
Living for Change is a weekly newsletter that provides the perspective and activities of the Boggs Center and related organizations. Thinking for Ourselves is a weekly column exploring issues in Detroit and around the Country. The column was originally published in the Michigan Citizen.

Mourning Times
Daily life moves quickly. But some moments deserve reflection. This past week we had such a moment, with the funerals of Aretha Franklin and John McCain.
Detroit engaged in a week-long celebration. Neither the 6-hour concert nor the 8-hour funeral could fully encompass the generous, soaring gift of the life of Aretha Franklin.

Abundance of Caution
Early Wednesday I drove to my usual downtown meeting, about 20 minutes from my home. Most of the drive is on freeways. On the few miles of surface streets, I passed four Water Department crews working on broken lines. Two included fire hydrants spewing water into intersections.

Democracy is Not Static
Trump’s defense is crumbling. Criminal charges of corruption are moving closer and closer to the White House. The President is now referred to as a Mafia Boss, described as waging war on the rule of law. As guilty verdicts and plea bargains proliferate, more and more people are focusing attention on Republicans in Congress, asking how it is possible for them to remain silent in the face of mounting evidence of corruption, immorality, and greed. Most Republicans cannot find their way to denouncing Trump’s behaviors.

Future Water Plans
Children working with the Detroit Independent Freedom Schools (DIFS) have been harvesting eggplant, tomatoes, greens, herbs, and other vegetables at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History. This is the second summer of the garden celebrating the agricultural expertise of African Americans and fostering skills needed for the burgeoning urban agricultural movement that shapes much of Detroit. Next summer the garden will be part of a visionary landscape, designed to emphasize water as a human right and a public trust.

The Road from Watts
The week of August 11 to 14 reverberates still from the uprising in Watts. Part of a long history of resistance and rebellion, this uprising, sparked by police brutality, ushered in a period of intense urban rebellions as the long, hot summers from 1965 in Watts to Omaha in 1969 engulfed the country.

Shaping Our City
Detroit has always been shaped by the impulses of white men. It was established in 1701 in the midst of war by white men pursuing land and access to the wealth of the natural world. Over the centuries, war and violence, the pursuit of personal wealth, and the destruction of the commons have been part of our legacy. But so, too, are the moments of resistance to these efforts. Chief Pontiac forged one of the largest armies contesting imperial expansion on the globe. Henry Ford’s mechanized industrial production, made possible by publicly financed streets, water, and sewers, was contained by the humanizing thrust of the labor movement, emphasizing the dignity of people who work. Many of our streets bear the names of those who wantonly killed, enslaved, stole, and sold other human beings. Yet we also honor the Abolitionist, the outlaws, and the troublemakers and peace seekers.

Chartering Values
Democracy in Detroit is in trouble. As we approach this primary season vote, the efforts of the corporate power to distort and destroy democratic impulses are intensifying.
The latest instance is the effort to get voters to authorize a revision of the City Charter. Proposal R should be voted down.

A Country Not Yet Born: Remembering Vincent
Vincent Harding has been on my heart these last few days. July 25 marks the passing of 87 years since he was born. Many know him as a theologian, an historian, a friend and collaborator of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. He was the primary author of the 1967 speech delivered at Riverside Church where Dr. King denounced the war in Vietnam, identified the U.S. as the greatest “purveyor of violence” on the globe called for a “radical revolution in values against racism, materialism and militarism.” Vincent thought it was that speech that marked King for destruction by the white power structure. Its vision was too expansive, too challenging, too inclusive, to be allowed to stand.

Risky Waters
Water seeks connections. Over this last week we were reminded of the essential role of safe, clean, affordable water for human life. While Donald Trump drew attention for his destruction and destabilization of international relationships, his new hometown was suffering from a water crisis. Tens of thousands of people in Washington D.C. were warned not to drink their water. For over a week, a temporary drop in water pressure due to an infrastructure failure resulted in a boil water advisory to much of the city. When water pressure drops, the possibility of toxins entering the water system soars.

Choices Now
Over the last few weeks the word fascism has entered the public conscience. In part this is thanks to Attorney General Jeff Sessions. In the midst of the horrific caging of immigrant children, public officials and ordinary people found themselves comparing the detention centers to Nazi Germany’s concentration camps. Sessions took to Fox News to defend the policy saying the comparison was “a real exaggeration.” His reasoning for this claim was chilling. He argued that Nazis “were keeping Jews from leaving the country” and he is trying to keep people from coming in. Then he said, “Fundamentally, we’re enforcing the law.”

Do It For Love
People rallied across the country to fiercely denounce the horrific immigration policies of Donald Trump and his administration. New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston, and Detroit saw large rallies. Smaller towns gathered as well. Here in Maine, Portland saw so many people come to the steps of the City Hall that streets had to be closed down to traffic. I went with friends to the tourist town of Bar Harbor where about 250 gathered on the Village Green.

The Cries of Children
Many of us hold a vision of a world without borders. We do this in the face of a reality where everything we call sacred is defiled. Only money and military might move freely. People and ideas are controlled and confined. Our lives are distorted and disrupted by the effects of corporate money. People and places we love are desecrated and destroyed by bombs and guns.

Walking Toward the Future
Walking down Cass Avenue this weekend felt like a slip in time. It felt like I had found a way into a joyful future. The streets from Wayne State, the Detroit Institute of Art, to the Cass Café and Avalon Bakery were filled with Allied Media Conference goers. Together, they managed to create a vision of what our world could look, feel, and taste like if we put justice and care in the center of our lives.

Majority-Black Detroit Matters
There is a new sign about town sparking a lot of controversy. In bold white letters on a black background, it proclaims “Majority-Black Detroit Matters.” For some this simple statement captures the growing concern that we are not only becoming two Detroits, but increasingly a Detroit dominated by and for white elites.

Mackinac Gathering
The business and political elite gathered on Mackinac Island last week to determine ways that will advance their interests and solidify their political control. As reported, “Nearly 1,700 business leaders, politicians, and philanthropists headed to Mackinac Island to rub elbows, and discuss issues in the state ranging from education to transportation.

Who Benefits
Last week Dan Gilbert received the largest tax subsidy in Michigan history to support his private developments. The board of the Michigan Strategic Fund in Lansing approved $618 million for four linked projects that are estimated to cost $2.2 billion. For perspective consider that the Little Caesars Arena cost $863 million, of which $329.1 million was in subsidies. Or consider that the city gave Belle Isle to the State because it could not afford the $6 million in annual upkeep. Or the $7.8 million the City Council approved for Homrich Wrecking to shut off the water.

Urgent Transitions
This week Eastern Michigan Environmental Action Council (EMEAC) hosted a conference of activists concerned about creating a future based on regenerative principles of a just economy. People from around the country and several First Nations gathered to share ideas and practices. This was the gathering that Siwatu-Salama Ra worked tirelessly to bring to Detroit. It was the gathering she could not see from her prison cell. She is serving two years in prison for pointing an empty gun at a person who threatened to run over her mother and child. Those of us who came together to think about a different future were reminded how urgently we need to change our ways of living, and how much pain and destruction we have come to accept as normal in our daily lives.

Mother’s Day with Nestlé
Shortly after Mother’s Day, three Nestle semi-trucks will roll into Flint with free bottled water. Between Mother’s Day and Labor Day Nestle will donate 100,000 bottles a week to three service centers where people can pick up the bottled water. The Mayor of Flint has graciously thanked the company for its “willingness to help the people of Flint.”

Truth Telling
This week the Rev, Edward Pinkney was vindicated by the Michigan Supreme Court. In 2014, the Benton Harbor activist was accused of election forgery and making false statements in a petition drive to recall Mayor James Hightower. Pinkney was accused of changing the dates on some signatures and allowing 6 people to sign the petition twice. He was found not guilty of making false statements, but he was convicted of changing dates and was sentenced to 30 to 120 months in prison.

Warning Signs
Early this week people in and around Wayne State University were evacuated because of a gas leak. Across the campus and in nearby residents, the smell of gas was overpowering. The leak was caused by a construction accident. By Friday we were told all is well, classes reopened and people returned to homes. No one was injured. We are back to normal.