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Close Your Eyes, Imagine the Future

So my two weeks are up. Of course I didn’t have the time to post about everything I wanted to. But I did want to say thank you especially to Cara for working this stint out for me.

I’ll leave you with this video from Detroit artists, Invicible and Waajeed.

VIDEO: Detroit artists Invincible + Waajeed doing “Detroit Summer/Emergence.”

I can’t find the lyrics anywhere, but here is a background on the video, and here is another one and here is another one. Basic description of the video: the song starts off in a darker tone, saying summer is here and it’s so hot, it’s a wonder we made it through the cold winter. This is symbolic of several things, the hard times in detroit, in michigan, in the world in general. It’s saying things are bad, but often the thing we’re praying for (like jobs) don’t bring the relief we expect it to. Then the second part kicks off in a brighter mood, and Invincible raps: close your eyes–imagine the future. Another world is happening even if you can’t imagine it…

Another world is happening.
Can you see it?

movement: rust belt style

For other posts in the series:

A short history (1)
A short history (2)
The Ruin Porn Post
The Consequences of Ruin Porn
On the other side: Hope Porn
reImagining Work
Dealing with Poverty while being a Michigander
More Welfare Woes

So another consequence of believing that Detroit (i.e. the Rust Belt) is dying is that it then makes sense to assume that there is no vibrant groundbreaking culture that is alive and well and creating a new way of thinking, a new *theory* if you will, about life in a post-industrial world. If the Rust Belt is given any credit at all for having a culture, it almost entirely centers on Joe the Plumber–a six pack drinking dude that is (ahem) “hard working” so he doesn’t have to think too hard. When you envision him, you envision that bald white guy who has flag tattoos and gets a boner every time “Boot in Your Ass” comes on the radio.

But the thing is, this idea that Joe the Plumber encapsulates the entirety of the Rust Belt experience (because the rest of us are dead, dying, or will be dying shortly) is hard to keep a lid on. Somehow, the dying land and people of the Rust Belt always seeps into mainstream consciousness, without that consciousness ever being fully aware of it.

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More welfare woes…

My facebook friends pointed me to this latest bit of charming news out of Michigan.

From Think Progress:

If you’re poor and live in Michigan, you just can’t catch a break from the current Republican administration under Gov. Rick Snyder (R-MI). Beginning next month, many Michigan residents on food stamps will lose their benefits under a new law that tightens eligibility requirements.
Seizing on any excuse to kick people out of the program, Republicans have mandated that recipients’ assets be scrutinized, in addition to their income, which has traditionally been the only measure that was considered when deciding eligibility. People with cars worth over $15,000 could be disqualified.

Of course, this change in welfare eligibility was done with the stated intention of returning welfare to “its original purpose”–that is, acting as a safety net for when times get rough.

And yet, I can’t help but think back to my own experience on welfare. Both my partner and I were in school and working–but my partner had at one point been working in the factories. We had a car. In fact we had two of them. Because it’s Michigan and there is no such thing as a viable public transportation. Especially not in Southeast Michigan–where public transportation needs are dictated by corporate needs. Other places get bus lines that run every 20 minutes instead of every hour. We get a freeway that links one factory to another.

So we needed those cars. We were both working, both going to school, both of us got jobs once we graduated, so welfare was absolutely a temporary life line for us. But it was a desperately needed lifeline. One that we wouldn’t have survived without. And yet–we wouldn’t be eligible today because of those two cars and the both of us being students.

How many people in Michigan–how many laid off factory workers specifically, are sitting on welfare with their nice cars in their driveways (those nice cars, by the way, which were often only affordable because of worker discounts that unions fought for)? How many laid off factory workers own their own houses? How many laid off factory workers are trying to figure out a way to survive by going back to school and “retraining” themselves so they are employable in the new job market?

These new rules are not just about drawing on tired ideas of poor people “scamming” the system. These new rules are *using* those negative stereotypes about poor people scamming the system as a way to keep workers desperate and disempowered. You’ll take any job if your kids are hungry. And you’re surely not going to waste time retraining yourself for a high paying job if your kids are going to starve while you’re doing it.

In Michigan, there’s a new type of worker–the kind that works three (or more) shit jobs in order to just barely make it. Because finding one full time job that pays enough to live on is near impossible. Especially without any schooling. But how do laborers who are working 10-20 hours at three different jobs organize? How do they form unions?

It’s being done, even against the odds. But it’s not easy work. And with this legislation–it’s only going to get harder.

Holy roller

WHAS11 tells us that First Unitarian Church in Louisville, Kentucky, has its first-ever female minister. Yay! And stuff. But whatever. The real story is that minister Dawn Cooley is hiding a dark, fishnetted secret (although not the one I was expecting by the time the news story got around to the big reveal).

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I’m pretty sure they did that entire story solely so they could pull out that “gap between church and skate” line at the end.

Transcript after the jump; full text of Cooley’s sermon at her blog.

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The attachment to “Capitalism”

For other posts in the series:

A short history (1)
A short history (2)
The Ruin Porn Post
The Consequences of Ruin Porn
On the other side: Hope Porn
reImagining Work
Dealing with Poverty while being a Michigander

I often have a really hard time trying to understand the attachment to “Capitalism” that people on the left exhibit. When I say “Capitalism” capitalized and in quotes, I am speaking of both the economic system people in the US live with and promote–and the US government’s relationship with corporations.

Even in Feminist circles, when there is any interrogation at all of “Capitalism,” whether it’s to notice that Detroit is struggling because of unfettered “Capitalism” or to point to how “Capitalism” is making life hell for women laborers worldwide, the response is anything from a mocking, “Oh, look at the cute idealistic hippie!” to a nastier, “How on earth is living without capitalism even possible???” Or people immediately jump to the “Prove that communism works” bandwagon (yes, I’ve gotten into plenty of conversations that mimic this right here on Feministe!), as if communism is the only natural answer to “Capitalism.”

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Dealing with Poverty while being a Michigander

As most of you probably know, with the election of Rick Snyder in Michigan came the new Emergency Financial Manager laws. What those laws have entailed has been well documented by Rachel Maddow, among others. What’s been less covered is the fact that it was recently quietly signed into law that welfare recipients in Michigan can only receive 48 months of benefits for an entire lifetime.

As organizers note, this is going to have devastating consequences for Michiganders.

From Michigan Welfare Rights Blog:

  1. As of October 1, 2011: 11,000 people will be cut off from welfare benefits, and that will continue through until 40,000 people are eliminated from the system. 75% THOSE PEOPLE WILL BE CHILDREN WITH THE AVERAGE AGE OF 7 YEARS OLD.
  2. Unemployment insurance was cut from a 24 weeks to 20 by the state.
  3. The Low Income Energy Efficiency Fund which gave DHS, THAW and Salvation Army energy assistance funding every year — adding to $575million in help for the poor since 2002 — has been completely eliminated by ABATE and the Attorney General and the Michigan Court of Appeals; although federal money is still available, it is not enough to cover the gap.
  4. College students are no longer eligible for food aid, a much needed subsidy.
  5. There is now a lifelong cap of 48 months for those who receive assistance.
  6. Most of the assistance cuts will be to renters, disproportionately effecting women.
  7. These cuts have a secondary effect of increasing domestic violence.
  8. If utility service is cut from the home, children must be removed by law from the family and home. And, yes, the foster care system is hiring.
  9. NO ONE IS EXEMPT: Persons with mental disabilities are not exempt from the cuts, recent mothers are exempt for only 2 months after birth, victims of domestic violence exempt for 3 months and caretakers of persons with disabilities for 12 months.
  10. THE STATE OF MICHIGAN WILL SAVE $68 MILLION IN TAX DOLLARS FROM STARVING CHILDREN.

MEANWHILE, corporations will receive $1.8 billion in tax breaks to ensure major profits keep flowing in — while putting an end to Michigan’s practice of not taxing retirement income and seeking to increase taxes on Michigan’s working poor! (download pdf)

Yes, that’s right. To pay for corporate tax breaks, children, disabled people, and women will be forced to give up a lifeline that for many, is all they have. And those who *do* have at least a little money coming in through pensions, will have a little less of that money as well. All to pay for corporate tax breaks.

Times have been tough in Michigan for a long time. But since Snyder got elected, things have gotten terrifying. Honestly, I could even deal with the far right ideological agenda that Snyder and the Republican Congress have brought with them–if they were sure to bring jobs with that ideological agenda. It’s always easier to fight anti-choice extremism, for example, when you know your family is not going hungry.

But the fact is, Snyder and the Republican Congress are NOT bringing jobs. They aren’t even pretending to look for them. Under the guise of “balancing the budget,” they are building wealth on the bodies of poor people.

Let them eat babies, I guess.

What romantic comedies can teach us about ourselves

God, I hate romantic comedies with a fiery passion. It’s a cliche, I know–look, the bitter, humorless feminist hates love and laughter–but they make my teeth itch. I don’t fault anyone else for enjoying them, if that’s their thing, but I can’t get over the repeated implication in every single movie that I’m supposed to identify with the inevitably vapid/obtuse/obsessed/otherwise undateable (yet gorgeous, under the ponytail and glasses) woman who will find love at last in the third act.

Christina H., over at Cracked, is with me, and her list of 6 Obnoxious Assumptions Hollywood Makes About Women hits some of my high points: We default to irrational anger on first meeting. We’ll turn on each other at the drop of a hat. We love us some shopping. But with such a wretched expanse of film stock already dead at the hands of such cinematic terrors–just Kate Hudson and Katherine Heigl have nearly 20 between them–there’s no reason to stop at six Obnoxious Assumptions.

Thus:

7. If we’re happy in our careers, it’s only because we don’t know what we’re missing.

If a movie opens up with a woman on the job, whether she’s cleaning hotel rooms or running a company, you can bet she’s a social-lifeless workaholic who will soon be taught to love life through the introduction of a guy and/or kids. (If it’s a man on the job, he’ll generally just be driven, although he might be presented as a workaholic if he will later be saved by the intervention of a Manic Pixie Dream Girl.)

The Cracked piece mentions the Catherine Zeta-Jones movie No Reservations, which I loved because it was basically cooking porn–all bustling around and adding ingredients without measuring them and arranging things on plates. In the beginning, Kate is shown as this Gordon Ramsay-type head chef/badass who rules her kitchen with an iron fist (such that she’s been ordered into therapy by her boss), and she obviously knows and enjoys her stuff. She takes pride in the quality of her work, she talks and thinks about it all the time, she spends early-morning hours in markets tenderly fondling the vegetables–I don’t think I’ve ever been that happy at any job in my life. Then there’s the stuff with the kid and the guy, and montages and a bicycle built for three, and then the charming bistro and the happy ending.

But if you run it backwards, Kate ditches the distracting boyfriend, her apartment gets clean, her sister comes to pick up her kid, and she’s able to focus on the work she loves.

8. We’re suckers for public humiliation.

Women love it when you bring it all out in public. If you’ve screwed up with a woman and she won’t talk to you, the way to her heart is to corner her in a public place and pour your heart out in front of Jesus and all Manhattan. If she’s marrying someone else, crash the wedding. A woman will never feel pressured to accept a public proposal or a public apology simply because the surrounding crowd–who know nothing about you–think you’re swell and romantic. So grab that mic at the wedding reception and start pouring your drunken heart out. We’ll definitely pull you aside, just to keep you from further spoiling the event, thus giving you an opportunity to win us back. We certainly won’t turn red and walk out. Or turn red, yell obscenities at you, and then walk out.

(Exception: Lloyd Dobler, but that might be only because John Cusack is on my List.)

9. We’re just not that bright.

The one we’re meant to be with? That perfect match? Our soulmate? Has been right there all along, and we didn’t even see. (Made of Honor, Someone Like You, The Ugly Truth, etc. ad nauseam.) You’d think we’d be self-aware enough to see what’s right there in front of our faces, but no. Here’s a person we’ve always seen as a friend, waiting patiently–sometimes even giving us romantic advice–while we pursue one failed relationship after another, and we’ve never looked at him/her with anything but the most platonic eye. It can’t be because we’re just not that attracted to them. Or that they’ve had romantic feelings toward us forever and have never spoken up, apparently expecting us to just smell their devotion like an aftershave, be turned on by it, and make the first move. It’s because we’re not attentive, we’re not smart, we’re not observant, and we’re always too busy going after the assholes. Think of all the Nice Guys™ who could have been saved if we’d only recognized their perfection 35 minutes in while we were crying about that jerk from the office. Thanks, Hollywood.

10. Twilight.

reImagining Work

October 28-30, 2011
SAVE THE DATE!

The old economy is failing. A new economy is sprouting like shoots after a forest fire. This transition to new ways of understanding and organizing work is as significant as the shift from hunting and gathering to agriculture 11,000 years ago and from agriculture to industry a few hundred years ago.

From Detroit, Michigan, where industrial jobs are gone forever, to points across the globe, there are exciting and moving stories of invention and reinvention.

In October 2011 in Detroit, a groundbreaking conference will gather thinkers and doers from the worlds of activism, community organizing, labor, crafts, media, entrepreneurship, the arts, academe, and ‘green’—in a 3-day collaborative discussion. You will come away inspired by people with whom you can collaborate in this profound economic and spiritual transformation.

Your startup is inferior to that guy with the mobile app for golfers

In case you needed a reminder that ventures traditionally associated with women are inherently inferior to things that are manly and such, tech reporter Jolie O’Dell is happy to remind you via Twitter.

Women: Stop making startups about fashion, shopping, & babies. At least for the next few years. You’re embarrassing me.

After a few of her followers call her to task, she eventually backs down to “there’s a glut of them & it bothers me” and “[a]ll the DEMO female-led companies are one of those three niches. I was disappointed, clearly.” But ultimately, she arrives at the classic girl-stuff burial ground: Girl stuff is stupid because it’s pointless, because it’s girl stuff.

Because I refuse to believe those smart, talented women are making the best use of their time & skills to change the world.

(Background: O’Dell made her comments in regard to DEMO 2011, a tech conference with some amount of focus on emerging tech and entrepreneurship–lots of pitches, presentations, and demonstrations. In her 140-word tweets, she doesn’t get around to mentioning exactly which girly startups she found so offensive, so one can only speculate.)

I get where she’s coming from, almost. A little. In the business world, where women still struggle for acceptance and recognition, it can be jarring to see women make it to the big show and start talking about shoes and diapers. It’s not an image some women want to see promoted. But O’Dell’s complaint has nothing to do with female business founders flashing cleavage or tittering through demos–they’re giving women a bad image simply by offering products of a traditionally female nature.

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On the other side: Hope Porn

For the rest of the series, see:
A short history (1)
A short history (2)
The Ruin Porn Post
The Consequences of Ruin Porn

Out of the ruins, springs hope. It’s an inspiring idea, one that we hear all the time. Out of death, springs life, out of horror and hell, springs humanity and grace.

In Detroit, it’s out of ruin porn, springs hope porn.

Compared to ruin porn, hope porn is almost the exact opposite–but the two need and build on each other. Whereas ruin porn focuses on the devastation, decay and blight of post-industrialization, hope porn focuses on the potential. It sees in the burned out houses possibility, it sees in the abandoned streets a lovely blank slate.

The way that hope porn manifests itself is less in pictures, and more in words. Documentaries and sales pitches. It usually involves an intrepid reporter or explorer that comes to see if things are “really that bad.” After a careful two week study that involves the reporter talking to a specific group of people, there is the grand announcement: it’s not as bad as we’ve been told! And then we get the secret. The exclusive “in the know” report out. Since everybody *thinks* things are that bad–property values around here are outrageously low! You can get a house for a dollar! You can do whatever you want with this house! Because it’s only a dollar! You are only limited by your imagination!

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