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.

Violent Hands
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Violent Hands

As people in Minneapolis struggled with questions of jury selection, prejudiced judgments, and appropriate places for a trial for the killer of George Floyd, another young white man picked up a gun. He ultimately killed 8 people, six of them Asian-American women. His actions were explained by the local sheriff as the result of a bad day. 

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Hard Questions
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Hard Questions

This week the people of Detroit achieved an important victory. U.S. District Judge Laurie Michelson threw out an outlandish, dangerous, and costly effort by the Chief of Police, Mayor Mike Duggan and the majority of the City Council to squash dissent. This lawsuit was an obvious effort to intimidate those who dared to stand up against police brutality. It was a petty “pay back,” aimed at punishing Detroit Will Breathe and activists who successfully challenged Detroit Police violence in court.

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First Step
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

First Step

Just a few days before the anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge where John Lewis and hundreds of others were beaten by Alabama State troopers as they demanded voting rights, Mayor Mike Duggan announced his budget proposals to the Detroit City Council. Nearly sixty years have passed since that vivid explosion of police violence, but it seems Mayor Duggan has learned nothing from it.

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Budget Choices
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Budget Choices

On Saturday the Detroit Charter Commission voted to advance its newly crafted document to state officials for review. The Commission hopes that, after review, the Charter will be adopted by a vote of the people in August. The document reflects three years of work by the elected commission. They held countless public meetings, offered opportunities for citizen engagement, heard expert testimony, and have worked with city officials and lawyers to meet their responsibilities. 

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Finding Love
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Finding Love

This week the United States will have lost 500,000 people to the Coronavirus. This is more than all the deaths we experienced in World War I, World War II, and Vietnam, combined. We have endured these losses in 1 year, touching people everywhere. This week we are also witnessing the dimensions of suffering in Texas, and surrounding states. The loss of electricity, combined with extreme cold, has revealed the fragility of our basic infrastructure yet again. People are without heat, food, and water. Hospitals are collapsing. Needed emergency supplies cannot be delivered.

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Dangerous Forces
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Dangerous Forces

The impeachment trial is over. The outcome was clear before the first words were spoken. In spite of overwhelming evidence of Trump’s responsibility for the Capitol attack, only 7 Republican senators had the courage to acknowledge his guilt. After voting against impeachment, Senator Mitch McConnell felt compelled to try and salvage his position by saying “There’s no question — none — that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of the day.”

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From Greensboro to Detroit
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

From Greensboro to Detroit

February 1 is the anniversary of the Greensboro sit-ins. In 1960 four young African American students at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, inspired by the actions of Dr. Martin Luther King, decided to do something about segregation. They decided to go to the white only lunch counter at the local Woolworth and order coffee. This simple act sparked some of the most courageous and imaginative organizing in defense of human rights in this country.

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Coming Storms
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Coming Storms

Since the attack on the Capitol, many people are acknowledging that mob violence is a part of who we are as a people. Recognition of the violence imbedded in American culture is crucial to changing it. It is also essential in understanding that we are facing accelerating conflicts as the right-wing terrorists are morphing from mobs to military forces.

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Creative Turmoil
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Creative Turmoil

This year Martin Luther King’s birthday falls the day before the inauguration of Joseph Biden and Kamala Harris. The Capital has been turned into a “green zone.” More than 25,000 National Guard troops are securing the grounds. This is 5 times the number of US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is nearly triple the number called out after the assassination of King in 1968. The National Mall, that once held King’s tent city of the Poor Peoples Campaign, is closed. Security forces are on high alert as right-wing extremists plot violent attacks, including efforts to storm state capitals and blocking Biden’s entry to the White House.

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Begin Again
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Begin Again

The mob that stormed the Capitol this week was as old as America. It climbed the steps carrying the shadows of the lynch mobs that have terrorized people for centuries. It echoed the mobs that ran through towns, attacking black people, killing, and destroying any trace of black lives.

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Out of Darkness
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Out of Darkness

As most of us shift our attention to family, friends and the deep rituals marking the turning of time from darkness toward light, we face an uncertain future. The longing to return to “normal” is evident everywhere. Yet most of us realize that the past is gone. We know “normal” is what created these crises. All the signs are that perilous times are accelerating.

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Limited Federalism
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Limited Federalism

The pandemic has enabled people to see the extraordinary inequalities and dysfunctions built into what we call the “normal” way of doing things. We are recognizing that the federal system of government is filled with limitations. It is a system that is increasingly moving toward authoritarian methods of governing, while benefiting a smaller minority of corporations. Since 1980, this shift has been carried out by policies loosely termed “austerity.” In the name of fiscal responsibility, the Federal government has been systematically withdrawing support for the most basic services and responsibilities of collective care. It has been allowing states to determine their own responses to shared problems.

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Bankruptcy Attempts
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Bankruptcy Attempts

As we move through these next few months of uncertainty, some things are clear. At least  12 million working people are likely to face the New Year without unemployment benefits. Another 30 to 40 million people are facing the possibilities of eviction. As many as 54 million people are facing food insecurity. These crises are most acutely felt in our cities, among Black, Indigenous, people of color, and children. They represent human trauma on a scale we have not experienced since the Great Depression. Long standing structural injustices have been accentuated by this global pandemic and the ineffectual responses of the current administration.

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Police Violence
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Police Violence

The Detroit Coalition for Police Transparency and Accountability  (CPTA) held a public hearing on police brutality November 21, 2020. For more than 3 hours people recounted the history of violence embedded in the Detroit Police Department. In story after story, spanning more than 50 years, we heard details of unprovoked, life-shattering encounters with physical and psychological assaults suffered at the hands of police.

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Breaking Myths
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Breaking Myths

President Trump continues to stoke hatred and violence. He refuses to acknowledge reality and concede the election.  He continues to claim widespread voter fraud. On Saturday he drove through a rally of supporters who shouted, “We Love Trump” and “Stop the Steal.” Later those supporters attacked Black Lives Matters demonstrators and challenged counter protestors. Fistfights and bottle throwing broke out and several people carried guns.

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After the Election
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

After the Election

I was preparing for a meeting with the National Council of Elders on Saturday morning when the banner from CNN flashed across my screen. Biden Elected President. Minutes later as I watched commentary about Pennsylvania putting Biden over the top in the Electoral College count, I surprised myself by crying. I have no illusions about electoral politics, and none about Joe Biden, but the broad and deep repudiation of Donald Trump brought forth a flood of relief, allowing a grief I didn’t even realize I was holding, to pass.

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The Days Ahead
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

The Days Ahead

We are writing this a few days before Election Day, 2020, November 3. Almost everyone expects an increase in right-wing violence. No one thinks it will be confined only to election day. In fact, since the election of Trump, we have seen an acceleration not only of hateful speech, but deadly actions. We have also seen countless examples of efforts to dominate the public square. Right-wing supporters routinely attack waiters who request masks and teachers who advance progressive ideas. They take up arms inside legislative halls.

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The Long Haul
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

The Long Haul

Tensions are building as we move through these final days toward the election. Almost everyone I know has been saying, “I can’t wait until this is over.” Of course, most of us know that no matter who wins the election, the tensions we feel and the challenges we face are not going to go away. They will intensify.

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Best of Reforms
Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell Thinking for Ourselves Shea Howell

Best of Reforms

A healthy skepticism of policing has long been part of the identity of Detroit. The emergence of Black political power was directly related to challenging police abuse. It is widely understood that the election of Coleman Young in 1973 was motivated by his courage and clarity in challenging police abuse, especially around STRESS. A month after taking office, Mayor Young abolished the STRESS unit, which was responsible for aggressive tactics and killings of citizens, especially young, Black men. Young also initiated a series of reforms intended to both fight street crime and to eliminate police corruption.

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