6, 2012, A1).  They have been given a harsh lesson in power (who has it and who doesn’t) and in how the Democrats are one of Sinclair’s “two wings of the same bird of [capitalist political] prey.”

World City Folly and Repression

“We’re a world class city with world class potential,” declared Rahm Emanuel last January. Infused by the same civic boosterism, commercial lust, and “global city” pretension that sent the second Richard (M.) Daley (Chicago’s “pinstripe patronage” mayor from 1989 to 2011) and the president himself panting to Copenhagen for the 2016 Olympics, “Rahmbo” and the Commercial Club of Chicago thought they had scored an enviable coup. Chicago, they cheered, would host both the G8 and the annual NATO military meetings this May. Hooray!

“If you want to be a global city, you’ve got to act like a global city and do what global cities do,” said Lori Healey, head of the G8/NATO Summit Host Committee, who led Chicago’s failed bid to host the 2016 Olympics. Healy’s committee came up with a brand name for the co-joined power elite gatherings: “Global Crossroads.”

They should have thought things out more carefully. Global capitalist policy summits became sites for significant “anti-globalization” (global justice) protests in and around big rich state cities during the late 1990s. In the summer of 2001, the G8 meetings in Genoa, Italy attracted giant demonstrations, provoking ugly repression that included the killing of at least one protestor (Carlo Guliani).  Following those events and the 9/11 attacks two months later, the G8 made an understandable point (from an elite perspective)  of meeting in more remote, non-urban locations: Kananaskis, Alberta (Canada, 2002); Evian-les-Bains (France,2003); Sea Island, Georgia (U.S.A., 2004); Gleneagles, Scotland (UK,2005); Streina, St. Petersburg (authoritarian Russia, 2006); Heiligendman, Mecklenberg-Vorpommen (Germany, 2007); Toyaku (Lake Toya), Hokkaido (Japan, 2008); L’Aguillo, Abruzzo (Italy,2009); Huntsville, Ontario (Canada, 2010);  and Deauville, Basse-Normandie (France,2011).[2]  Do G8 planners really want to return to a big city environment during an age of elite-imposed capitalist austerity and in the wake of the related outbreak of the greatest wave of left urban protest to emerge in the West in many decades?

To compound their protest problem, Rahmbo sweetened the G8 target by combining it with the meetings of the rich states’ murderous U.S.-led military alliance – the North American Treaty Organization (NATO).  “Despite its claims,” Chicago-based peace activist Brian Terell rightly noted on ZNet last January, “NATO was never a defensive alliance. It is structured to wage ‘out of area’ wars in Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, as well as to ‘contain’ China [and, Terell might have added, Russia].” The U.S. occupation of Afghanistan (2001-20??) – a criminal and mass-murderous action from the start – is technically a NATO operation.

The idea of combining the two summits in the Second City belonged to Emmanuel.  “After it was determined in December 2010 that the United States would be the host of the G-8 and NATO summit meetings,” the New York Times reported last week, “the Obama administration announced within months that Chicago would be the site [for both]. The idea was less Mr. Obama’s than the brainchild of Rahm Emanuel, then the White House chief of staff….” (J. Calmes, “Camp David, Not Chicago, to Host G-8,” NYT, March 5, 2012)

Here Emmanuel unwittingly did the left he abhors something of a potential favor.  The global justice movement that arose in the late 1990s and sparked repression in Seattle (1999), Washington DC (2000), and Genoa (2001) was focused on economic and environmental matters almost to the point of excluding the more-than-lingering problem of imperial militarism – U.S. imperialism (displayed in the bombing of Serbia that preceded the 1999 World Trade Organization protests in Seattle by many months).When the 2001 jetliner attacks provided “the new Pearl Harbor” that gave official justification for an epic U.S. war campaign in Afghanistan and Iraq, the global justice movement was ill-equipped to respond. This was a shame (from a radical perspective) since corporate globalization and American military imperialism were (and remain) two sides of the same world state-capitalist coin. This basic truth was expressed (in an approving way) by the leading neoliberal propagandist Thomas Friedman in a March 28, 1998, New York Times Magazine article on the need to project U.S. power. “For globalization to work,” Friedman wrote, “America can’t be afraid to act like the almighty superpower that it is. The hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist. McDonald’s cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas, the designer of the F-15, and the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley’s technology is called the U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps.”

Besides upping the Age of Occupy protest ante by joining two summit targets in one big “global city” time and place,  Emmanuel’s bid to combine the G8 and NATO’s seemed almost calculated to help the left overcome differences between its economic and global justice wing on one hand and its anti-imperialist and antiwar wing on the other.  It promised to unite those angry at Obama because of his service to the permanent dictatorship of money with those angry at Obama because of his intimately related service to the permanent war party.  It suggested the basic left point that corporate-financial globalization and American militarism are “two wings of the same [world-capitalist] bird of prey.”

Rahmbo and others in Chicago’s elite knew that their “Global Crossroads” dream carried what one local news station (WLS-ABC) called “the prospect of large-scale protests stealing the stage as the world watches.” But they had a plan to deal with that likelihood: repression, global city-style. The city has been “training thousands of officers in tactics for mass arrests and containment” (the Chicago Sun Times) for months now.  The Mayor warned downtown businesses to expect property damage and told them to increase private security during the summits. He prepared to saturate the downtown (at massive taxpayer expense) with heavily equipped and militarized riot police (required “if you want to be a global city”) and made contact for repression assistance with surrounding city and suburban police forces, the Cook County Sheriff’s office, the state police, and the Illinois National Guard. Last January 18th, moreover, Emmanuel pushed through his obedient City Council a draconian anti-protest ordinance that

  • Increased the minimum fine for violation of the City’s parade permit ordinance from $50 to $200.
  • Required protest organizers to provide the City ahead of demonstrations with a list of all signs, banners, sound equipment or other “attention-getting devices” that required more than one person to carry them, creating what activists call “a license for the city to ‘ding’ organizers with absurd fines.”
  • Required downtown protest marches to obtain $1 million in insurance coverage to “indemnify the city against any additional or uncovered third party claims…arising out of or caused by the parade.” Protest groups would have to “agree to reimburse the city for any damage to the public way or city property arising out of or caused by the parade.”
  • Permitted the “deputizing of ‘law enforcement’ from the DEA, the FBI the Illinois State Police, and “other law enforcement agencies” (including private security firms like Blackwater) determined by the superintendent of police to be “necessary for the fulfillment of law enforcement functions.”

Most disturbing of all, the “Global Crossroads” hosting committee announced last January that the Illinois State Crime Commission was “urgently seeking Iraq-Afghanistan combat veterans” to fill security positions for the summits. “As in other ‘global cities,’” Terell noted, “these veterans will be used as private mercenaries without the legal protections and benefits of public employees…In answer to a potentially volatile situation in the streets of Chicago, the commission is not seeking workers trained in conflict resolution, but it has an urgent need for ex-soldiers trained in the violent chaos of Iraq and Afghanistan. These veterans urgently need treatment and meaningful employment, but at the ‘global crossroads,’ they are offered only temp jobs as rent-a-cops protecting the interests of their exploiters.”

The Last Thing the President Needs

Seasoned Washington observers found it odd that the White House suddenly and without explanation announced the G8’s shift to Camp David. As veteran New York Times correspondent Jackie Calmes noted last week, “the change was unusual given the months-long lead time that such events require.” Stranger still, “President Obama has boasted for months about playing host to the annual summit meeting of the Group of 8 industrialized nations this May in his hometown, Chicago” (Calmes, “Camp David, Not Chicago”).

Obama has cited the desire for a “more casual backdrop” and worried about traffic as the reasons for the late move to the woods of Maryland.  Administration officials told reporters that “the prospect of…protests…was not a factor in the decision to change locations.” That was a bold-faced lie. The truth of the matter is captured well by 1960s veteran Danny Schechter in a recent ZNet commentary:

“The President has been playing Ronald Reagan these days, talking tough while feinting towards the center. What he most decidedly does not want to do is play Hubert Humphrey and relive the summer of 1968 in Chicago. That’s why the G8 meeting was shifted from contested ground there to safe space in the ultra-secure, well-guarded environment of Maryland’s Camp David. The last thing the President needs in the middle of his campaign is another police riot in the Second city [emphasis added]. Someone must have pointed out that the Occupy Movement was already in the process of planning another battle ala Seattle in the very heartland of the Obama Empire. Even the editor of Adbusters, who issued the call to occupy Zuccotti Park last September, now had his megaphone fixed on the Second City. The world movement that has mobilized to confront so many G8 had this one in its crosshairs for month. Sweet Home Chicago was in line to become a sweet home for a world of angry protesters, not just Americans. That has to be stopped or diverted, and it was.”

Leading Chicago activist Andy Thayer tells the Chicago Tribune that “protests will go forward” since “We believe that NATO is, frankly, the de facto military arm of G-8 and anybody who’s upset with G-8 should be upset with NATO.” He’s right. The war party and the money party are two wings of the same bird of prey.  They are joined together on the back of the rapacious global vulture that is American Empire and Inequality, Inc.  The city remains a fitting grassroots protest, resistance, and organizing site both within and beyond its corporate downtown and with or without international summits of the rich and powerful.

Carl Levin, the Israeli Lobby and Iran

March 13, 2012

Last week, both US President Barack Obama and Michigan Senator Carl Levin attended the annual policy conference hosted by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).

Both the President and Carl Levin made sure that their allegiance to Israel was unconditional. Both Obama and Levin made it clear that they will continue to support Israel and both emphasized their commitment to demonize and punish Iran for challenging Israeli and US hegemony in the Middle East.

This is no surprise, since every US President since Richard Nixon has endorsed the State of Israel and made them the largest recipient of US foreign aid for more than three decades. As for Senator Levin’s commitment to Israel, one only has to look at the fact that he has been one of the top recipients of Pro-Israel PAC money over the past 20 years.

According to Open Secrets, Levin has received $1,656,735 from Pro-Israel groups in the US, with AIPAC being the largest contributor to the Michigan Senator. Levin has also consistently voted in for legislation that defends Israel, even when Israel commits war crimes, as they did in the 2009 assault on Gaza.

The main reason for Levin’s visit to the AIPAC conference was to make sure that the major Israel lobby would know that he supports Obama’s plan to marginalize Iran. Here is what the Senator had to say last week to those who attended the AIPAC conference:

I worked closely with the President Obama recently, when as David said my Armed Services Committee adopted a bipartisan Kirk-Menendez Iran sanctions bill as part of our defense authorization bill. That’s where it belongs: Defending Israel as part of our defense authorization bill. And that bill is now law and has been signed by the president. The sanctions which are in our bill with the support of the president will cripple Iran’s access to international financial markets and its ability to sell oil.”

In that speech Levin continues the anti-Iran position by claiming if Iran has nuclear weapons Israel will be in great danger. Levin fails to mention that Israel has possessed nuclear weapons for more than 2 decades, an admission he begrudgingly made in a recent interview with MLive.

When an MLive reporter asked Levin if Israel possessed nuclear weapons, the Michigan Senator said, “I think they do. They’re not going to use them. But they have them. Anybody who thinks they can use nuclear weapons is mistaken. They are totally unusable. That’s not the point. The point is that nuclear weapons are not usable except to deter. I believe that Israel has nuclear weapons. I think most of the world believes Israel has nuclear weapons. They were threatened with extinction. They felt that was one way to deter attacks on them that might be aimed to actually wipe them off the face of the earth.”

Later in his AIPAC speech Senator Levin lets it be known that he supports the President’s commitment to protecting Israel from Iran at all cost and that if Iran pursues nuclear capability the US will likely declare war on Iran.

When he (Obama) says all that options are on the table to prevent a nuclear Iran, he means it. I believe him. The world will believe him. I hope the Iranians are rational enough to believe him, because Iran ignores the president of the United States and his words at their peril.”

This hawkish and imperialistic position demonstrates once again that Senator Carl Levin and the majority of the Democratic Party that supports this policy towards Iran, are just as committed to war as any Republican administrations in the past.

GRIID Spring 2012 Classes

March 13, 2012

The newest round of GRIID classes are now posted, with one new class and a class we have offered several times in the past.

The new class we are offering is A Brief History of Revolutionary and Resistance Movements, which will explore the rich history of revolution and resistance over the past century from the Paris Commune to the Zapatista Uprising.

The intent of this 8 – week class is to not only familiarize participants with rich examples of revolution and resistance in recent human history, but to learn from previous movements and to recognize what it might take for contemporary resistance and revolution to occur.

A Brief History of Revolutionary and Resistance Movements class will take place from 6 – 8pm on Mondays, beginning April 2nd.

The second class we will be offering is the very first class we began with in early 2008, Making Sense of US Foreign Policy. This class is designed to discuss US foreign policy since WWII, politically, economically and militarily.

We will discuss issues such as US intervention, torture, sanctions, use of proxy forces, war crimes, trade policies, the US relationship to the United Nations and other international agencies like the IMF and World Bank, with the last few session examining the foreign policy of the Obama administration.

Making Sense of US Foreign Policy will be held from 6 – 8pm on Wednesday nights beginning April 4. For this class we will be using the book Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower.

Both Spring 2012 classes will be 8 – weeks and will be held at the Steepletown Center located at 671 Davis NW, in Grand Rapids. The cost of each class is $20, but anyone is welcomed to sign up even if you can’t pay.

If you have questions about either class or would like to sign up, contact us at jsmith@griid.org.