Today Detroit – tomorrow, every city in America
(This article by Rania Khalek is re-posted from Missing Pieces.)
If Milton Friedman, father of the free market, were alive today, I imagine he would be jumping with joy at the prospect of the abandonment of public education for private, for-profit charter schools.
Back in 2005, following the devastation of hurricane Katrina, Friedman wrote an article in the Wall Street Journal where he said “This is a tragedy. It is also an opportunity to radically reform the educational system.” Soon after, Friedmonites rushed into New Orleans for the chance to implement what Friedman had long envisioned. With the help of the Bush administration, they dissolved the public school system and in its place built a network of publicly funded charters run, not by educators, but by private entities that made their own rules.
At the time, New Orleans residents alerted the rest of the country, that what was happening to their city was only the beginning and it wouldn’t be long before it spread to our neighborhoods. In 2006, Bill Quigley, a local lawyer and activist warned:
“We know that what is happening in New Orleans is just a more concentrated, more graphic version of what is going on all over our country. Every city in our country has some serious similarities to New Orleans. Every city has some abandoned neighborhoods. Every city in our country has abandoned some public education, public housing, public healthcare, and criminal justice. Those who do not support public education, healthcare, and housing will continue to turn all of our country into the Lower Ninth Ward unless we stop them. Why do we allow this?
If only we had listened. Soon after New Orleans came the drastic transformation of the Chicago school system by Obama’s Labor Secretary Arne Duncan, New York City schools by Mayor Bloomberg, and Washington DC schools by Michelle Rhee. Which brings us to Detroit.”
Following the passage of Michigan Republican Gov. Rick Snyder’s “Financial Martial Law,” Emergency Financial Manager (EFM) of Detroit Public Schools (DPS) Robert Bobb is closing 8 schools and selling 45 to charter companies. DPS is currently preparing a charter school board through training sessions provided by the National Charter Schools Institute, which had more than 70 charter operators and entrepreneurs in attendance just this month. In addition, DPS has hired the National Association of Charter School Authorizers (NACSA) to review applications. NACSA’s president, Greg Richmond, worked with charter schools set up in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and claims “The system opened up to the people of New Orleans in a way it hadn’t before…Now there are dozens of opportunities to get involved.”
In sharp contrast to the lingering unemployment that plagues Detroit, the auctioning off of Detroit’s schools is taking place with breathtaking speed. Gov. Snyder is on a mission to reinvent public education. He is calling for more measurements of student and teacher performance, while at the same time proposing deregulation and more teacher autonomy. He says “We have to put much more emphasis on proficiency, on growth, on measurements and results than we have had in the past” and “Michigan’s public schools need to more rigorously measure students’ academic growth, but with fewer state rules to make that happen.”
Detroit residents have already started protesting. Just last week, eight students, along with their children and some faculty members of the Catherine Ferguson Academy of Detroit, began a sit-in at the end of the school day in protest of EFM Robert Bobb’s announcement to close the school. About a dozen or so were arrested by Detroit police for refusing to leave. The school is specifically designed for pregnant and teen parents and their children, and has a 90% graduation rate and 100% college and higher education acceptance upon graduation.
Gov. Snyder recently said his focus is a holistic approach to education from pre-natal to life-long learning. He says early childhood education is important and should involve “a public and private partnership.” If shutting down an award-winning school and arresting, rather than listening to the students he claims to care so much about, is his idea of a holistic approach, then Detroit is in for a treat.
Shanta Driver, National Chairperson of By Any Means Necessary (BAMN), in an interview with Voice of Detroit at the sit-in, said it best:
“The massive school closures that have been carried out in DPS since 2004 have led to the depopulation of Detroit and to the deepening financial crisis of the district. Public schools are being closed to make way for charters and are part of the national attack on public education. Today Detroit – tomorrow, every city in America. The parents and students of Catherine Ferguson are fighting to maintain the right of every student in our nation to a free, quality public education. Every supporter of public education should do everything possible to support their fight and make sure they succeed.”
Driver is warning us, as did the people of New Orleans in 2006. This corporately funded education reform movement that praises standardized tests, non-union teachers, and private management as the solution to the budget woes of Detroit’s education system is a threat to us all.
Surprised by Solidarity in Wisconsin: Media erred in assuming public shared their distaste for unions
(This article is re-posted from Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting.)
One of the early assumptions in media coverage of the Wisconsin protests against Gov. Scott Walker’s proposed anti-labor legislation was that the public wouldn’t sympathize with “overpaid” public-sector workers. But soon enough, reality intervened.
The New York Times’ Matt Bai (2/27/11) recommended that “taking the fight to the unions is a good way to bolster your credentials as a gutsy reformer with voters who have been losing faith for years in public schools and government bureaucracies.”
In the March 7 Time, Amanda Ripley wrote that hating public workers is a historical fact: “Since the beginning, Americans have resented government workers’ asking for money. The distrust ebbs and flows, but the less financial security we have, the angrier we get.”
And CBS’s Jim Axelrod (2/18/11) declared, “Unions don’t have any sort of upper hand when it comes to public opinion these days.”
But those assumptions took a hit when a Gallup Poll, reported on the front page of USA Today (2/23/11), found a surprising tilt in public opinion:
Americans strongly oppose laws taking away the collective bargaining power of public employee unions, according to a new USA Today/Gallup Poll. The poll found 61 percent would oppose a law in their state similar to such a proposal in Wisconsin, compared with 33 percent who would favor such a law.
That wasn’t all. When Gallup asked about “reducing pay or benefits the state provides for government workers,” 53 percent opposed such cuts. A New York Times poll (3/1/11) further undermined the media narrative on public workers: 60 percent of those polled opposed stripping public workers of collective bargaining rights; 56 percent opposed cutting pay or benefits of those workers in the name of deficit reduction.
So what to make of this disconnect between pundits and polls? Self-professed “union guy” Bill O’Reilly at Fox News Channel offered one solution: Union households shouldn’t be polled. As he explained (3/1/11):
The New York Times headlines today reads, “Majority in Poll Back Employees in Public Sector.” But the poll is misleading because 20 percent of the responds say they are from union households. If you subtract them, those who favor cutting benefits win the poll. Wow, New York Times.
In case it wasn’t clear, by “subtract them” he means exactly that—union households shouldn’t count in polls of the American public. Or, as he put it, “I’m just taking it out of the mix.” The logic here is hard to parse: Should the elderly be excluded from polls on Social Security? Or people of color left out of surveys on civil rights laws?
Most corporate media reporters and pundits presumably wouldn’t agree with O’Reilly’s novel idea about how to “fix” the “problem” with public opinion. But they act as if they do: Media discussion about workers’ rights rarely includes much input from workers and their advocates. On ABC’s This Week (1/20/11), a roundtable debate about Wisconsin and budgets featured a right-wing Republican politician, right-wing pundit George Will and the right-leaning ABC correspondent Jonathan Karl—with Democratic strategist Donna Brazile on the other side. The ABC website headline on the panel was actually “Unions vs. Tea Party.”
In the heat of the Wisconsin debate, labor leaders sent out word that none of the Sunday morning talk shows had booked a guest from a labor union; shortly thereafter, NBC’s Meet the Press added Richard Trumka of the AFL-CIO to its February 27 panel discussion (Huffington Post, 2/24/11).
In Madison, a Numbers Game
The Wisconsin story, we were often told, comes down to numbers: a giant multi-billion dollar budget deficit and a Republican governor trying to fix it. But does it add up?
Careful readers may have been confused by much of the reporting on the scale of the problem in Wisconsin. The current deficit was $30 million, though a “far greater shortfall of $1.5 billion is expected next year,” according to the Washington Post (2/19/11). The two-year projected deficit was even larger: $3.6 billion. But as Laura Dresser of the Center on Wisconsin Strategy told CounterSpin (2/25/11–3/3/11), those figures, which came from Gov. Scott Walker’s office, represented funding requests from various state agencies—wish lists that were never likely to be granted unaltered.
Yet media coverage stressed that Walker’s plan to curtail collective bargaining was purely a fiscal move. It was “a key piece of his budget-cutting strategy” (Washington Post, 2/19/11), or “essential to help balance the budget” (New York Times, 2/19/11). On NBC Nightly News, Brian Williams announced (2/17/11) that “the state is broke,” so the governor “is proposing drastic cuts he says will save billions of dollars.” NBC reporter Kerry Sanders chimed in: “Walker says he will cut up to $3.6 billion from the budget, in large part by eliminating unions’ collective bargaining powers to negotiate wages and benefits.”
But would these cuts really reduce a “large part” of Wisconsin’s supposed $3 billion budget deficit? Not really—according to some estimates from Walker’s office, the health/pension cuts might save $300 million (USA Today, 2/23/11).
Some coverage suggested that anti-Walker protests really opposed fiscal responsibility, as when NBC reporter John Yang (2/18/11) claimed demonstrators were “denouncing Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s plan to attack a projected $3.6 billion budget deficit.” On ABC World News (2/17/11), Chris Bury explained that protesters were “raging at the governor’s plan to rein in a $3.6 billion budget deficit.”
Of course, the problem wasn’t that Walker was fixing the deficit. As many were pointing out, Wisconsin had faced a larger projected deficit in 2009 without resorting to such drastic measures (PRWatch.org, 2/22/11). If anything, the protests were trying to argue that Walker’s plan wasn’t really about deficit-cutting at all—an argument made all the clearer with the late-night March 9 Republican ramming through of a bill containing only the non-fiscal changes Walker was pushing, like the attack on collective bargaining.
IWW hosts Annual May Day event this Saturday in Grand Rapids
The Grand Rapids branch of the IWW is hosting its second annual May Day celebration. Like last year, the event will be held at Martin Luther King Park on Fuller SE, just off of Franklin.
May Day is an international worker’s holiday and an opportunity for the community to come together to obtain resources and enjoy local entertainment. Last year the celebration brought out 200 members of the community of all ages and affiliations.
In a Media Release sent out by the IWW they state:
“May 1st marks the 125th anniversary of International Workers Day. The origins of International Workers’ Day go back to 1886, when hundreds of thousands of workers across the United States went on strike. In Grand Rapids, 7,000 furniture workers of the Knights of Labor left their workplaces for an impromptu march. Workers demanded that their 10- and 12-hour work days be shortened to an 8-hour day with no reduction in pay. Over the next few years, thousands of workers won the 8-hour workday that many of us still enjoy today.
MayDay 2011 will be an attempt to revive that most effective weapon, the General Strike, in the 21st century class war being waged. A national network of labor unions and advocacy groups are planning actions across the country (http://maydayunited.org/about/organizations/) under the banner “Legalization and Jobs for All.”
Like last year there will be children’s activities organized by the group Stop Targeting Our Kids (STOK), information tables by a variety of local organizations and a Really, Really Free Market to 2 – 4pm. The Really, Really Free Market is an opportunity for people to give away things they no longer need and get items they can use.
At 1pm there will be a community potluck where people are encouraged to bring some food to share, but the group Food Not Bombs will also provide food as well.
Live musical acts will be performing throughout the day, with the follows acts already committed to playing:
Capoeira Mandinga
Vito & the Vegitable Bros.
Radiator Hospital
Eric Glatz
Winter Break
Royal Space
Xtra Vomit
Ostradamas
Props
Focus Ferocious
Bottom Line Band
NorthStarrr / GangGreen
DJ Iceman
grrRoPoLis
The event is this Saturday, April 30th from 11am – 8pm and everyone from the community is invited to celebrate workers and workers struggles in Grand Rapids and around the world.
Noam Chomsky on the US Electoral System
(This video is re-posted from ZNet.)
At a recent forum someone asked Chomsky what he thought about the US Electoral System and if he thought there was much of a difference between Republicans and Democrats. Here is his response:
The Gentrification of Detroit—Again
The American branch of my family has deep roots—five generations—in Detroit, a city that has been sitting on the narrows of the Detroit River since 1701. Now a comparative ghost town, there are hints of another new cycle of interest in downtown development in the city, and God knows that property there can currently be had for a song.
In 2002, Wayne State University sponsored a symposium on gentrification. Disagreement existed among the participants about whether Detroit could be “revitalized” without driving the current population out, but many admitted, looking at the arc of history in Detroit, that if the capitalists came back, eventually the poor would be displaced.
While a Cass Corridor resident called for change in which “there’s a place for decay,” one Wayne State professor commented, “The dynamics of gentrification, unfortunately, is that housing prices go up…taxes go up. I don’t see how you can avoid the dynamic of the market.”
Recently, Rapid Growth Grand Rapids, an online publication with a parent-company mission “to focus on growth, investment and remarkable people leading communities into the new economy,” put together a road trip. Young Grand Rapidians from a variety of professions, some of whom had never set foot in the state’s largest city, took a look at its “revitalization” efforts. The purpose of the trip, said Rapid Growth’s Tommy Allen, was for attendees to look for ways to “partner on projects to change the face and reality of our state.”
They visited a bakery, a few bars, the College for Creative Studies, the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, a pet grooming and day care facility, and an urban farm, among other sites. They were wined and dined at one of downtown Detroit’s best restaurants. And judging from their comments, the attendees did seem to gain a different perspective from their encounters with entrepreneurs they met on the trip.
What was less clear was how much context the visitors had of Detroit’s cycles of gentrification, which have occurred many times since its founding.
Detroit’s history shows population shifts and forced neighborhood changes happening over and over: the ribbon farms of the French settlers being seized up by lumber barons for their huge riverfront mansions, as the farmers are driven out of the city (only to be driven out again by people building summer homes in the Grosse Pointes). Woodward Avenue turning from a collection of workers’ homes and small, owner-run businesses into a Fifth Avenue of large stores, posh churches, and upscale restaurants. The Cultural Center changing from a working class neighborhood to streets with large, upper-class homes, a museum, a library. Improvements? Yes, for those with money. For the workers, it represented a constant challenge—where to live so that one could still be close to one’s work, when neighborhoods became too expensive for them? Where to shop, when affordable greengrocers’, bakeries, and clothing shops transmogrified into lavish department stores filled with furs, pigskin gloves, imported pâté, and French perfumes?
And every time the rich tired of a neighborhood, moving on to places more fashionable, then it was the working class who faced slum landlords, the disappearance of jobs, the increase of crime that occurred in their formerly stable neighborhoods.
Of course, some of this change was inevitable—after all, what major city still has farms within its limits? But what’s significant is that in every case, in every cycle of change, it’s the elite who decided what neighborhood to co-opt and alter, and the workers and poor simply had to accept and somehow adapt, often without the resources to do so successfully.
There were periods when it worked for a short time. A balance was struck, not too many people seemed to be disenfranchised, and uneasy peace was declared. We can see this kind of teetering balance in some Grand Rapids neighborhoods today. But the balance never seems to hold for long, as Detroit’s history proves again and again.
People today are most familiar with the highlights of Detroit’s 20th century transformations—the arrival of immigrant and minority workers, many finding jobs in the car industry; the White flight to the suburbs; and the hilarious early attempts at “renaissance.” When the Renaissance Center was completed, the opening gala in 1977 was attended by 650 people so terrified of being downtown that they only attended on assurances that they would be able to step right from their cars into the security-guarded building, without having to go into the parking lot or set a foot on a Detroit city sidewalk. My cousin, a Detroit activist, later commented, “And these were the people who were going to bring positive change to the city, with that attitude?”
Advertised as a “city within a city,” the tacit message of the Renaissance Center was, “It’s OK, White people—you don’t have to actually go into Detroit itself to work here. You can spend all your time inside a safe, secure, guarded fortress.” The concept was to have the building contain offices, restaurants, hotels, a shopping center. But business after business fled the building and Detroit. The entire complex was finally sold to General Motors for pennies on the dollar. It now serves as GM’s headquarters.
Even the Mackinac Center has admitted that the whole idea was a failure. But not the failure of the business movers and shakers who conceived it—oh, no. Rather, it was the city’s failure—for not having a better school system, better municipal services, and for putting “crushing taxes and regulations” on businesses, all of which hampered the largesse that generous capitalists were willing to rain down upon Detroit.
In a smaller way, we see similar scenarios in Grand Rapids’ history. One example: shortly before the Amway Grand was completed, the leading power brokers on this side of the state insisted on a change with similar economic results as the Detroit Renaissance Center. They deemed it was crucial for the struggling retail presence in Grand Rapids’ city center to take out Monroe Avenue and turn it into a pedestrian mall. This would supposedly let downtown “compete” with suburban malls that were pulling shoppers away. Some long-time, small business owners downtown who had survived the shifts in retail traffic saw that they would lose their car-door-to-store-door advantage in this redesign. But the street was mall-ified in 1980 despite their objections. One by one, the remaining businesses failed.
Did anyone benefit from this Titanic of a decision? Yes, the people who always benefit: those with the economic means to buy properties at fire-sale prices. Later, Monroe Avenue was re-opened and the downtown was “revitalized.”
In the Detroit toured by the Rapid Growth road trip attendees, a number of residents are wearily aware that any improvements they make could, at any moment, be co-opted by capitalists looking to make yet another buck off the backs of the poor, the unemployed, and the low-wage workers left in their largely broken urban landscape. Commenting on a similar scenario in Washington D.C., Natalie Hopkinson wrote,
“In the fanfare over the ‘new D.C.’ and drooling over retail, it’s almost as if poor people and their grievances have been put on mute. That was the problem with [Mayor] Fenty and some of his more strident ‘creative class’ supporters; many of them went about their business as though the poor were invisible or, worse, already gone.”
Rayfield Waller wrote in a Michigan Citizen article that the “creative class” working to reinvent Detroit today are “white elites reoccupying inner cities that have crumbled in the wake of federal abandonment, infrastructure collapse, police brutality, loss of worker rights, government corruption, and joblessness.” He goes on to state that in his opinion, urban or neighborhood collapses like the one in Detroit are engineered economic ploys: “America’s response to rebellion, protest and riots by urban Americans objecting to the same corporate and government elites now funding what is essentially a ‘cool’ class war of ‘creative’ elites against urban have-nots.”
Let’s face it. It’s not Detroit’s recent capitalist ventures—from the redo of the Book-Cadillac Hotel with its spa and $60-per-porterhouse-steak restaurant to the peppering of renovated “hipster” bars and Twitterati-approved coffeehouses—which are going to address the reality that Waller describes. But there are organizations in Detroit that are working for justice for the residents who are there, rather than campaigning to lure “urban pioneers” (read: customers with ready cash) from the suburbs to the city.
One of these is the Garden Resource Program Collaborative, which brings together 189 different organizations to support urban gardening and farming. The collective provides education for people who have never grown gardens before; it teaches beekeeping; it offers seed exchanges and lessons in canning and preserving food. According to its website, this food justice organization provided help and advice to nearly 900 community, school, and family gardens,
The Detroit chapter of the Michigan Welfare Organization is another group working to improve the lives of the city’s residents. The group acts as an advocate between low-income citizens and service organizations that stand in the way of people receiving the Medicaid, food stamps, and other assistance that is rightfully theirs. The chapter also intervenes in landlord-tenant disputes and utility company threats. In addition to fighting poverty, the group’s mission statement says it is building “an army prepared to battle for the economic and human rights of millions of disenfranchised Americans.”
Equally important is Moratorium Now!, a grassroots coalition of activists committed to stopping foreclosures, evictions, and utility shutoffs in the city’s metropolitan area as well as across the state. In a city where foreclosures still number approximately 4.5 the national average, this group is crucial to Detroit’s future. In 2010 alone, over 43,500 people in Detroit lost their homes to foreclosure.
The cost of gentrification—again—in Detroit will come at the expense of its already beleaguered population. At GRIID, we believe that a statement circulated in the city several years ago, printed on flyers and posted everywhere downtown, sums up the issue perfectly. It was titled “Detroit Artists Against Gentrification.” Unlike many observations on this topic, it is untainted by an agenda of promoting capitalist interests. It says, in part:
“Fuck ‘Cool Cities.’ We don’t want our art turning into someone else’s eviction notice….We recognize that the city must develop, the nature of things is change…But we don’t think just any development is good development, and we don’t think the end justifies just any means.
“We have seen what gentrification has done to other cities, displacing working class and poor people…In Detroit, it has faked progress, pretending to cure real issues of racism and poverty with fancy new buildings. Frankly we think it is boring and stupid. It is a cycle of destruction and reconstruction that could go on forever, but only benefits those who already have money. They say a rising tide lifts all boats, but that assumes that you have a boat.
“…We need to know that our voices are heard about the din created by all the bulldozers and the local shuffle of money changing hands. All the people in the city must have a say in what’s going on.”
On Friday, the GVSU student group Students Advocating Freedom & Equality, the student socialist group and the LGBT Resource Center co-hosted author/educator Chris Williams on campus for an Earth Day lecture. Williams is the author of a recent Haymarket book entitled Ecology and Socialism: Solutions to Capitalist Ecological Crisis.
The theme of Williams’ presentation was building a new mass movement for environmental justice. Chris pointed out that we are at a critical point in our history because of environmental crisis we are faced with particularly with the issue of Global Warming.
Williams also mentioned the Japanese nuclear catastrophe as the most recent manifestation of our unsustainable energy policies, a catastrophe in which we still don’t know what the long-term effects of will be. The 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster is also just days away and we still have not learned from that catastrophe. The fact that we still think we can deal with nuclear radiation, which will be with us for hundreds of thousands of years, reflects our lack of vision on energy issues, according to Williams. The lack of vision was summed up nicely is a recent Onion headline which read, “Nuclear Energy Advocates Insist U.S. Reactors Completely Safe Unless Something Bad Happens.”
According to Williams, most research shows that nuclear power and nuclear energy is not sustainable and has only survived because of the massive subsidies under both the Bush and Obama administrations.
Williams also stated that the data shows that renewable energy would be more than adequate to meet our existing energy needs, with a combination of wind, solar and other renewable sources. So the issue is not a technological question, rather it is a social question.
Williams said that what needs to take place is a massive systemic change of not only our energy production, but city planning, transportation systems and future housing construction. The US government could subsidize the construction of low energy housing if it diverted from subsidizing the nuclear, oil and coal industry to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars annually.
According to Williams the root of the problem is Capitalism. First, the purpose of the system is perpetual growth, which means that the use of natural resources is exponential. Secondly, the purpose of Capitalism is to make a profit. Products are just a means of making money, not really to provide necessary goods. This also takes into account of the value of what is produced. As an example he juxtaposes HIV medication production, which provides people with the opportunity to be healthy as opposed to weapons production, which is primarily about making a profit and contributing to more suffering.
The third aspect of Capitalism is the fact that it is only concerned with immediate outcomes and profits as opposed to long-term consequences. Williams went on to say that if you don’t think that Capitalism is the root of the current ecological crisis the solutions will always fail. One of those “solutions” is that technology will save us. A second failure of thinking is to increase the market itself. Williams gives the example of Cap and Trade, where businesses will actually make money off of polluting. The third notion is that we need to change our personal life styles and not the system.
He talks about the concentration of wealth and ecological destruction and says that a radical redistribution of wealth could make the planet more sustainable. For example, the amount of money spent on marketing annually in the US is $1 trillion dollars, which is more than we spend on education from 1st grade through graduate school.
Williams said that in order to build a new movement we need to have some immediate small victories, such as stopping nuclear production, ending mountaintop coal removal and stopping the process of fracking.
He also says we need to wed labor struggles and environmental justice. However, the ultimate challenge is to dismantle Capitalism. We need to learn from the democratic struggles in the Middle East and how it has not only transform the political environment there, but inspired political movements here.
Williams also said that Capitalism is always trying to convince us that you can solve problems like environmental destruction by buying the right products and altering your personal lifestyle. Green Capitalism, according to Williams is just an extension of traditional capitalism and convinces us that the “right” kind of consumerism is all we need to do to save the planet.
The presenter’s analysis was in sharp contrast to the comments a staff person from the West Michigan Environmental Action Council (WMEAC), who stated at a forum on Wednesday, “Today’s top environmental problems are a result of the aggregated accumulation of the behaviors of many. There are fewer and fewer specific villains (I.E. point source polluters…major polluters egregiously dumping their wastes in our natural world). Certainly, there are still examples of this and it still happens, but today’s largest environmental problems can be traced to the behaviors and decisions of individuals and the society we have created.”
Lifestyle activism is not really a solution, according to Williams, even though he said it was important for all of us to try to act responsibly, but ultimately we have to change systems if we want to seriously address the current ecological crisis and that means dismantling Capitalism.
The Bloom Collective is hosting a discussion on water privatization since Grand Rapids has been seriously considering this move in the past 6 months.
We have reported in several previous postings about the ongoing discussion of privatizing the water/sewage system in Grand Rapids. Last fall there was an initial report where the Mayor of Grand Rapids first suggested water privatization.
In February there was another report that the City had already met with two French multi-nationals about water privatization, with one of them being Veolia, a company that is the target of the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign against the repressive policies of the State of Israel.
The Bloom Collective plans on providing information on this issue along with facilitating discussion on the consequences of water privatization and ways to resist such actions.
Water Privatization discussion
Tuesday, April 26
6:30PM
Bloom Collective
671 Davis NW in Grand Rapids
Corporate Sponsored blog gives Grand Rapids Eco-award
Yesterday, MLive reported that Grand Rapids received an award from Mother Nature News as the “Destination of the Week” city.
MLive writer Troy Reimink gives a summary of the Mother Nature Network (MNN) award story, but writes the summary in such a way as to just gloat in this new award for Grand Rapids. He says that the MNN article refers to Grand Rapids as an impressive city and then concludes the article by writing, “File under: We already know, but it’s nice to be recognized.”
Instead of gloating, maybe the MLive writers should practice some journalism and try to provide a fair assessment of the destination of the week award.
As is the norm these days the first thing the MNN article cites is the number of LEED certified buildings in Grand Rapids as evidence of its commitment to ecological sustainability. While this writer would agree that new buildings should be more energy efficient it does not take into account what happens in these buildings. If the policies and practices of the businesses that inhabit LEED certified buildings engage in ecologically destructive practices then operating in a LEED building seems a bit irrelevant.
The MNN article is broken into four parts: go green, eat green, sleep green and see green. Each section highlights what they have determined to be sustainable practices.
In the go green section we are told about the mass transit system The Rapid, which is hoping to have citizens improve on May 3 with a millage vote. The Rapid has improved significantly over the past 20 years, but Grand Rapids is still a car dominated city, with traffic jams, lots of surface parking lots and all the pollution that comes with a car dominated culture.
Bicycling is also mentioned as a means of green transportation, but the article does state that Grand Rapids is only bike friendly during the “warmer months.” There has been an increase in bicycling as a means of transportation in recent years in Grand Rapids, but the city has very few urban bike lanes and car culture still dominates commuting dynamics, which makes it somewhat dangerous for those who ride bikes as a regular means of transportation in the city.
The eat green section highlights 3 restaurants first – San Chez, the Green Well and Brickroad Pizza, as indications of sustainable eating. While these restaurants serve some locally grown food the menu prices make it somewhat prohibitive for working class people to make those places a meal destination. The article does mention the Fulton Street Farmers Market, which is a far more sustainable food source, since buying and preparing your own food is much cheaper than eating out and you have the opportunity to directly ask the vendors where their food is grown and under what conditions.
In the category of sleeping green we are told that hotels like City Flats in Holland and the JW Marriot are green because of LEED certification and “green features.” Again, one could argue that the cost to stay at hotels like the JW Marriot is probative for most working class people, but more importantly Hotels in the US tend to cater to the business class who are traveling from city to city and conducting work that supports and nurtures a much larger capitalist system, which is inherently unsustainable.
Then there is the question about who Mother Nature Network is and who supports them. If you scroll to the bottom of the MNN webpage you can see who the organization’s sponsors are: AT&T, Miller/Coors, General Electric, Dell Computers, Seimens, Georgia Pacific, AFLAC and Coca Cola. This would be a great list, if we wanted to identify major corporate polluters, but models of ecological sustainability?
According to the Political Economy Research Institute, General Electric is the 13th worst company for creating air pollution. AT&T is a huge corporation that is seeking to further monopolize their control over our communication’s systems. Georgia Pacific has a long history of deforestation for its paper products and was purchased by the arch-conservative Koch brothers in 2005. Coca Cola has been engaged in stealing communal water around the global for decades for its beverage line and is also deeply involved in the assassination of union leaders in Coke bottling plants in Colombia. (See The Coke Machine: The Dirty Truth Behind the World’s Favorite Soft Drink, by Michael Blanding)
Ultimately, the function that the Mother Nature Network serves is to support and promote green capitalism. They do not support or promote true sustainability, but have taken advantage of the growing sector of companies that are trying to position themselves as eco-friendly. This distinction would be more evident to the public if MLive writers bothered to practices journalism instead of acting as cheerleaders.
On Tuesday, April 26 the local group Healing Children of Conflict will host a fundraiser for an Iraqi boy who was seriously wounded by US bombing while playing outside his home in Baghdad.
What follows is a brief account of what happened in 2008 from the boy’s father:
“My son Hamzah was badly injured, covered with blood, stomach and intestines are cut out of his belly, the car was destroyed and part of my house and the houses next to it. I carried my son Hamzah who was in a very bad condition, and ran to the nearest hospital to my home. The doctors told me: “What do you want us to do with him, we cannot do anything; he will die”.
I was crying, begging, they agreed to take him, they took him into the operating room. The operation lasted for 4-5 hours. When he came out, he was in a catastrophic condition; all wrapped in bandages and tubes, and his right leg was plastered.”
Hamzah survived the operation, but he lost one of his legs and has had continuous medical problems since the April 2008 US bombing that changed his family’s life.
Healing Children of Conflict will be bringing Hamazh and his father to Grand Rapids next month for medical treatment and they need your help to cover the costs of the trip and provide other services while they are both in town.
The fundraiser is this Tuesday, April 26, 7:00PM at 25 Kitchen a downtown Grand Rapids restaurant located at 25 Ottawa SW. Tickets are $10 or $25 and there will be a brief informational program along with the meal.
For more information on this event or ways you can support the medical needs of Hamzah contact Healing Children of Conflict at events@healingchildrenofconflict.org.
As a regular practice GRIID makes it a point to monitor local media, whether that is the commercial news media or blogs from the all parts of the political spectrum.
One site we look at regularly is the Acton Institute, a far right organization that philosophically weds Christianity and Capitalism that has its main office in downtown Grand Rapids. The Acton Institute doesn’t believe in global warming and has received significant sums of money from Exxon/Mobil for such a stance. The Acton Institute also has a cozy relationship with the DeVos family and Erik Prince.
Last week the Acton Institute posted a commentary piece on its blog that was attempting to call out a progressive religious leader in the US, Rev. Jim Wallis over the issue of civility. The blog post links to a Democracy Now show where Wallis was a recent guest.
The blog post also makes the claim that there have been vicious and violent attacks against both Governor’s Scott Walker and Rick Snyder. The evidence the Acton writer provides is a video produced by the Michigan branch of Americans For Prosperity.
The video is interesting on many levels. First, this is a classic Media Literacy example of how media is constructed. The person (s) who filmed protestors at the Lansing State Capitol chose to only include footage of signs that convey a certain message, such as “Rick’s Shit doesn’t stink” and others that use Hitler references to Governor Snyder.
The video essentially includes a montage of people with signs that appear to be extreme while viewers listen to piano music. However, the videographer does not talk to those holding the sign to find out what each person really meant by the language of their signs. Are the working class people who are being threatened with layoffs, pay cuts, decreased health benefits and pensions or the senior citizens who are being threatened with increased taxes just expressing anger and frustration? It’s impossible to tell from this highly selective video.
As someone who has been to numerous demonstrations in both Lansing and Grand Rapids over Governor Synder’s proposals I have seen many signs that clearly express anger and frustration and I have talked to many of those with angry signs. What I found out was that while people were angry they were in no way suggesting that the Governor be violently attacked. In fact, the only concrete strategies that people expressed were to either Recall Snyder or to vote him out, both of which could hardly be considered violent attacks.
However, the majority of people that have carried signs at rallies in Lansing and in Grand Rapids have expressed some pretty basic and non-threatening messages such as “Snyder’s policies are an attack on the Middle Class,” “Michigan is not 4 sale” and “Fight the Attack on the American Dream.” Indeed, people have also carried signs using quotes from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, hardly messages that could be considered violent.
What the Koch brothers funded Americans For Prosperity video is really attempting to do is to discredit unions and working class people who are questioning the shock doctrine policies of Governor Snyder. Making them seem violent or ridiculous is clearly the intent of the video, but anyone who has actually attended these rallies knows that the video only portrays a very narrow representation of those protesting and it provides no context for people’s anger.



















