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Showing posts from May, 2025

Getting the band back together

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Live musical performances are a very special variety of social gathering. People come together around beats and melodies, participating as players, dancers, spectators and listeners. These events can be a great exhalation, a release of massive, pent-up energies deriving from the experiences of all those present. Having attended many musical performance events in a wide variety of roles—including but not limited to light and sound technician, performer, dancer, listener and reveller—when they involve a lot of fun-loving people and competent show-running, they are far and away my favorite social environment. Other types of gatherings seldom match the intensity of sensory stimulation alone. But that’s only a surface-level difference. Beneath high decibels and flashing lights and before crowds assemble, mingling heat and breath, people prepared a venue while others waited and talked in lines outside, some casual and others almost visibly vibrating in anticipation. Before that, artists p...

Democracy against corruption

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Michigan consistently has ranked at or near the bottom of U.S. states in government transparency and accountability for over a decade. Journalists and government watchdogs have been sounding alarms while statutory remedies have stalled in legislative limbo or faded entirely from view. Two policy reforms would go a long way: banning legislators receiving gifts from lobbyists and ending the total exemption from Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests currently enjoyed by the office of the Governor of the State of Michigan and by members of the Michigan State Legislature. Given the incentives at play, Michigan residents cannot rely on representatives to enact the necessary reforms. In a response to an investigation published by the Detroit News in 2024 that revealed Lansing politicians receiving gifts from lobbyists unchecked, retired litigator Bob LaBrant said a ballot measure through a citizen-initiated petition drive may be Michigan residents’ only hope. “The December 2024 lame...

Why we celebrate International Workers’ Day

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Toward the end of the 19th century, the United States of America was home to many working people’s organizations. Two such organizations, the Knights of Labor and the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions (later known as the American Federation of Labor), have competing stories from 1882 about one of their chapters proposing that the first Monday of September each year be observed as Labor Day. Great battles for the eight-hour workday began two years later. The FOTLU held their national convention in Chicago and declared that “eight hours shall constitute a legal day's labor from and after May 1, 1886.” They planned and coordinated a series of demonstrations and labor strikes in order to win their demand. On May 1, 1886, an estimated 300,000 workers across the nation went on strike, affecting more than 13,000 businesses. The population of the United States at that time was between 50 and 60 million. In Chicago, where initially an estimated 40,000 workers went on strike,...