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.
Beyond Compromise
Across Michigan people concerned with protecting forests, streams, and rivers from military encroachment breathed a little easier. The Department of Natural Resources rejected the effort by Military and Veterans Affairs to take an additional 162,000 acres for military training purposes. This proposed expansion of Camp Grayling, already the largest national guard training center in the country, would have more than doubled the amount of public land dedicated to military use.
A Reckoning
This week I had the opportunity to talk with members of Peace Action Michigan. This seems to me an urgent moment for all of us to think more deeply about how to move toward a deeper practice of peace. Here is some of what we talked about.
The dangers of this moment are evident. Not only are conflicts spreading across the world, but the possibility of nuclear war is closer than at any time since the bombs were dropped on Japan. The Doomsday Clock is now 90 seconds from midnight.
Southern Risings
Deep changes are stirring in the South. A spirit for justice is rising with renewed energy. The struggles of the Tennessee Three, ending in the victorious reinstatement of both Justin Jones and Justin Pearson into the state legislature signaled a new energy for change, while echoing the best of the liberation struggles of the past.
Message from Nashville
This week began in the shadow of yet another mass killing. The deaths of three children and three adults on March 27 in a small Christian school in Nashville had sparked renewed demands for gun control, amidst the grief of funerals and families dealing with pain and loss. It ended with the expulsion of two young African American legislators who supported public demonstrations calling for change.
Benefitting the Community
The Detroit City Council once again approved major tax incentives to stimulate downtown development. In a vote of 8-1, Council approved $800 million in incentives for the Ilitch family to develop the area near Little Caesars Arena. This is the same area the Council approved $400 million in tax incentives for a decade ago. Then, the Ilitch group promised a vibrant neighborhood, jobs, stores, and restaurants. Instead we got parking lots and the violent displacement of people who had been living in older apartment buildings.
Love and Power
This year, the anniversary of Dr. King’s Beyond Vietnam: Breaking the Silence speech comes in the shadow of the 20th anniversary of the US Invasion of Iraq and the third anniversary of the killing of Beonna Taylor by Lexington police. We are also entering the second year of war in Ukraine.
These moments of connection give us an opportunity to ask some difficult questions about where we are and where we need to go.
Stealing Symbols
I have been rereading one of my favorite political writers, Kenneth Burke, thanks to Mike Duggan’s recent State of the City address. Burke was a complicated, wide-ranging thinker who greatly advanced our understanding of the relationships between language and politics. Predicting the rise of fascism in Europe in the early 1930s, he continued to explore the meaning and manipulation of symbols into the late 20th Century. One of his key concepts is “the stealing back and forth of symbols.” It was this idea that caused me to revisit my much-used copy of Attitudes Toward History, written in 1937.
Caring Cities
This week Mayor Mike Duggan gave his 10th State of the City address. He staged it in the Michigan Central Station. Amidst the gleaming columns and grand architecture, the mayor focused on how far we have come since being forced into bankruptcy in 2013. He noted that in those dark days, the train station was a symbol of despair, and now it portends possibilities of growth to rival Silicon Valley. Duggan emphasized the demolition of abandoned houses and the restoration of others. He talked about new, affordable housing, lowering unemployment, job training, new businesses, and crime prevention.
Long Time Coming
The vote by the Michigan State Senate to extend civil rights protections to people who identify as gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans and queer is a cause for celebration.
This decision comes amidst a growing national trend to assault and demonize the LGBTQ+ community. Tied to the attacks on Critical Race Theory, attacks on “queer theory” are integral to efforts to distort and destroy fact based, critical analysis of our country. Fifteen states have laws prohibiting certain words and concepts from being uttered, including mentioning racism as “systemic, “and outlawing the words gay and queer. State legislators are targeting trans parents and students, in some cases making it illegal to offer care and support to them.
Peacemaking
The invasion of Ukraine by Russia passed its one year mark this week. Looking ahead, most analysts see only continued carnage and devastation. The U.S. and Europe are pledging more arms, including advanced tanks. President Volodymyr Zelensky continues to press for fighter planes and long-range missiles. He is committed to victory over Russia. Russia continues to prepare for greater military engagement, despite heavy losses on the battlefield.
Water Timing
I recently got a photo from a friend that I cannot get out of my mind. It is a picture of a shower timer given out to people when they sign up for the city’s Lifeline Plan. The plan is based on a fixed monthly rate and limits water usage. When you sign up, you are warned that usage is limited. The shower timer is your reminder.
Truths and Lies
Detroit is facing critical choices about basic institutions that shape our lives. Development pressures pushing long term residents out of homes, are accelerating as money flows into the city. Corporate interests are pressuring for everything from capturing library funds to large scale developments of highly toxic concrete production plants.
Lessons from Memphis
This week the city of Memphis laid Tyre Nichols to rest. But the questions raised by his brutal murder remain. Mr. Nichols should have had a long life. He should have been able to grow old, surrounded by the love of family and friends.
For Tyre Nichols
Once again, we have witnessed the brutal murder of a young, Black man at the hands of police – Tyre Nichols’ death has provoked outrage and horror. The hour-long video capturing the viciousness of the attack he endured, has shaken people who have become used to such scenes of violence at the hands of police.
Challenging Violence
This week a young person, Manuel Teran, who called themselves Tortuguita, was killed by police in an urban forest in Atlanta, Georgia. Multiple police groups attacked a peaceful protest encampment, in a day-long effort to dislodge forest protectors. The encampment is an effort to protect the forest from plans to turn it into a police training center. At least seven other protestors were arrested and charged that day with domestic terrorism. Protestors were living in tents and tree houses. Tortuguita was asleep when the assaults began.
Avalon Lesson
Detroit is a city where you get used to loss. When I came here in 1973 there were nearly 2 million people in the city. Now we have less than 650,000. We have been losing people for seven decades, tumbling from the 5th largest city in the country to number 27.
New Choices
Many of us are embracing this new year in a spirit of deep reflection. We realize that these are dangerous and uncertain times. We are facing stark choices about the kind of futures we will have.
Doing Better
Earlier this month my next-door neighbor’s house was robbed. I live in a typical working-class neighborhood on the west side of Detroit. My neighbor is an elderly African American man who lives alone in his family home. Until a few years ago, his mother lived with him. His children and grandchildren live up the street. He has lived in our neighborhood for all his 70 plus years and is well known. He returned home in the early evening and found every light in the house on, drawers open, cherished possessions on the floor. His handgun was stolen. He said, “They really didn’t take much of anything, but I just feel so violated.”
Public Accountability
This week, The Boggs Center joined a coalition of local groups in suing the city of Detroit over the improper approval of multimillion dollar contracts with ShotSpotter. The lawsuit argues that the city violated a hard won ordinance requiring citizen input and transparent, evidence based processes before the introduction of new surveillance technologies.
No Peace, No Justice
The day before Thanksgiving, Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announced no charges would be brought against the five Detroit police officers who killed Porter Burks. In response to a request for help from Mr. Burks’ older brother, police shot 38 rounds, hitting Mr. Burks 19 times. He died on the street.