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Understanding the GR Power Structure – Part IX: The Non-Profit Industrial Complex in Grand Rapids

September 9, 2024

In Part I of this series I began an updated version of a Grand Rapids Power Analysis, which lays out the ground work for what the Grand Rapids Power Structure looks like and what it means for this community.

When I use the phrase, the Grand Rapids Power Structure and who has power, it is important to note that I mean power over. A local power analysis is designed to investigate who has power over – who oppresses, exploits and engages in policy that benefits them to the exclusion of everyone else – the majority of people living in Grand Rapids.

In Part II of this series on the Grand Rapids Power Structure, I looked at the DeVos family, which I argue is the most powerful family in this city, in terms of economics, politics, social and cultural dynamics. In Part III of this series I looked at some of the other families and individuals that also wield tremendous power in this city, economically, politically and socially. In today’s post I will focus on the private sector organizations that also have tremendous power and influence on daily life in Grand Rapids.

In Part IV, I focus on private sector organizations, many of which have individuals who are part of the Grand Rapids Power structure sitting on their boards. These private sector organizations serve a vital role in dictating local policy, which primarily benefits their own interests. Part V took a critical look at the role that the Grand Rapids City Commission and the Kent County Commission play in representing the interests of the private power sector, along with how they use fear and violence against residents who are actively challenging the local power structure. 

In Part VI, I looked at how the major daily local news agencies normalize systems of oppression that protect and expand the Grand Rapids Power Structure. Then in Part VII, I discussed the role that local colleges and universities play when it comes to the Grand Rapids Power Structure. Part VIII focused on religious organizations in Grand Rapids and their relationship to the local power structure.

In today’s post I want to look at the function of the non-profit as it relates to the Grand Rapids Power Structure. First, I think it is important to state that not all non-profits are alike. Some non-profits genuinely make an effort to move beyond social services and education, even at times challenging systems of power. However, those non-profits are generally the exception and not the norm. Second, I understand that most non-profits do some form of “good”, which often translates into provided some support, relief or resources to those who are struggling. 

However, regardless of the “good” that non-profits do or the support they provide to people, what they don’t do, or don’t do very often, is to challenge systems of power and oppression. In the chapter Social Service or Social Change, from the book, The Revolution will not be Funded: Beyond the Non-Profit Industrial Complex, Paul Kivel talks about the primary function of the non-profit, which is to act as a buffer for systems of power and oppression. Kivel identifies three ways in which the non-profits act as a buffer zone for the small percentage of people who control most of the wealth and political power.

  • First, non-profits take care of those who are struggling economically. Take care of them primarily means offer services or resources.
  • The second buffer zone function of non-profits is to keep hope alive, which translates into connecting individuals and families to opportunities in the community to improve their economic standing.
  • The third function is to maintain a system of control. Non-profits do this consciously or unconsciously by discouraging people from getting organized and to make sure that they do not engage in socially disruptive acts. 

The Non-Profit Industrial Complex is a relationship between the Private Power, the State, foundations, the non-profit/NGO, social service agencies and sometimes social justice organizations. These relationships often result in the surveillance, control, derailment, and everyday management of political movements. The feminist group INCITE!, has identified the following ways in which non-profits function as it relates to private and state power.

  • Monitor and control social justice movements;
  • Divert public monies into private hands through foundations;
  • Manage and control dissent in order to make the world safe for capitalism;
  • Redirect activist energies into career-based modes of organizing instead of mass-based organizing capable of actually transforming society;
  • Allow corporations to mask their exploitative and colonial work practices through “philanthropic” work;
  • Encourage social movements to model themselves after capitalist structures rather than to challenge them.

In looking at non-profits in Grand Rapids and their relationship to private power, it is easy to see that these organizations rely heavily on the very foundations run by the wealthiest families who make up the Grand Rapids Power Structure, which we have been documenting here. These foundations channel millions of dollars to local non-profits, which results in; 1) the non-profits will not speak out about the power these families have in influencing public policy, and 2) the non-profits will not look at the root causes of the issues they are organized to respond to. In fact, the members of the Grand Rapids Power Structure, through their efforts to influence public policy, are part of the root cause of the issues that non-profits are responding to. The foundation money that goes to non-profits is what I call hush money.

Besides foundation funding to local non-profits, members of the Grand Rapids Power Structure, or their representatives, will often sit on the boards of directors of these non-profits. One example I reported on recently was the board of directors and the strategic partners that work with the non-profit Housing Kent.

I have spent lots of time writing about and engaging non-profits in a variety of ways, but let me give three examples of how non-profits have served those in power or remained silent about systems of power and oppression.

The first example has to do with silence. In 2017, it was reported that the non-profit group – Inner City Christian Federation (ICCF) – had received millions in funding from the DeVos family specifically to purchase dozens of properties in Grand Rapids. I asked three main questions of ICCF, questions I wrote about and questions I sent to them. I never got a response from ICCF to my questions. 

A second example has to do with the group Kids Food Basket. I have written numerous article about this organization over the years, primarily about their failure to truly address food insecurity and hunger. Then in 2021, when a coalition of autonomous groups in Grand Rapids nominated them for being one of the worst non-profits in the area. In response, instead of choosing to do better or enter into a dialogue with these autonomous groups, Kids Food Basket had their lawyers send threatening letters to some of the BIPOC members of these autonomous groups. You can read about what happened in my article entitled, White Liberals, Kids Food Basket and the Non-Profit industrial Complex in Grand Rapids.

The final example I want to provide has to do with the non-profit group AmplifyGR. AmplifyGR is a non-profit that was created by the DeVos family, specifically with founding from the Doug and Marie DeVos Foundation in 2017. Many of the DeVos members also sit on the Board of Directors for AmplifyGR. In 2017, when there was an organized effort to question the role of AmplifyGR in the Southeast part of GR, specifically at several community forums in June and July of 2017, AmplifyGR decided to cancel any future community forums in order to prevent pushback from the community. 

Non-profits do not have to act as buffers for systems of power and oppression, even if the way non-profits are structure limits their ability to work towards structural change. This is why I don’t have any expectations that non-profit work will lead to the dismantling of systems of power and oppression. We need local autonomous groups and movements, ones that don’t operate within the constraints of the non-profit industrial complex or within partisan politics. Autonomous groups and movements have the freedom to fight these systems and to create other possibilities, which can truly lead to collective liberation for those that the Grand Rapids Power Structure seeks to control. 

In Part X, I will highlight some of these autonomous groups that exist in Grand Rapids and the work they have done that moves in the direction of collective liberation. 

Police apologist group, Voice for the Badge, posts offensive message on Labor Day, a message that comes from an anti-Immigrant nationalist organization

September 9, 2024

Johnny Brann Sr. has been putting lots of money behind pro-cop candidates in Grand Rapids during some of the recent Grand Rapids City Commission races. This most recent example is with 1st Ward candidate Dean Pacific, which both Johnny Brann and the GR police union provided Pacific with thousands of dollars.

In addition, Johnny Brann Sr. founded the pro-cop group, Voice for the Badge, which continues to show how far right they are as an organization. For Labor Day, Brann/Voice for the Badge posted this comment:

To all who hold the line we are truly grateful!  From the men and women who are first to hear our cry for help, to the officers and fire fighters who save and keep us safe, to the hospital staff that save and heal our lives, to the men and women who protect our freedom and all who work to support them we wish you a very Blessed Labor Day!  Your strength, dedication and sacrifice does not go unnoticed.  You are loved and appreciated 365/24/7!

Be safe today and everyday!

The Voice For The Badge.

Besides posting this message, which is an insult to labor history and working class people’s history, Voice for the Badge reposted a meme from the group NumbersUSA. According to SourceWatch, NumbersUSA is an anti-immigrant organization that was tied to the larger anti-immigrant network that was created by now deceased Michigan physician John Tanton.

If you look at NumbersUSA’s Facebook page, you can see that they embrace a far right, anti-immigration, pro-Trump agenda. None of this should be surprising to anyone who is familiar with Voice for the Badge, but it is important that we acknowledge that their organization is more than pro-Cop. Voice for the Badge is also a far right, nationalist and white supremacist organization that we need to expose and confront.

MLive not only relies on a business association’s press release, but fails to report on how a wage decrease will impact workers who are already living paycheck to paycheck

September 8, 2024

On Thursday, Mlive posted an article entitled, West Michigan wage growth declining amid economic uncertainty.

The article begins by stating: The rapid wage growth spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic is showing signs of slowing down, according to a Michigan employer survey.

The survey that was cited came from the American Society of Employers West Michigan, even though the MLive article never really tells readers anything about this business association apart from the fact that they have merged with another group.

However, the article does cite lots of statistics from the survey, along with comments from the organization’s CEO. In addition, it is important to point out that the MLive article pretty much just relies on a Press Release from the  American Society of Employers West Michigan, which the organization posted on August 28th.

So, we have an MLive article, which:

  • Relies primarily on a Press Release from a business association.
  • Only cites the business association.
  • Doesn’t investigate the accuracy of the data provided by the business association.
  • And the reporter fails to ask the most basic question – how will this impact workers. 

One could also certainly make the case that MLive should have done a follow up story where they talk to workers about the prospect of having their wages reduced, especially in an economy where the basic cost of living has gone up – food, gas, utilities, etc.

Equally important is the fact that in late July, MLive reported, “that 41% of Michigan households live paycheck to paycheck.” This was based on the ALICE report. ALICE stands for Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed. In that same MLive article they provided a map of Michigan, which allowed readers to see what percentage of the population by county is living paycheck to paycheck.

The MLive story that this GRIID post first looked at, had Muskegon, Michigan as the location of the article, since the American Society of Employers West Michigan is based there. If you look at the ALICE data for Muskegon County, it shows that 48% of the households in that county are living paycheck to paycheck. If the wages are going to decrease, it would mean that more than 50% of the households in Muskegon County would be living paycheck to paycheck. 

THIS should be the story that the MLive reporter should be pursuing, not the unverified data provided by a business association. Just one more example of how the commercial news media in this area demonstrates a clear class bias, favoring the opinions of the business class over the working class. 

Palestine Solidarity Information, Analysis, Local Actions and Events for the week of September 8th

September 7, 2024

It has been 11 months since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. We will also provide information on local events and actions that people can get involved in. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.

Information  

ISRAEL’S WEST BANK ATTACKS FUEL ITS ANNEXATION PLANS 

Israeli Treatment of Palestinians Remains Unchanged Over 75 Years 

IDF Attacks Gazans Buying Bread as Netanyahu Tanks Cease-Fire Hopes 

We’ve Organized for Palestinian Liberation for Years. Here’s What We Learned. 

On the Frontline of Resistance: The Women of Palestine 

Thousands of Palestinian Children in Gaza Are the Principal Victims of Israel’s Genocide 

From ‘Defense’ to Destruction: The Evolution of Zionist Aggression 

Campaign against Project Nimbus gathers steam and supporters 

Analysis & History  

Israel Has Built an Economy Fueled by Genocide at Home and Abroad 

What is Israel’s endgame? 

Israel/OPT: Israeli military must be investigated for war crime of wanton destruction in Gaza – new investigation 

Local Events and Actions

Power to Palestine: Weekly Rally in Grand Rapids

Wednesday, September 11th, Noon – 1pm, Corner of Pearl St and Monroe in downtown GR.

The People’s Poetry for Palestine

Thursday, September 12 at 6pm

Canal Park in Grand Rapids

Lowell Rally for Palestine

Saturday, September 14 from 1 – 2pm

Visual used in this post comes from https://visualizingpalestine.org/ from 2021.

West Michigan Foundation Watch: The CDV5 Foundation – also known as the Cheri DeVos Foundation

September 5, 2024

Foundations are a way for members of the Capitalist Class, which made their wealth by exploiting workers, to hide some of their wealth from taxation, only to then turn around and use foundation funds to undermine social movements and generate positive PR for themselves. 

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

 – Joan Roelofs, Foundations and Public Policy

The CDV5 Foundation

GRIID has always begun our Foundation Watch work by looking at the foundations associated with the most powerful family in West Michigan, the DeVos family. GRIID has already looked at the Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation, the Doug and Maria DeVos Foundation and the Dan and Pamela DeVos Foundation.

I am using the data from the foundation’s 990 document for 2022, which is the most recent year that is available. The CDV5 Foundation has $74,339,327 of assets in the foundation’s account, which is just another way that members of the Capitalist Class to be able to hide their money from taxation. 

Before I dive into how the CDV5 Foundation distributed their funds, I wanted to point out that Cheri DeVos is the primary DeVos family member who runs this foundation, along with CDV5 Properties,, which does property management for retail, office and residential buildings, like the one I wrote about in 2022.

In addition, it is important to point out that the CDV5 Foundation has provided funds to other DeVos family economic assets, specifically Ottawa Avenue Private Capital $212,047.00 and the RDV Corporation $151,581.00. 

The CDV5 Foundation made contributions to dozens of entities in 2022, but there are some clear categories of groups they contributed to, such as the Religious Right, Think Tanks, Education-centered groups, and social service entities, to name a few. Below is a listing of each from these categories, with a dollar amount.

Religious Right

  • Basecamp Urban Outreach – $20,000
  • Fellowship of Christian Athletes – $30,000
  • Keystone Community Church – $250,000
  • Partners Worldwide – $30,000

Education-centered groups

  • Grand Rapids Christian Schools – $810,000
  • Hope College – $25,000
  • Potters House – $75,000
  • Rehoboth Christian School Association – $100,000

DeVos-owned, created or connected groups

  • ArtPrize – $25,000 (this was the last year it was being run by Rick DeVos)
  • Chicago Cubs Charities – $10,000
  • Corewell Health Foundation – $200,000
  • Grand Action Foundation 2.0 – $50,000
  • Grand Rapids Symphony Society – $450,000
  • Helen DeVos Children’s Foundation – $35,000
  • West Michigan Aviation Academy Foundation – $105,000 

Groups receiving Hush $ 

  • Baxter Community Center – $30,000
  • Bethany Christian Services – $40,000
  • DA Blodgett/St. Johns – $100,000
  • Family Promise of Grand Rapids – $20,000
  • Housing Kent – $300,000
  • Kids Food Basket – $100,000
  • Safe Haven Ministries – $50,000
  • Women’s Resource Center – $300,000

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

For example, the CDV5 Foundation gave $300,000 to the group Housing Kent. Housing Kent claims to work towards housing for everyone who lives in Kent County. However, Housing Kent never discusses how the cost of housing, either owning a home or renting, is too expensive for thousands of individuals and families living in Kent County. 

Housing Kent thinks that if more “affordable housing” is built, there can be options for everyone. This is a false solution, since they do not promote social housing policies or funding for social housing, plus they never talk about the need for people to earn a livable income to be able to afford to buy a home or cover the cost of rent in Kent County. You see why they think this, based on those who sit on the board of directors, which os made up of mostly developers, politicians, DeVos personnel and the government affairs person from the GR Chamber of Commerce, Josh Lunger. Lunger was the person from the GR Chamber to prosed the ordinance to criminalize the unhoused and then championed the version of the City ordinance that Grand Rapids adopted.

Then there are the “strategic partners” involved with Housing Kent, which consists of lots of the usual suspects – banks, foundations that are part of the Grand Rapids Power Structure, government entities, numerous businesses and pro-business groups, along with several non-profit groups that are notorious for not challenging systems of power or addressing roots causes of social problems. These are the exact kinds of groups that the DeVos family foundation love to direct money towards, because they will not threaten the ideological economic and political interests of the most powerful family in West Michigan.

Worthy and Unworthy victims: Why Rep. Scholten is a hypocrite and complicit in genocide

September 4, 2024

It seems like there is a report of Israeli bombing and killing Palestinians on a daily basis. One recent report states:

The Israeli military killed nearly a dozen people Sunday in its latest bombing of a school-turned-shelter in the Gaza Strip, an attack that came amid limited pauses aimed at allowing relief workers to vaccinate Palestinian children against reemergent polio.

Another recent report provides some sobering numbers on the number of Palestinians that have been killed by Israel since October 7, 2023:

Israel’s war on Gaza has been described as a “war on women.”  Two mothers are killed every hour.  Of the reported 40,786 (2 September) killed since 7 October,  70 percent have been women and children, leaving families anguished and their children with diminished protection. 

Now, the 40,786 Palestinians who have been killed by the Israeli military is likely an under-reported number. Some sources put the number much higher, as was reported by Democracy Now! in early July, stating:

But a new report in the British medical journal Lancet estimates the actual death toll could be 186,000 or even higher — that’s roughly 8% of Gaza’s population.

The point being that Palestinians are being killed on a daily basis by the Israeli military and in some cases Israeli settlers. This fact is just not contested.

Despite this reality, Rep. Hillary Scholten has never condemned or expressed outrage over Palestinian deaths, which have been mostly women and children. This fact is even more absurd when you read what Rep. Scholten wrote on her Facebook page earlier this week, where she cited a Washington Post article. Here is what Rep. Scholten wrote:  

I’m outraged over the news of Hersh’s murder, moments before his potential rescue. His family has worked with international leaders non-stop to secure his release and bring their son home. I’m praying for Hersh’s family and the other victims’ families today as they receive this devastating news.

Hamas is a brutal terrorist organization that poses a threat to peace everywhere. They must be stopped. 

Claiming outrage over the death of these Israeli hostages, while Rep. Scholten has voted for billions in US weaponry to Israel, weaponry that has killed anywhere between 40,000 and 200,000 Palestinians is nothing short of hypocrisy. In fact, Rep. Hillary Scholten has demonstrated once again that she is embracing the Zionist narrative about what is happening.

It is also hypocritical for Rep. Scholten to call Hamas a brutal terrorist organization, when the real terrorists are the Israeli government/military and their primary accomplices – the US government. 

Let’s not miss another opportunity to defeat what the rich bastards in Kent County want to do in the future

September 3, 2024

On Monday, MLive posted an article entitled, Smaller venues want a cut of tax approved for Grand Rapids amphitheater, soccer stadium. 

The article cites a few of the smaller venue owners, which is great, but provides more comment from Kent County Commissioners. I find it puzzling that the Kent County Commissioners were given so much space to talk about this matter, event though they are the same body that approved the August 6th ballot initiative to expand from 5% to 8% of the hotel tax in the first place. It is also somewhat disingenuous for these commissioners to sound like they care about the viability of smaller venues, when they knew very well that the Grand Action 2.0 proposed ballot initiative would not benefit the smaller music venues.

I also saw a response on social media to the MLive article linked above, where someone asks why people supported the hotel tax increase in the first place. Well, the August 6th ballot initiative did not get overwhelming approval. According to the Kent County Clerk’s office, 65,909 people voted in favor, but 56,976 voted against the hotel tax increase. This is pretty amazing, especially when you consider that the Destination Kent Committee had raised nearly a half a million dollars in just a few short months, which allowed them to spend hundreds of thousands on radio ads, online ads and mailers.

Imagine if there would have been a organized campaign to oppose the hotel tax increase or a campaign to change the language of it to allow for smaller venues to benefit. Imagine if the those who are owners of the smaller venues cited in the MLive article – Four Star Theater, the Pyramid Scheme or the Intersection – were organized with the community, what could have collectively been done to defeat the Grand Action 2.0 ballot initiative?

I have heard numerous people say that in the future, we cannot let groups like Grand Action 2.0 and their friends at the GR Chamber of Commerce create ballot initiatives or manipulate local politicians into using millions in public dollars to finance development projects that will simply expand the wealth of those who are already millionaires and billionaires in this area. In fact, I think we should start organizing now to see how many people want to be ready to defeat any future development projects that transfers more wealth to those who think they run this community. Who wants in on this? 

Book signing this Friday for Radical Grand Rapids: Places, dates, actions and people

September 2, 2024

Join me this Friday, September 6th, between 5pm and 8pm, at the 28th Street location of Schuler Books, where I will be signing copies of my latest book, Radical Grand Rapids: Places, dates, actions and people.

This new book is a companion to the book I wrote last year, A People’s History of Grand Rapids. The new book consists of 40 short chapters that focus on: 1) significant places in Grand Rapids where a specific event took place; 2) dates of important events and various campaigns for social justice in Grand Rapids; 3) actions, which cover over a 100 year period and were part of larger social movement work; and 4) specific people in Grand Rapids history that I believe need to be honored, celebrated or shown contempt.

This past week, while at a conference, I had the opportunity to hear the amazing Ruth Wilson Gilmore speak. I say this, because I cite her in the introduction to Radical Grand Rapids: Places, dates, actions and people. 

“In her book, Abolition Geography: Essays Towards Liberation, Ruth Wilson Gilmore says, “Abolition geography starts from the homely premise that freedom is a place.” Building on Wilson’s notion of abolition geographies, we can then understand the importance of mapping the political, social, and economic terrain of Grand Rapids. Therefore, I am arguing that freedom and liberation can be a place, but it can also be about dates, actions, and people.

I am only including forty places, dates, actions and people in this short book, since many more stories of the powerful and radically imaginative actions that people have taken in Grand Rapids over the past two centuries are explored in my book, A People’s History of Grand Rapids. I want show people, especially young people, that when we take radical actions, we open spaces for people, and we allow them to radically imagine that another world is possible.”

Please come and join me, pick up a copy of my book, tell me some stories or just give me a hard time. You can check out the Facebook event page that Schuler Books created for the book signing. Hope to see you there!

Day Three – Socialism Conference: Immigration Abolition, Border Imperialism, Indigenous resistance and anti-carceral movement work

September 2, 2024

Silky Shah (Unbuild Walls: Why Immigrant Justice Needs Abolition) began the conversation by talking about how far the Democrats have moved to the right on immigration and carceral responses to immigration. This ultimately means that Republicans just continue to move even further to the right of whatever the Democrats are proposing, leaving immigrants to suffer under both parties.

Shah then talked about how Republican Governors have been busing immigrants to the North, which may not have been a huge problem decades ago, but now that social services have been radically defunded, cities line New York no longer have capacity to deal with an influx of immigrants. This has led the Democrats to focus even more on draconian border policies. Thus, moving to the right is the logic for winning the 2024 election for the Democrats. 

She then says, “the Biden/Harris policy for those who have been here for 10 years or more and are married to a US citizen is just window dressing and crumbs. Neither of these things promote immigration justice.”

Harsha Walia (Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism) began by talking about how Far Right border policies have been a bipartisan approach in the US, but is also happening around the globe. Walia refers to this trend as both a fascist border policy and nationalist xenophobia. “What we are seeing is that politicians and the commercial media are talking about border insecurity, when they fail to talk about the actual violence being done to immigrants at the border.

Another important point that Walia talked about was the fact that we don’t talk about immigration outside of the US/Mexican border. In fact, Mexico is currently deporting more Central Americans than the US, but they are doing so at the behest of the US. This dynamic is conveniently left out of the political and media narrative.

Then there is the issue of border outsourcing, when states, like Australia, are paying the private sector to create and run detention centers, often off the mainland, as a way of hiding it and distancing the state from the harm. Another aspect of global border imperialism is that we don’t talk about the colonial history or the current imperialist dynamic, which are the very roots of why so many people are fleeing their countries of origins. We cannot “fix” the immigration issue if we don’t come to terms with how US foreign policy is displacing people and has created the “immigration crisis.” Walia says that the real crisis is imperial policies.

Walia end her opening comments by saying, “To undo and dismantle border imperialism, is to dismantle racial capitalism.” 

Silky then talked more about the evolution of US immigration policy, especially from the Obama years, which were very draconian. She discussed how the immigrant (led) justice movement pushed back against the Democratic immigration and border policies. The immigrant justice movement has been able to, especially during the Trump years, reduce deportations, create more sanctuary spaces and reduce some of the harm. Unfortunately, in this moment, the Harris campaign has now become hawkish on immigration, but if she is elected Silky fears that too many people will abandon the immigration justice movement, just like they have under Biden.

Harsha then talked about how the immigrant justice movement, particularly in so-called Canada, has been an anti-colonial/anti-imperialist movement, which not only believes that No One is Illegal, but that Nations States are the entities that are truly illegal. She says that this framing and narrative has provided space for the movement in Canada to become more abolitionist over time.

Walia also said, “The years and decades of austerity policies have forced our movements to to become too single issue. This is a consequence of having bipartisan Neo-Liberal economic policies.” For example, every 2 seconds someone is displaced because of climate change, but too often we don’t talk about how climate change causes displacement. Harsha says, “in fact, every major struggle – anti-imperialist, climate justice, labor justice, etc., are intertwined with immigrant justice.”

She ended her thread on this issue, by stating, “You can’t be anti-fascist today if you are not anti-border! In the same way that defund is the floor for abolition, status for all immigrants is the floor for anti-border imperialism.

How Can the Left Respond to this Moment?

Later in the day I sat in on a live taping of the Laura Flanders Show, with guests Harsha Walia, Rachel Herzing, and Nick Estes.

The theme for the show/discussion was, how do we respond to this moment? We are led to believe that the most important thing we can do is to vote in November, despite the fact that there is no evidence that this actually creates the kind of change we want.

Harsha began by saying, “In this moment I think we need to think about Global Fascism and recognize it, along with the tendencies towards Fascism, as we recently saw at the DNC, with Harris saying that she wants to be more to the right on US border/immigration policies, law enforcement policies and of course the unconditional US support for the Israeli genocide.” 

Nick responded by saying,”We need to learn from the history of Indigenous resistance. We also need to avoid falling into the electoral politics framework. There is no real choice.” Estes was also critical of the uncommitted movement, since they thought they could change the Democratic Party, plus he isn’t convinced that many of them will still vote for Harris.

A second question posed by Flanders was, “Are there any new possibilities and new forces outside of political party forces?

Rachel stated that, “we need to have an intersectional analysis of the current crises, to see how they are inter-connected. The student encampments have been amazing and encouraging. Then there is the current crisis of Capitalism, where you see moments like the 2020 uprising, specifically to state violence, where protests shut down commerce and disrupted business as usual in lots of ways.”

Nick responded to the question by saying, “I think about the mobilization against Standing Rock and how so many people started to think about Indigenous struggles, just like how so many people have been mobilized to resist the US support for the Israeli genocide, and that so many people are not ignoring this issue. Plus, the bipartisan support for Israel should tell us something about the ruling class in this country.”

Harsha stated that, “the system and the structures in the US requires us to silo our struggles, which is especially played out in the the Non-Profit Industrial Complex.”

Flanders then came back to Estes, asking what he meant by his comments about Capitalism must die. Nick’s response was clear. “Capitalism must die, because even in the so-called green economy there is a reliance on extractivist practices, which always impacts Indigenous people the most. Line 3 and the ongoing carbon emissions from these projects are the direct outcome of Capitalism.” Estes also pointed out that Minnesota Governor Walz provided the financing and state support for the Line 3 project, which means that tar sands oil will flow through this pipeline for years to come, with untold amounts of carbon emission. Nick then commented, “But we are told by the DNC that Walz is an environmentalist.”

Rachel Herzing responded to the question by saying, “You can’t have the Prison Industrial Complex without Capitalism. It’s not about safety, it’s about generating profits from a system of carceral violence.”

Harsha Walia chimed in by saying, “We need to think about bordering as displacement, which happens around the world, but also happens within our own communities such as what happens with gentrification. Taking an abolitionist approach to borders, imperialism and Capitalism will be necessary if we want our movements to succeed.

Bring the conversation back around to the upcoming election, Flanders wanted the panelists to talk about whether or not movement politics is at all compatiple with electoral politics? Nick Estes referred to an article he wrote in 2018, headlined, You can’t vote any harder. He then said that, “Deb Haaland has provided us with reports on the genocidal policies of Boarding Schools, but she has also presided over an increase in oil and gas drilling permits in the US.

Rachel Herzing had her own question/comment, stating, “Will Black people be bamboozled by voting for a Black person, like we saw with Obama, and now with Harris? I do think it is worth think about down ballot voting, like local judges and school board members.” Rachel also shared that while in Atlanta recently, she saw a Black family with Law & Order logo T-shirt, with Harris 2024 underneath. She was puzzled and couldn’t tell if this was serious or if the family was making fun of the Harris/Walz ticket.

Harsha’s comments regarding movements and electoral politics was right to the point. “I am always blow away by the fact that if we don’t get involved in voting that shit will hit the fan, when in fact these are often the same people that don’t do much of anything beyond voting to reduce the harm or to create structures built on collective liberation.

Nick Estes then shared an interesting observation about how systems of power when trying to do good are still engaging in harmful policies. “We learned that NGOs that worked on ending pipeline policies would talk about how the Keystone XL campaign was really connected to the US imperialism against Venezuela, since the Keystone XL project was a way of undermining Venezuela’s oil. Interestingly enough, the Venezuelans actually provided us Indigenous people with oil in the Dakotas, where we have some of the highest oil costs and some of the harshest winters. The 350 people did not want to talk about this connection, since it wouldn’t sell amongst their funders, which is a big problem for movement work.

Laura Flanders ended with one last question for the panelists. She asked, “what gets you out of bed in the morning to keep doing what you do?” Rachel Herzing stated, “the abolition of imprisonment is happening right now. It is not some futurist vision, but a project/movement right now. What Black and Pink is doing on a daily basis is amazing, just like the work of Critical Resistance. I want to continue to be part of that. We have to organize and organize, especially in collective fashion, which is always absolutely necessary if we are to have a future.”

Nick Estes shared what he learned from the late Elizabeth Cook-Lynn, who said, “we don’t even own our own life, we are here to make things better for the future. This is how how we can be good ancestors.” 

Harsha came back to a theme that has been repeated over and over again at this conference….. “How can we be in good relationships with each other. Ho do we find unity through struggle. How we are and how we are with each other is what really matters.”

Palestine Solidarity Information, Analysis, Local Actions and Events for the week of September 1st

September 1, 2024

It has been nearly 11 months since the Israeli government began their most recent assault on Gaza and the West Bank. The retaliation for the October 7 Hamas attack in Israel, has escalated to what the international community has called genocide, therefore, GRIID will be providing weekly links to information and analysis that we think can better inform us of what is happening, along with the role that the US government is playing. We will also provide information on local events and actions that people can get involved in. All of this information is to provide people with the capacity of what Noam Chomsky refers to as, intellectual self-defense.

Information  

Israel plans colony on UNESCO heritage site as land theft surges 

Western Media Outlets Are Complicit in Israel’s Genocide—and Must Be Held Accountable 

Blinken Condemned for ‘Empty Words’ on Genocide as US Backs Israel’s Obliteration of Gaza 

Palestinian Healthcare Workers Chained, Starved, Sexually Abused: New HRW Report on Israeli Prisons 

US Has Sent Israel Over 600 Weapons Shipments Since October 

Analysis & History  

GAZA CEASEFIRE DEAL STALEMATED, WITH ANTONY LOWENSTEIN 

“Colonial Process”: How U.S.-Led Ceasefire Talks Are Latest Erasure of Roots of Arab-Israeli Conflict 

Local Events and Actions

Power to Palestine: Weekly Rally in Grand Rapids

Wednesday, September 4th, 6pm – 7pm, Corner of Pearl St and Monroe in downtown GR.

https://www.facebook.com/events/992936209242057?ref=newsfeed 

Image used is from B’tselem – Israeli Human Rights group.