Category Archives: News

New Entertainment Magazine in Grand Rapids

A new glossy entertainment magazine, IndulgeGR, with the tagline “Hip – Informative – Entertaining,” has been released in Grand Rapids. Apparently, the magazine has an extensive budget, as it is printed on glossy paper and has a significant number of distribution boxes all over town. However plentiful the resources are behind the magazine, it lacks in substance. Most of the magazine is filled with a discussion of the “hippest” bars and clubs in downtown, generally reading like a college newspaper (poor writing and grammar errors included) extolling the joys of drinking and barhopping interspersed with the occasional “political” article that reads like a poorly informed rant from someone in an introductory political science course. Most disturbingly, the magazine, both in its own content and the advertisements it runs, extensively objectifies women–reinforcing the sexism of the both the club scene and the larger society while conveying the sense that such attitudes should be considered both normal and acceptable.

IndulgeGR is clearly devoted to promoting a specific lifestyle of consumerism and the magazine’s advertising kit reveals that it exists primarily as a way of reaching a coveted marketing group. According to its literature, IndulgeGR’s readers are “trend setters, educated, and have high disposable income” and are described as “hip, trendy, mobile, club-wise and always looking for the new HOT thing”, and most importantly, are “very local to those [advertisers] who directly target them.” While it does claim to feature “bipartisan commentary” and “edgy, urban and provocative commentary,” the latter style has long been used as a way of advertising to “hip” consumers.

Moreover, there is no discussion of gentrification in the magazine. Of course, no magazine actively trying to portray Grand Rapids as a “hip” city would discuss gentrification as it relates to recent development projects. However, gentrification is a critical component of the effort to make Grand Rapids into a “hip” or “cool city”–new developments consisting of upscale condominiums and clubs in downtown alter the character of the community, displace residents, and bring increased pressure from the police to “clean up” the area and remove people deemed to be undesirable.

It is not surprising to see all the money being used to produce IndulgeGR, but it is particularly disturbing when there is no alternative paper in Grand Rapids. There are already a number of papers focusing on entertainment–Music Revue, On the Town, and Recoil–and a constant flow of advertisements promoting the fantasy world of consumerism that makes the larger part of IndulgeGR’s content.

Tax Day

Tomorrow is April 15, or simply “tax day” as it is known to millions of Americans. While the vast majority of American citizens feel that the tax system is incredibly screwed up, the majority continues to file returns and pay their taxes. Increasingly, the tax system has been “reformed” to favor the super rich at the expense of everyone else. This trend has accelerated under the Bush administration, which has used small $300 tax rebates to gain public support for huge tax breaks for the very wealthy. Also, the IRS has continued to have it’s enforcement ability cut, allowing more wealthy people to avoid paying taxes. At the same time that the IRS was letting the wealthy get away with tax avoidance, Congress did finance a crackdown on the poor. The working poor, most of whom make less than $16,000, are eight times more likely to be audited than millionaire investors in partnerships. And of course, American corporations are paying an increasingly smaller percentage of the tax burden. This trend is unlikely to change, as both George Bush and John Kerry are for lower corporate taxes. Even more disconcerting than the question of who is paying taxes is the question of what the taxes are being spent on. A staggering amount of taxpayer’s money is being spent to finance US imperialism, militarism and war. In response to this, various organizations and people have adopted a strategy of tax resistance as a political statement.

Here locally on the 15th, an action is planned for the downtown post office

Grand Rapids Petition Drive to Target Sewage Proposal

At Noon on Thursday, April 15 at the downtown Grand Rapids post office site, a 112-page report will be released by the Natural Resources Defense Council, Clean Water Action and West Michigan Environmental Action Council detailing how the Bush administration is rewriting environmental rules to benefit industry in ways that sometimes hurt taxpayers. On a day when average Americans are filing their federal income taxes, the news event will focus on how Bush administration’s policies are benefiting industry.

The report will also coincide with an announcement Thursday by Clean Water Action of a petition drive to get City Commission backing of a resolution opposing the Bush administration’s proposed so-called sewage “blending” policy that weakens sewage treatment standards. This rule rewriting by the Bush administration comes at the expense of Grand Rapids, which has already invested over $200 million to upgrade sewage infrastructure.

Who: Clean Water Action, Natural Resources Defense Council and West Michigan Environmental Action Council

What: Release of “Rewriting the Rules: The Bush Administration’s Assault on the Environment” and petition drive announcement

Where: West side of Main Post Office Downtown Grand Rapids

When: Noon

Anti-Affirmative Action Petition Loses State Approval

The Michigan Board of Canvassers has rescinded its approval of the “Michigan Civil Rights Initiative,” a petition designed to allow citizens to vote on whether or not affirmative action policies should be allowed in Michigan. The petition language has drawn significant criticism for its vagueness and the Ingham County Circuit Court recently ruled that the petition language does not acknowledge that the proposal would “alter or abrogate” portions of the state Constitution dealing with civil rights. According to recent media reports, about 40 percent of voters incorrectly thought the Civil Rights Initiative would strengthen affirmative action rather than eliminate it.

The petition drive and campaign is being organized by Ward Connerly, a rightwing activist who helped pass California’s Proposition 209 that banned affirmative action programs in hiring, contracting, and public school admissions. He has pledged to bring similar initiatives to the ballot in a number of states.

Previous Media Mouse Coverage: March 31, 2004

Activists Get Ready for a Summer of Resistance

In June, the G-8 summit meeting will be held in Sea Island, Georgia from the 8th to the 10th. Anti-authoritarians are calling for decentralized actions against capitalism throughout the country similar to those that took place in conjunction with a G-8 meeting on June 18th 1999. The June 18th protests are widely recognized as the start of the anti-globalization movement among the white left in North America and it is hoped that the 2004 actions will reinvigorate a largely dormant movement. The call for decentralized actions is a result of the increasing ineffectiveness of mass protests in which local and federal law enforcement successfully criminalize protest while local citizens stay off the streets until the crazy anarchists are out of town. Moreover, by staging local actions, activists can draw connections between the global capitalist order embodied by the G-8 and local examples of neoliberal style privatization. For example, San Francisco’s actions will be coinciding with the BioDev 2004 (an annual biotechnology conference) and will be focusing on corporate control of life and specifically genetic engineering of agriculture.

In Boston from July 26th to the 29th, the Democratic National Convention will be met by protests. In addition to the protests, the Boston Social Forum will be held from the 23rd to the 25th and will offer a chance for activists from around the country to get together and strategize.

After the DNC protests, a group of activists are organizing a 225 mile “mass mobile convergence” between Boston and New York City. The march, based on the Root Cause march that preceded the convergence against the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) in Miami, will build towards the protests against the Republican National Convention in New York City from August 29 to September 4th. Pre-convention talk from government officials have indicated that security outside of the RNC will be incredibly tight and that “talk of terrorism” may result in the “freedom of assembly” being largely suspended. Nevertheless, media reports have indicated that police and city government officials are expecting nearly a million people to protest outside of the convention.

Both convention protests are part of a nation-wide campaign designed to promote political involvement beyond just voting, encouraging people to instead get involved in politics on a daily basis. The “Don’t Just Vote” campaign was organized to demonstrate that daily organizing and direct action are more effective in achieving social change than voting for one of two largely interchangeable politicians every four years. The campaign, like the decentralized G-8 actions, is designed to promote local organizing over mass convergences in distant cities based on the premise that people are more likely to get involved with local issues than with abstract international issues that may not have a direct bearing on their lives. In addition to the “Don’t Just Vote” campaign, a more cynical electoral campaign called “Vote No One in 2004″ is also being organized.

Sanitizing a National Hero

So, we just celebrated another holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. The great civil rights leader, the Dreamer. “The Burrhead.” “The most dangerous Negro in America.” Well, at least that is what former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover thought of King. So, how come this is not part of the official reflections each 3rd Monday of January, when we celebrate the memory of Dr. King? Why is it that we always hear another reading of his “I Have a Dream” speech, or watch news stories about a march for peace (escorted by the police), or a display of multiculturalism with children singing? This has been the version of King for most of us since 1983, when the US government made King’s birthday a national holiday.

Black insurgent scholar Michael Eric Dyson says that the most damaging effect of legislating a federal holiday in honor of King is that “it has sanitized his message.” Indeed, not only his message, but the context and contours of an entire movement. We now have Dr. King’s image plastered everywhere in late January. Businesses proudly display ads to honor the civil rights activist and governments make declarations annually about the Dreamer. Yet, so rare is it to find any critique of this sanitizing of King in the news media, that one would think that there is either complete historical amnesia or collusion with sectors of power to silence his message. So what did King do besides deliver the I Have a Dream speech and advocate for little Black children and little White children to get along?

King was actually a latecomer to the civil rights movement. When the Montgomery Bus Boycott began, King was recruited to be the main spokesperson, even though he had not made civil rights the subject of any previous sermons. King was part of the creation of the South Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1957, even though the SCLC never embraced a revolutionary agenda. As many historians are quick to point out it was the work of groups like CORE, SNCC, and other grassroots groups that pushed a stronger agenda. Dr. King was the more “reasonable” voice by the early 1960s, at least to the establishment. What became known as the Black Power movements forced the government to realize, that if it didn’t deal with King and make the reforms that he was asking, it would have to deal with a more aggressive, potentially violent movement.

Eventually, King began to take positions that even alienated other Black leaders. In 1962, King organized a youth conference that led to a march where all 1,000 youth were arrested. King was heavily criticized by other Black leaders for putting Black children in danger. Black leaders were not the only ones concerned with King’s activities. The FBI began a file on King that would last until his assassination. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover even dubbed King “the most notorious liar in the country,” and “the most dangerous Negro in America.” FBI documents show that beginning in 1963, both the SCLC office in Atlanta and King’s home was bugged. However, it wasn’t until King challenged the economic practices and the US war in Vietnam, that King fell out of favor with many liberals and became an even greater threat to the establishment.

Once the Voting Rights Act was passed, King began focusing more on activities and organizing in the north. Here he discovered that many of the tactics that worked against southern White supremacists didn’t effect urban centers in the north where institutional racism flourished. In 1966, while organizing in Chicago, King said “We’ll use something that avoids violence, but becomes militant and extreme enough to disrupt the flow of the city. I know it will be rough on them when they have to get 200 people off the Dan Ryan expressway, but the only thing I can tell them, which do you prefer, this or a riot.” King began to question his non-violent tactics in the north and even felt his message was difficult for urban Black to hear, when they were being drafted to fight in a war thousands of miles a way, while unable to achieve justice at home.

“As I have walked among the desperate, rejected and angry young men I have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve their problems. I have tried to offer them my deepest compassion while maintaining my conviction that social change comes most meaningfully through nonviolent action. But they asked – and rightly so – what about Vietnam? They asked if our own nation wasn’t using massive doses of violence to solve its problems, to bring about changes it wanted. Their questions hit home, and I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today – my own government.”

In 1967-68 King provided some of the strongest denunciations of the US war in Vietnam. He said “We are criminals in that war, and we have committed more war crimes than any other nations, and I will continue to say it.” It was statements like these that got King in trouble, enough so that the NAACP adopted a resolution that said to “attempt to merge the civil rights movement with the peace movement is, in our judgment, a serious tactical mistake that will serve the cause neither of civil rights nor peace.” However, it was the Poor People’s Campaign that not only alienated King from the “acceptable” civil rights groups, it probably got him assassinated.

The Poor People’s Campaign was an attempt to not only draw attention to the economic injustices of the day, but it was designed to advocate for a major economic restructuring of the country. Here is another quote from King to illustrate what the campaign was all about and why he was such a threat to power:

“We are now making demands that will cost the nation something. You can’t talk about solving the economic problem of the Negro without talking about billions of dollars. You can’t talk about ending slums without first saying profit must be taken out of slums. You’re really tampering and getting on dangerous ground because you are messing with folk then. You are messing with the captains of industry….Now this means that we are treading in difficult waters, because it really means that we are saying that something is wrong…with capitalism…here must be a better distribution of wealth and maybe America must move toward a Democratic Socialism.”

On April 4, 1968 King was assassinated in Memphis while supporting garbage workers who were on strike. Many sources, most recently William Pepper’s book An Act of State, provide ample evidence to show that James Earl Ray did not kill King. Pepper’s research suggests that the local police in Memphis, the FBI and even the US military had a role in the assassination of MLK. A lone racist didn’t kill King, rather a White Supremacist system silenced him.

So, what does all of this mean for us today? If we are serious about honoring the message of King, of keeping the dream alive, then we better be about the business of organizing against the so-called War on Terrorism. We need to denounce and organize against the corporate takeover of our economy, the racist practices of our “justice system,” and the theft of our civil rights by the USA Patriot Act. Anything less would be a disservice to the memory of MLK.

Jeff Smith, a local organizer, can be reached at [email protected]. He works at the GR Institute for Information Democracy.

2004 Election to be a Repeat of 2000?

A new report examining voting systems in the United States has identified the potential for possible fraud and disenfranchisement on the level of the 2000 presidential election. Despite an effort by the government to investigate how elections are conducted and a push to upgrade voting technology, there is growing concern that most states will not have new systems in place by the 2004 presidential election. Moreover, federal legislation has demanded that states consider electronic voting options first, despite the well-documented failings of electronic voting machines and potential for abuse. Here in Michigan, despite a relatively successful use of internet voting technology in the Michigan Democratic Party caucus, there were charges of more “traditional” forms of disenfranchisement by way of last minute changes of location and the closing of polling places.

Along with concerns over voting, many Democrats now believe that in order for John Kerry to win, he must become a “centrist” candidate in order to avoid alienating potential voters. Trying to be more Republican than the Republicans has historically been a failure, but many pundits and party officials seem willing to try it again this year. The media has provided plenty of airtime to urge Kerry towards “the center,” yet has failed to address the lies and inaccuracies present in campaign commercials from both major parties. Of course, no comparison of the 2000 and 2004 elections would be complete with mentioning the almost deluge of articles that seek to place blame for the Democrats’ failure on Ralph Nader.

On a related election note, the Grand Rapids Institute for Information Democracy (GRIID) has begun monitoring the local media’s election coverage, as well as keeping track of political ads being run on area television stations.

Condoleezza Rice Testifies Before 9/11 Commission

Condoleezza Rice finally testified before the 9/11 Commission after weeks of stalling by the Bush administration who claimed that she could not testify due to issues of tradition and privilege that supposedly dictated that National Security Advisors do not appear before the legislative branch. The Bush administration’s position, and Rice’s own statement on 60 Minutes, “It is a longstanding principle that sitting national security advisers do not testify before the Congress,” ignored the fact that national security advisors under both Presidents Clinton and Carter testified publicly before congress.

Her testimony (transcript), considered by many to be a formal rebuttal of the Richard Clarke’s testimony a couple of weeks ago, has already drawn intense scrutiny and criticism. The Center for American Progress has put together a fact sheet titled “Claim vs. Fact: Rice’s Q & A Testimony Before the 9/11 Commission” that looks at what Rice said compared to what has been said by people who have previously testified, and in some cases, compared to what Rice herself has previously stated in public. Their study points out numerous contradictions and errors, and a number of possible lies. People have also raised significant questions about what Rice knew before the attacks on 9/11 and the administration’s policy of regime change in Iraq and how that complicated anti-terrorist measures. While it would be absurd to charge that the administration had specific knowledge of a terrorist attack on the World Trade Center using hijacked airplanes, there have been a number of recent reports stating that the administration had intelligence stating that planes would be used in terrorist attacks and there has been much debate as to whether or not Condoleezza Rice herself had received this information.

Hunger Strike Ends at GVSU; Taco Bell Campaign Continues

Students have ended a three-day hunger strike at Grand Valley State University (GVSU). The hunger strike was a direct consequence of the university’s failure to remove Taco Bell from campus. Students maintain that as long as Taco Bell remains on campus, GVSU continues to violate its own declared ethical standards.

Students have released a statement on the end of their hunger strike:

The success of this hunger strike, although seemingly subtle, cannot be underestimated. Since 7:00 A.M. Monday morning, when the hunger strike began, we have had the opportunity to witness and actively engage with an overwhelming amount of supporters, some of whom we were previously unaware existed. A wave of national hunger strikes began last week at Notre Dame and will from Grand Valley continue on to the University of Florida. We support University of Florida in their actions and will continue to initiate our own until universities and Taco Bell accept their responsibility and change their policies to reflect the values of human rights. We look forward to meeting with administration at our own university with the determination of meaningful dialogue and with confidence that Grand Valley State University will uphold the ethical standards that they themselves put into place — ultimately requiring the University to cut the contract with Taco Bell. Despite the end of our hunger strike, we will continue to act in support of exploited workers and in conjunction with a larger, national campaign.

The campaign will be continued in a series of meetings with administration officials over the next week and a resolution that goes before the GVSU Student Senate today that expresses support for the removal of Taco Bell.

People can help the campaign by sending an email to administrators urging the university to uphold its own ethical standards and remove Taco Bell. The group has setup an automated form to email the administrators, a process which only takes about 30 seconds but is immensely helpful in applying external pressure on the administration.

The hunger strike at GVSU was part of a nationwide string of hunger strikes in response to Taco Bell’s continued refusal to pay more for tomatoes it purchases from Florida. The hunger strikes began last week with a 7-day hunger strike at Notre Dame and will continue next week at Central Michigan University and the University of Florida.

First Hand Reports from Iraq

With anti-occupation sentiments on the rise, some Iraqi groups have stepped up acts of armed resistance. While it is difficult to judge the motivations behind many of these acts, even the mainstream media is beginning to realize that the resistance is not simply a group of “Saddam loyalists” and is instead a collection of different groups all opposed to the United States’ occupation.

Over the past few days the mainstream has reported extensively on the issue, but as usual, there has been little effort to actually understand what is motivating the resistance. However, it is worth noting that an AP wire story has a subheading that uses the words “revolutionary violence” to explain what is happening in Iraq—an unprecedented description of the insurgency, and one first used in the corporate media. As is generally the case, the independent press is doing a much better job covering the issue and some indepdendent journalists are actually on the ground in Iraq. Author Raul Mahajan recently wrote an article titled “Opening the Gates of Hell” on the situation in Iraq and is providing frequent updates on the situation as he observes it in his blog. Author Naomi Klein is also in Iraq and recently completed an article examining the Shia Uprising.

Civilian casualties have been reported and the most accurate numbers are being posted on www.iraqbodycount.org

Colombian Human Rights Speaker in Grand Rapids

Padre Joakin will be speaking on Wednesday, April 7, at 7:00 p.m. at Fountain Street Church, 100 Fountain, in downtown Grand Rapids.

Padre Joakin is co-founder and member of the Executive Board of the National Network for Peace Initiatives in Colombia REDEPAZ, Director of the Commission for LIfe, Justice and Peace at the Diocese of Socorro and San Gil, and Coordinator of the team working in sovereignty processes in the towns of Southern Bolivar. He is currently on tour with the Colombia Support Network.

Co-sponsors of this event are Fountain Street Church’s Adult Ed, member groups of the West Michigan Justice & Peace Coalition, GRIID and the People’s Alliance.

Download and distribute the flier

For more info on Colombia, check out the following resources, articles, and publications: