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Announcing the Sprout Anarchist Collective

November 15, 2011

(GRIID received this announcement from the Sprout Anarchist Collective and we are posting it in its entirety. GRIID salutes this new effort, both the information and the opportunities for expanding radical politics in Grand Rapids.)

The Sprout Anarchist Collective is a new anarchist collective, distributor, and publisher here in the territory presently occupied and known as Grand Rapids, Michigan (lest we forget that we’re living on stolen land).

We’re anarchists because we don’t see anything worth salvaging in this civilization. Folks can spend much of their lives appealing to authority and seeking reformist demands with the best of intentions – and some of us have tried that route – but it ultimately won’t work. For those who identify as more “radical” than the movements they work in, you can hide your politics – or reduce them down to a series of catch phrases and slogans for banners – but you’ll ultimately be disappointed with the results. In the case that you do achieve a “victory” (always against nearly insurmountable odds), the results are often disappointing: less ecological devastation rather than no ecological devastation, fewer prisons not no prisons, community police officers rather than no police officers, or swapping fast-food jobs for “green jobs.”  Similarly, capitalism, patriarchy, white supremacy, and the whole lot aren’t going to go away by voting for a specific candidate, passing a particular piece of legislation, or replacing the government with a more “fair” (or even “revolutionary”) one. The problem is capitalism, the state and growing technology – and they must be abolished. In their place, we have our eye on a non-hierarchical world based on mutual aid, direct action, autonomy, and voluntary cooperation. Moreover, looking back for thousands of years there are plenty of examples showing that it is possible to live without hierarchy.

Ambitious goals to be sure, and we’re starting small. Yet we’re willing to bet that trying something entirely new will have great benefits. We’re working to increase the visibility of anarchist ideas and practice in Grand Rapids. Our primary activity is talking to folks and distributing and publishing literature, posters, and other propaganda. Our specific focus is on the kind of introductory material (think “how to” guides on building collectives and various tactics) that will inspire and help people start new autonomous projects that can delegitimize capitalism and the state on a number of different fronts. In addition, we also offer a variety of workshops (more to foster a conversation than to tell folks how or what to do) and publish news about what anarchists are doing locally, nationally, and globally to highlight the many ways in which folks are fighting to tear down this rotten system.

We encourage folks to check out our website to learn more about what we believe, to share ideas, or otherwise contribute: http://sproutac.org

 

 

Condoleezza Rice book tour comes to Grand Rapids Wednesday: Will be confronted by protestors

November 14, 2011

On Wednesday, former National Security Advisor and Secretary of the State, Condoleezza Rice will be in Grand Rapids to speak at the Kent GOP’s annual Lincoln Day Dinner.

The former Secretary of State will be greeted by protestors, which are connected to the Grand Rapids Occupy movement. According to a facebook event page, people will gather at 4pm at Monument Park in downtown Grand Rapids and then march to the convention center where Rice is scheduled to speak.

The group wants to bring attention to various war crimes that Rice was complicit in during her years in the Bush administration.

According to the online source War Criminals Watch, Rice is guilty of the following war crimes:

  • Crime against peace – planning and carrying out a war of aggression.
  • Complicity in the commission of a war crime – wanton destruction of cities and villages, devastation not justified by military necessity, ill-treatment of civilian population of or in occupied territory.
  • Complicity in the commission of a war crime – torture, ill-treatment of detainees.

Condoleezza Rice has been confronted for her war crimes and crimes against humanity while in the Bush administration and since then on numerous occasions. In 2009, Rice was confronted by students and faculty at Stanford University, where the former Secretary of State once taught. Rice has also been confronted by the feminist anti-war group CodePink. Here is a video of a Code Pink action confronting Condoleezza Rice.

Premier screening of a People’s History of the LGBTQ community in Grand Rapids this Thursday

November 14, 2011

The film is finally done and we are excited to announce that the premier showing of a People’s History of the LGBTQ community in Grand Rapids is this week, Thursday, November 17.

The film is based on 69 interviews, archival documents, photos, videos and a research project of how the Grand Rapids Press covered LGBTQ issues in the 1980s and 90s.

Following the model of people’s history developed by radical historian Howard Zinn, the film looks at watershed moments in Grand Rapids where the LGBTQ community responded to institutional homophobia and organized campaigns for greater equality. Issues featured in the film include the effort to organize the first Pride Celebration, the campaign to past an anti-discrimination ordinance in Grand Rapids, responding to the AIDS crisis, dealing with the Religious Right, the persecution of Jerry Crane, LGBTQ organizing at GVSU and the significance of Sons & Daughters.

We will also be unveiling a new online archive for the People’s History of the LGBTQ community in Grand Rapids, which we hope people will add to for years to come. Copies of the DVD will be available at this event.

People’s History of the LGBTQ Community in Grand Rapids Film

Thursday, November 17

6:30PM

GVSU downtown campus – Loosemore Auditorium

This event is free and open to everyone. A discussion will follow the film and LGBTQ organizations will be tabling at this event.

GRIID is grateful to the LGBT Resource Center at Grand Valley State University and the Kutsche Office of Local History for their support in making this project come to fruition.

After the film we are encouraging people to attend a fundraising event for the group Until Love is Equal, which has been working on passing an anti-discrimination ordinance in Holland.

This Day in Resistance History: The Asking Day Model

November 14, 2011

In only a couple weeks, we’ll be face to face with Black Friday: the day after Thanksgiving, America’s tribute to the temples of capitalism. This year, as hordes of bargain-hunters fill corporate coffers, think about an alternative model. Think about Asking Day.

November 14 marks the Asking Day Festival in the Inuit culture. It’s the first of a string of winter festivals that encourage the Inuit people to celebrate their season of leisure and plenty after the long summer of hunting and food preservation. This first and most important festival underscores a basic tenet of the Nation: possessions belong to everyone.

The Inuit believe that everything on earth has inua, or a soul. Places, people, animals, and objects all have souls. But the Inuit Nation also believes that no one person can truly possess an object. The only “things” an individual truly owns are the dreams he or she has, the healing songs passed down through a family, and the stories that a person tells. Each tool, item of food, article of clothing, and work of art does not have only one owner. It must find its way to the person who needs it the most.

Inuit communities are essentially collectives, where everything belongs to the group and not to individuals. Although early White anthropologists formulated some pretty outlandish theories about the festival’s focus, Asking Day is intended to celebrate this life of communal property.

On the evening before the festival, the children of the village go from house to house and ask to be given food. They bring the food back to a central kitchen where it is used to cook the Asking Day feast.

On the day of the festival, each person in the village asks someone else to give up an object. They begin by asking for possessions which have the most value. No one may refuse a request. It is considered wise to ask for an item that you really need, and an honor to give such an object up. The goal, by the end of the day, is to see that most of the community’s possessions have changed hands.

The Inuit believe that it adds heaviness to the soul to own things that one cannot use. By evening, everyone’s burden is lightened. Each person has found what he or she needs and possessions have been redistributed to reflect that. The community feasts on shared food and dances to celebrate.

In dealing with the outside world, the Inuit have been forced to work on a cash basis to sell their furs and their art. But within their own communities, the culture is still heavily founded on the idea of sharing freely to meet everyone’s needs.

So as we hear on the news about Black Friday…complete with news footage of people being trampled underfoot as crowds race for Early Bird specials…with cash registers ringing up sale after sale…with gloating merchants announcing their one-day sales totals…the Inuit Asking Festival is a road map leading in another direction.

Buy Nothing Day has become a popular activist alternative to Black Friday’s consumer glut. Events such as Really Really Free Markets offer the chance to put possessions we don’t use into the hands of people who really need them. Individual barters and swaps of services, food, and possessions is another way to fulfill community needs without buying new merchandise from the corporate elite. Community gardens and food justice programs help us grow and exchange food and share seeds.

We can lighten the burdens of others by helping meet their needs. And we can lighten our own lives at the same time by starving the capitalist system of its fuel and its power. 

 

Moving money revisited

November 13, 2011

This article is re-posted from Left Business Observer.

Along with the Occupy Wall Street movement has grown up a Move Our Money campaign, pushed by a group calling itself the New Bottom Line. It takes off from a brainchild of that great exploiter of unpaid journalistic labor at her eponymous Post, Arianna Huffington. Ariana’s scheme, launched almost two years ago, would have those of us with money in large banks move it to small ones. This touches on foundational populist fantasy: that virtue and size are inversely related.

When Huffington unveiled her scheme, I took advantage of the gadget on her website (the Move Your Money Project) that allowed you to enter your zip code and came back with a suggested list of virtuous, meaning small, banks. I thought I’d look into some of the suggestions that emerged when I entered by home zipcode, 11238. One, the black-owned Carver Federal Savings Bank, is a major financer of the gentrification of predominantly black neighborhoods in Brooklyn and Queens. As those neighborhoods get richer, Carver boasts, it’s partnering with Merrill Lynch (a subsidiary of the Bank of America) to offer wealth management services to the flusher new residents. Another suggestion, Apple Savings Bank, has about three-quarters of its assets in securities like U.S. Treasury bonds, not local loans. They don’t come much bigger than the U.S. Treasury. And a third, New York Community Bank, which even features that precious word in its name, financed a private equity group that bought up a lot of apartment buildings in New York in the hope of squeezing out the rent-regulated tenants and replacing them with more lucrative ones paying market rents. With the real estate bust, the PE firm is having trouble servicing its debts, and the residents of its buildings are suffering as services are cut further.

There’s a fundamental problem with these small-is-beautiful schemes. One, many small banks have more money than they can profitably invest locally. As Barbara Garson showed in her wonderful book, Money Makes the World Go Around, the portion of her book advance she deposited in tiny upstate New York bank was probably lent via the fed funds market to Chase, where it entered the global circuit of capital. This is not at all uncommon. Money is fungible, protean, and highly mobile even when it looks locally rooted. That very mutability is part of what makes money so valuable: it’s the ideal form of general wealth that can instantly be turned into caviar, lodging, Swedish massage, erotic massage, or shares of Google.

The New Bottom Line people are pushing credit unions along with small banks. Many credit unions are fine little enterprises. But they too have the more money than they know what to do with problem. According to the Federal Reserve’s flow of funds accounts, 58% of their assets are in individual loans, mostly for cars and houses. The balance is invested in bank deposits and bonds. The bonds are Treasury and federal agency securities. Again, anything but small and local. And should they get an influx of money, it’s highly likely that most of it will go to these sorts of bonds. In fact, , more than half the growth in credit union assets over the last three years has gone into Treasury and federal agency securities. Less than a quarter went to mortgage loans, and consumer credit (like credit cards and auto loans) have actually declined. There’s no way they could accommodate even a small fraction of our near-$8 trillion in bank deposits without turning to bigtime securities or Merrill Lynch wealth management services.

Getting banks under control is a matter of politics, not individual portfolio allocation decisions. Sure, you may get friendlier service and lower fees from a credit union—but you’re not really doing anything politically transformative by moving the money. Move your money and it’s still money.

New Media We Recommend

November 12, 2011

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.

Food Sovereignty: Reconnecting Food, Nature and Community, edited by Hannah Wittman, Annette Aurelie Desmarais and Nettie Wiebe – This collection of essays is an important contribution to the growing awareness about our food system. The authors present a compelling case for the idea of food sovereignty, where communities would have complete say in the kind of food system they want. The other important aspect of the book is the articulation of what food sovereignty would mean for communities around the world and what groups like Via Campesina are actually doing about it. Food Sovereignty is an important resource for anyone who cares about a truly sustainable food system for the future.

On History: Tariq Ali and Oliver Stone in Conversation – Anyone who has come to know the writings of Tariq Ali, knows what a treat they are in for. In this series of interviews, famed film director Oliver Stone talks with radical historian Tariq Ali about topics such as WWI, WWII, the former Soviet Union, post-colonialism, US blowback and what Tariq refers to as “the revenge of history.” The book is only 105-pages, but it packs a lot of information and insight into the importance of understanding history and its significance for today. On History is a delightful read and a welcomed contribution to a radical critique of history.

Gender Outlaws: The Next Generation, by Kate Bornstein & S. Bear Bergman – In a fabulous sequel to her first book Gender Outlaw, Bornstein and co-editor Bergman provide readers with dozens of essays that both challenge and expand our notion of gender and identity. Many of the book’s contributors identify as transgender, but this collection of essays cannot be simply put in that category. The stories, information and analysis provided in the contributions of people of all ages, races and experiences was riveting and at times confusing to someone who has always identified as heterosexual. However, this writer found the book challenging and enlightening not only in how I self-identify, but how the dominant institutions label people. Gender Outlaws is an important contribution to a growing understanding of gender identity and gender justice.

Just Do It: A Tale of Modern-Day Outlaws (DVD) – Just Do It lifts the lid on climate activism and the daring troublemakers who have crossed the line to become modern-day outlaws. Documented over a year, Emily James’ film follows activists in England as they blockade factories, attack coal power stations and glue themselves to the trading floors of international banks despite the very real threat of arrest. The film is both inspirational and instructive of the kinds of direct action tactics people can use to challenge capitalism and corporate power. Just Do It demonstrates that there are plenty of people willing to take risks and engage in a type of organizing that is outside of the acceptable means of the State.

Thank Obama for the Occupy Wall Street Movement

November 12, 2011

This article by Glen Ford is re-posted from Black Agenda Report. 

There is no particular political genius to the Occupy Wall Street movement, no soaring, searing vision that sets the world afire in some new and different way. When it comes to political analysis, much of what emanates from the swirl of activity is no more than soggy old left-liberal reformism that only feels more dynamic when wrapped in a youthful, “movement” package. And yet it is the most promising mass U.S. phenomenon in more than forty years. Why, and why now?

The power of the movement derives from the inexorable logic of its animating slogans. It is, at root, opposed to the rule of finance capital – although even the word “capital” is repugnant to some participants who believe themselves to be engaged in a spiritual quest far beyond the parameters of political economy. Nevertheless it is a fact that opposition to the rule of finance capital – to Wall Street – is opposition to capitalism as it actually exists in the here and now. Judging by the ballooning of the movement and the demeanor of its troops, opposition to capitalism as it actually exists turns out to be an exquisitely exhilarating and fulfilling activity, whether those so engaged consider themselves socialists or not.

The anti-Wall Street slogans and rhetoric have their own logic and dynamic that should – in struggle and over time – push aside left-liberal pabulum and weak reformist nostrums that cannot possibly even begin to contain, much less defeat, the hegemonic power of massed capital.

It did not take genius to identify the rule of finance capital as the common enemy of humankind. Millions, if not billions, have already come to that conclusion, and the inevitable trajectory of capital was predicted and plotted long ago. But the United States, a nation conceived as a white man’s empire and singularly dedicated to the project of business, confronts the 21st century as a political-cultural desert, a place where May Day is largely unknown, supplanted by a Labor Day four months removed on the calendar and eons away in class content. The centrality of racial oppression has so distorted relationships of class that the very language is impoverished and popular political discussion, infantilized.

Thus, we in the U.S. are relegated to working our way through the logic of slogans that are broadly informed by a reality that is everywhere manifest, but only stiltedly articulated. But that’s the political culture we’ve got, and the OWS slogans do point, inexorably, to confrontation with The Hegemon: the Lords of Capital, their servants and institutions.

The brilliance – if not genius – of the movement, is in the evocation of “occupation” when coupled with the address of the enemy, Wall Street. To many of the participants, “Occupy Wall Street” signifies the elevation of human needs and values over Wall Street profits – a laudable, though amorphous, goal. But to “occupy” the enemy’s camp is to grapple with him for physical and/or political space. Inevitably, that means a struggle whose outcome can only be measured in terms of power. In this arena, left-liberal nostrums of tinkering and accommodation with fundamental evils must fail – and will be seen as inadequate to the struggle, early on.

The imperative to “occupy” space means the movement is constantly challenged to find new arenas to manifest itself, whether or not the original occupation sites are lost. It is a promise to the people that the movement intends to be permanent, a commitment to provide a focus for expanding spaces of struggle. That is the new and dynamic element that has intruded upon the national psyche, and has so energized and inspired previously existing Left political forces. It is the promise – the possibility – of a popular, activist movement that is, for practical purposes, as permanent as the presence of the enemy: Wall Street.

The cumbersome horizontal mechanisms of the Occupy movement are, in practice, a prophylactic against co-optation by the Democratic Party – a greater danger than the police. To put it bluntly, OWS practice makes it difficult for the movement to make a “deal” with Wall Street’s minions in the Democratic Party and like-minded circles, even if the weaker reformers in the ranks wanted to – which many do, judging by some of the proposals swirling around the milieu.

The movement’s machinery has also stifled radicals in some locations, but it does not prevent them from functioning outside of and in close collaboration with OWS elements. That’s because there is no OWS “franchise” that must be bought into; if there were, then OWS would become its own opposite – a limiting structure in a movement whose central purpose is to constantly expand against the hegemonic power of massed capital.

The movement has had dramatic effect in Black America. By virtue of its whiteness, the OWS has been allowed to exercise citizenship rights that have been effectively denied to African Americans in their militarized communities. A Black-occupied Zuccotti Park, or Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC, or any of the other occupation sites, is unthinkable under the New Jim Crow. It would invite massacre, as virtually every African American knows. White privilege – in this case, the privilege not to be summarily shot or beaten to a pulp en masse when confronting authority – has been on televised display for the past six weeks. Black perceptions of the spectacle were mixed. There was, of course, deep resentment of the ease with which young white kids from “wherever” could flaunt petty public assembly laws and, for the most part, get away with it, while Black youth are routinely accosted, humiliated and falsely imprisoned by police while simply walking or standing in their own neighborhoods. Black activists who have labored for decades in the urban trenches recoiled at the media exposure garnered by even relatively small groups of white OWSers at their downtown encampments.

But, there is another side of the racist coin. The mostly white OWS movement had, in a sense, legitimized civil disobedience and confrontation with the cops in the current era – an opening that could be exploited. And, if the cameras followed the white people like drones on the kill, then Black outfits should take advantage of the new publicity. After all, African American audiences get most of their information from the same corporate media as whites. If white people could take over a city site and proclaim themselves the Occupation, why not “occupy” Black neighborhoods? In a matter of weeks, Occupy the Hoods proliferated, quite often generating more neighborhood organizing activity than had previously existed, and this time with the cameras rolling.

To the extent that it collaborates with people of color within and outside the OWS, the mostly white movement gains legitimacy among those with the greatest (objective) stake in toppling Wall Street. Without such legitimacy, it is doomed, and no amount of white privilege will save it.

It is doubtful that there would have been an Occupy Wall Street phenomenon, as we have experienced it, if President Obama had not lost his last stitch of emperors clothes this past spring and summer. His abject subservience to the “market’s” (Wall Street’s) demands that the budget deficit take priority over human needs – a logic that would necessitate the gutting of virtually every social program of the New Deal and the Great Society, including Social Security – broke the heart of every left-liberal Obamite, and every Black person that was not still drunk on ObamaL’aid. His 2008 activist base watched as Obama pleaded with Republicans to accept his $4 trillion budget cut “Grand Bargain” that would roll back a lifetime of social safety nets. The “progressive’s” champion became the star in their nightmare. This is what their votes had bought them: a total disaster.

And then the OWS folks gave them a movement.

In that sense, we should thank Obama for shattering the illusion that a Black corporate Democrat with better snake oil-selling skills than Bill Clinton can be anything but a more efficient facilitator of Wall Street’s all-consuming, world-killing agenda. However, this unintended favor is nothing compared to the catastrophic harm Obama’s ascent has wreaked on Black politics. The advent of the First Black President has politically neutralized Black America, the most progressive constituency in the nation – despite the fact that Obama opposes every element of the historical Black political consensus on peace and social justice. The opening that OWS has created for movement politics comes not a moment too soon for African Americans, the group most in need of a movement, and with the deepest historical experience in movement building.

Healing Children of Conflict to host film screening of Budrus in Grand Rapids

November 11, 2011

The local organization Healing Children of Conflict (HCC), which earlier this year brought a young Iraqi boy to West Michigan for medical treatment, is hosting a film next week on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.

The film Budrus will be screened at Calvin College on Tuesday, November 15 – 7:00PM. Budrus is a powerful film, which demonstrates how effective collective non-violence can be against repression.

Budrus is an award-winning feature documentary film about a Palestinian community organizer, Ayed Morrar, who unites local Fatah and Hamas members along with Israeli supporters in an unarmed movement to save his village of Budrus from destruction by Israel’s Separation Barrier. Success eludes them until his 15-year-old daughter, Iltezam, launches a women’s contingent that quickly moves to the front lines. Struggling side by side, father and daughter unleash an inspiring, yet little-known, movement in the Occupied Palestinian Territories that is still gaining ground today. In an action-filled documentary chronicling this movement from its infancy, Budrus shines a light on people who choose nonviolence to confront a threat.”

Healing Children of Conflict screening of Budrus

Tuesday, November 15

7:00PM

Calvin College – Bytwerk Theater/DeVos Center

This film showing is free and open to all. A discussion about the film and the work of HCC will follow the film screening.

Grand Rapids LGBT History: Community Relations Commission & Inclusion

November 11, 2011

As we have shared with you over the past several weeks the ordinance, which included the language “gender orientation,” was finally adopted in Grand Rapids in 1994.

This ordinance language was first approved by the Grand Rapids Community Relations Commission (CRC) years before the ordinance was adopted in 1994.

However, what is not as widely known is that beginning in 1994, members of The Lesbian and Gay Network of West Michigan began submitting their names to be on the Community Relations Commission in Grand Rapids.

According to a Network News article from 1995, Network Secretary Phil Duran had applied to be a member of the Community Relations Commission in 1994, “but was turned away as the Commission was at that time seeking to replace their departing Jewish representative, without whom their was little religious diversity.”

The article goes on to say:

In 1995, after learning that yet another opening had occurred, and was filled by a White woman whose main attribute was living on the Westside, Duran submitted another application, and sent a copy to Equal Opportunity Officer Ingrid Scott – Weekley. Additionally, he and Network President Mary Banghart made a concerted effort to attend each CRC meeting for the rest of 1995.”

Towards the end of 1995, another member of the CRC stepped down and members of the Network had hoped that their applicants would finally be included on the Commission. However, Ingrid Scott – Weekley decided that the Commission lacked representation from the Native American community and again the LGBT community was overlooked.

So it seems that even though the Community Relations Commission had supported language to protect against discrimination of the LGBT community in the early 1990s, that government body did not practice what it preached.

It is worth noting that the Community Relations Commission in Grand Rapids now has representation from the LGBT community, but like the tactic of The Network in 1995, it might be a useful practice for people to attend those meetings just to have extra eyes on monitoring what the CRC is doing.

It is also important that we are familiar with the stated purpose of the Community Relations Commissions, what the ordinance language actually states and how one can file a complaint if discrimination occurs.

The issue of the battle for an LGBT inclusive ordinance in Grand Rapids is one of the chapters of the People’s History of the LGBTQ Community in Grand Rapids film that will premier next Thursday, November 17 at 6:30PM in the Loosemore Auditorium at the GVSU downtown campus. This event is free and open to everyone.

Presidential Candidate Fundraising in Michigan

November 10, 2011

This article is re-posted from Opensecrets.org.

Southeastern Michigan was the setting for the latest GOP presidential debate Wednesday night. The state’s significance as the symbolic center of the American auto industry and as an epicenter of a sluggish economic recovery were lost on no one, as the candidates debated bailouts to American car manufacturers and the economy at length.

Though a Republican presidential candidate hasn’t won Michigan since 1988, residents’ political contributions indicate the state could turn red in the 2012 elections. According to research by the Center for Responsive Politics, Michigan residents contributing $200 or more have given about 60 percent of their contributions to Republicans this election cycle, much of it to one candidate: former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Romney, who was born and raised in Michigan and whose father also served as governor of the state, has so far received $1 million from Michigan residents. President Barack Obama, meanwhile, has raised about $600,000 from such donors in Michigan. Combined, the two candidates have raised significantly more than the other presidential hopefuls.

Detroit and it’s surrounding suburbs — ever the heart of the American auto industry — has favored Republicans in 2011, having given them 65 percent of their contributions, including $868,000 to Romney thus far.

Detroit-based car companies Ford and General Motors have also preferred Republicans with their political contributions this cycle, while prominent labor unions such as the United Transportation Union have been heavily Democratic in their donations in 2011.