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$
How to live for a day. page 4
OCTOBER 4, 2024 | VOLUME 15 | ISSUE 21
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
ASK YOUR VENDOR:
WHAT WAS YOUR
FAVORITE
SUBJECT IN
SCHOOL?
DONNA
MCGAUGHY
#310
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Outrage over resolution to increase
downtown policing shuts down
Ypsilanti City Council meeting. page 5
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
Police block door to City Hall after it
was prematurely adjourned.
Photo credit: Emily Mills
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
GROUNDCOVER STAFF
Get excited for the first-ever Groundcover
Community Choice Awards!
Throughout the month of September
we complied the following categories
and nominations from Groundcover
News vendors. Over the next two
weeks we will be polling in the community
to determine the winners! Buy
the next edition (October 18, 2024) of
Groundcover News to see who the
community chooses!
Best Public Park
• County Farm Park
• Argo Nature Area
• Waterworks Park (Ypsi)
• West Park
• Frog Island
• Wheeler Park
Best hot, free meal
• St. Andrew’s Breakfast Church
• Delonis Center
• Fed-Up Ministries
• Mercy House pancake breakfast
• Bellflower
Best affordable restaurant
• Fleetwood Diner
• New York Pizza Department
• Mama’s Pizza
• Pilar’s Tamales
• Detroit Pizza Pub
Best cup of coffee
• Groundcover News office
• Downtown Home and Garden
• Argus Farm Stop
• Bridge Community Cafe
Best place to hear live music
• Crazy Wisdom on Friday night
• Sonic Lunch
• Blue Llama
• Ziggy’s
• LIVE
• Downtown A2 streets
Best dispensary
• Misty Mountain
• Cross Street Shop
• Jars
• Bloom
• House of Dank
Best nonprofit / social
service / homeless
grassroots organization
• Delonis Center
• Groundcover News
• Washtenaw Camp Outreach
• Hospitality House Ypsi
• Mercy House
• Pizza in the Park
OCTOBER 4, 2024
2024 Community Choice Awards coming soon!
Best free daytime activity
• Pizza in the Park
• BBQ at the park
• Go to the library
Most supportive faith
community
• St. Andrew’s Church
• St. Luke’s (Ypsilanti)
• Trinity Lutheran Church
• Karuna Buddhist Center
• Bethlehem United Church of
Christ
Best mural
• Pure Roots Alley
• Bomber restaurant
• Challenge everything. Create
anything (Huron St.)
• Flowers on Huron St.
underpass
• Geometric Rainbow on 432.
Michigan Ave
PROVIDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR SELFDETERMINED
INDIVIDUALS IMPACTED BY POVERTY,
PRODUCING A STREET NEWSPAPER THAT GIVES A
PLATFORM TO UNDERREPRESENTED VOICES IN WASHTENAW COUNTY,
PROMOTING AN ACTION TO BUILD A JUST, CARING AND INCLUSIVE
SOCIETY.
Groundcover News, a 501(c)(3)
organization, was founded in April
2010 as a means to empower lowincome
persons to make the
transitions from homeless to housed,
and from jobless to employed.
Vendors purchase each copy of our
regular editions of Groundcover
News at our office for 50 cents. This
money goes toward production costs.
Vendors work selling the paper on the
street for $2, keeping all income and
tips from each sale.
Street papers like Groundcover
News exist in cities all over the United
States, as well as in more than 40
other countries,
in an effort to raise
awareness of the plight of homeless
people and combat the increase in
poverty. Our paper is a proud member
of the International Network of Street
Papers.
STAFF
Lindsay Calka — publisher
Cynthia Price — editor
Michelle Lardie-Guzek — intern
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Elizabeth Bauman
Ramón Roberto Isla Caballero
Jamie Cameron
Dezz Clark
David KE Dodge
Cindy Gere
Mike Jones
James Manning
Ken Parks
Denise Shearer
Shawn Swoffer
GROUNDCOVER NEWS ADVERTISING RATES
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Dimensions (W x H in inches)
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10.25 X 13
PROOFREADERS
CONTACT US
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VOLUNTEERS
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Glenn Gates
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Melanie Wenzel
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Office: 423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
Mon-Sat, 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Phone: 734-263-2098
@groundcover
@groundcovernews
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Additional 20% discount for money saving coupons
Story and photo submissions:
submissions@groundcovernews.com
Advertising and partnerships:
contact@groundcovernews.com
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ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
What was your
favorite subject in
school?
Reading and writing.
— Donna McGaughy, #310
History.
— Ramón Roberto Isla Caballero,
#347
Geography.
— Wayne Sparks, #615
Physiology and anatomy. I
enjoyed it so much my professor
tried to convince me to
switch majors to biology.
— Ken Parks, #490
Smoking a cigarette in the
hallway.
— Shawn Swoffer, #574
History and civics.
— Cindy Gere, #279
The girls.
— Tony Schohl, #9
By the time I started liking
school, it was math. I love
numbers!
— Lonnie Baker, #99
Probably should have been
politics.
— Terri Demar, #322
Physical education.
— Pony Bush, #305
Doing the cars … body work!
— Schillington Morgan, #148
English.
— Stephanie Dent, #84
Home economics.
— Tre McAlister, #519
History and social studies —
and later I discovered sociology,
knowing people, helping
people.
— Dezz Clark, #643
Lunch. But I excelled in math.
— Jason Lozon, #212
Impromptu writing.
— Will Shakespeare, #258
Math, as a student and a
teacher.
— Jim Clark, #139
History.
— Mike Jones, #113
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
The hidden truth about mental
disorders
People don’t understand the
ones who have or know someone
with a mental disability, that one
in every eight people have to deal
with. The people in this world think
that they don’t have a problem but
they don’t want the world to see
the real you!
Now people don’t know how
widespread mental disability is.
The funny thing is that people don't
know that people who have a physical
health disability are more likely
to show it than that side of their
mental disability because the physical
is more visible. No one can see
the mental pain that you know is
there but can‘t do anything about
it. The problem is people tend to
hide their disorder. It becomes a
factor in all of their life. Now as a
person like myself who has PTSD, I
DEZZ CLARK
Groundcover vendor No. 643
have experienced a lot of unwanted
looks and finger pointing because
they have a disorder themselves.
You also have those who know it is
hard to hide the things we go
through but we only wish for someone
to help, to please just listen.
Maybe one day people who feel
that they are usually exempt from
any connection
person with a mental disability will
recognize it’s not true. But maybe
as a PERSON WHO HAS A MENTAL
DISORDER, I need to come to
to any type of
3
understand my own mental disability.
I’m OK after a long stay in
prison where I was subjected to a
lot of abuse from the Michigan
Department of Corrections, but
this is about me, you or anyone that
has been through the same thing.
It is the person who has the
mental disability who has to understand
what brought this on. With
my PTSD, I find myself speaking to
others who have similar illnesses
with different experiences and different
disorders, feeling, thinking
psychosis. The medical field comes
with its own understanding. This
results in people getting misdiagnosed
and now you have people
who don’t believe that they're suffering.
Sometimes, especially in
the case of misdiagnosis, people’s
families try to hide their disabilities
— the hidden truth.
Undercover art intel: Luna gallery
Low income and struggling artists
took a huge hit when the pandemic
raged through Michigan.
All art galleries and art shops
were closed. It only took three
months to destroy the art communities
in Ann Arbor. New art
locations have now popped up
across the Michigan landscape;
one such location is the new Luna
Gallery in downtown Ypsilanti.
This location is a place for local
artists to display and sell their
beautiful creations and build a
sense of community. Undercover
Intel’s purpose is to bring people
together, out and away from their
computers and out of their shells,
The pieces are from around a
CINDY GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
and out into the community.
Luna Gallery was first established
in fall 2022 and the community
totally received the gallery
well. Luna is located at 50 North
Huron Street, Ypsilanti.
dozen local artists across southeast
Michigan from all demographics,
including LGBTQ artists.
The kinds of art shown include
paintings, ceramics, jewelry,
mixed media and locally made
soaps. There are also tarot readings
with Madam Brule on the
weekends!
Luna Gallery hosts ongoing
activities. The Michigan Pagan
Gathering is going to be there on
October 6 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. It
will be located at the Ypsilanti
Freighthouse at 100 Market Place
in Depot Town. Come one, come
all!
Improvements for FlexRide
I appreciate all public transportation
because me and other
people really need it. If we didn’t
have public transportation, we all
would be in bad shape. I especially
appreciate the FlexRide that's part
of our local transportation options,
too.
FlexRide is a shared shuttle service
that helps riders connect to
fixed-route bus stops and other
hard-to-reach destinations. FlexRide
provides on-demand, curbto-curb
transportation in select
locations of the greater Ann Arbor
and Gold Card I.D. (Free).
There are things I wish were different
about the Flex. I wish the
rides were easier to get for people
with leg problems like I have. It’s
too hard to climb up into the car.
The step is too high.
I wish that there were nicer drivDENISE
SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
and Ypsilanti area. A regular, oneway
fare is $1 — unless you have a
half-fare card ($0.50) or an A-Ride
ers and dispatchers; I wish they
would be nicer and more understanding
to the riders. That’s the
only thing I wish was different
about the Flex. I wish they would
pick people up when they say will,
and be more compassionate.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOMELESSNESS
No smile, too much goofy
On Thursday, September 12, Ramón
Roberto Isla Caballero was sitting and
selling his Groundcover papers on the
corner of Washington and Main Streets.
While selling he keeps his belongings
under an archway to stay dry and off
the sidewalk. A police officer driving by
parked their car after they noticed
Ramón and his things outside. They
walked up to him and said he needed
to move his belongings and find a new
place to sleep by Monday, September
16 — just four days from then. The officer
suggested Ramón talk with someone
from the Washtenaw County’s
Street Team (PATH) to get a tent and go
camp in the woods behind the Kroger
on Jackson and Stadium. If he stays
downtown to sleep outside, then the
officer said they will fine him $250,
which he does not have.
Ramón is most comfortable staying
around downtown because it is where
he feels safe knowing there are people
around. It is where he sells his paper.
This allows him to be close to the services
he needs at the Groundcover
office and the Street Team’s Annex
office. Ramón has grown close to some
of the downtown businesses and
restaurants, whose staff look out for
him in different ways, including helping
him with food. This is important to
him because he no longer goes to get
breakfast at St. Andrew’s Church. There
is too much fighting. He no longer goes
to the Delonis Center for a meal
because the last two or three times he
It does not make sense to stress out
Ramón about where he sleeps because
he is already stressed about it, in addition
to all that he has to do for his own
health.
En Español: El jueves 12 de septiembre
RAMÓN ROBERTO ISLA
CABALLERO
Groundcover vendor No. 347
went, his belongings were stolen. He
did not want to say much about it to the
staff there because he did not want to
get someone in trouble, or have someone
then come find him outside to
cause trouble for him later.
Ramón is a cancer survivor. Now he
has other health issues that he is taking
care of. He sees doctors often who prescribe
a lot of different types of medications
to help him feel better and manage
the pain on his hip. Staff in the Street
Team help him get to all of his appointments
so it is very important he is close
to their offices for this, and also if there
is any emergency, that he is close to the
hospital. Leaving downtown to sleep
elsewhere is not a better option for
Ramón. Not to mention, the suggestion
from the police assumes that he can just
take the bus back and forth. After selling
his papers he must use what he makes
to get food. He says, “Who will give me
money for bus tokens?”
Ramón Roberto Isla Caballero estaba
sentado vendiendo sus periódicos
Groundcover en la esquina de las calles
Washington y Main. Mientras vendía,
mantenía sus pertenencias cerca debajo
de un arco para mantenerse seco y alejado
de la acera. Un oficial de policía
que pasaba por allí estacionó su auto
después de notar a Ramón y sus cosas
afuera. Se acercaron a él y le dijeron que
necesitaba mover sus pertenencias y
encontrar un nuevo lugar para dormir
antes del lunes 16, solo cuatro días
después. El oficial sugirió a Ramón
hablar con alguien del equipo de calle
del condado de Washtenaw para conseguir
una tienda de campaña e ir a acampar
en el bosque detrás del Kroger en
Jackson y Stadium. Si se queda en el
centro a dormir afuera, el oficial dijo
que le impondrán una multa de 250
dólares, cantidad que no tiene.
Ramón se siente más cómodo
quedándose cerca del centro porque es
donde se siente seguro sabiendo que
hay gente alrededor. Es donde vende su
periódico. Eso le permite estar cerca de
los servicios que necesita en la oficina
de Groundcover y la oficina anexa de
Street Team. Ramón se ha acercado a
algunos de los negocios y restaurantes
del centro que lo cuidan de diferentes
maneras, incluso ayudándolo con la
comida. Esto es importante para él
porque ya no va a desayunar a la iglesia
de San Andrés. Hay demasiadas
peleas. Ya no va al Centro Delonis a
comer porque las últimas dos o tres
veces que fue le robaron sus pertenencias.
No quería decirle mucho al personal
porque no quería meter a alguien
en problemas, o que luego vendrían a
buscarlo
afuera
para
causarle
problemas.
Ramón es un sobreviviente de cáncer.
Ahora tiene otros problemas de salud
de los que se está ocupando. A menudo
visita médicos que le recetan muchos
tipos diferentes de medicamentos para
ayudarle a sentirse mejor y controlar el
dolor de cadera. El personal del Street
Team lo ayuda a llegar a todas sus
citas, por lo que es muy importante que
esté cerca de sus oficinas para esto y, si
hay alguna emergencia, que esté cerca
del hospital. Salir del centro para
dormir en otro lugar no es la mejor
opción para Ramón. Sin mencionar
que esto supone que puede tomar el
autobús de ida y vuelta. Después de
vender sus periódicos debe utilizar lo
que gana para conseguir comida. Él
dice: "¿Quién me dará el dinero del
token del autobús?"
No tiene sentido estresar a Ramón
por dónde duerme, porque él ya está
estresado por eso y por todo lo que tiene
que hacer por su propia salud.
OCTOBER 4, 2024
How to live for a day
How do those who are homeless live
and what are their daily concerns?
This article focuses mainly on those
newly homeless, not chronically
homeless.
Our first need on Maslow's Pyramid
focuses strictly on survival needs:
food, safety and shelter.
Food — Where to get food? Peggy's
House (sometimes called Mercy
House) offers free breakfast on Saturday
mornings 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., dinner
Monday and Wednesday evenings,
and some lodging. Inquire within at
805 W Huron St. The nearby Delonis
Center provides lunch and dinner.
Groundcover News sometimes has
food during office hours 11 a.m. to 3
p.m. There is a very early morning
breakfast at St. Andrews Church (7:30
to 8:30 a.m.). Pizza in the Park is
another option on Fridays at 7 p.m. at
Liberty Plaza. FedUp feeds people in
both Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti on
Wednesdays at lunch, and Hospitality
JAMIE CAMERON
Groundcover vendor No. 612
House (169 N. Washington) has open
hours Sunday 12-3 and Thursday 4-7.
There is an outdoor barbecue at
Wheeler Park at 3:30 every other week,
and on the off weeks at the same time
in Waterworks Park. Both of these
places will change locations in the
winter.
Money — You can risk police contact
or disturbing people by panhandling.
Or you can charge for your talents,
such as singing and playing guitar with
an open guitar case as one example.
Or, you can work for Groundcover
News. We buy each paper for fifty
cents, and go sell them at the cover
price of two dollars, sometimes with
tips. You can also earn income by participating
in the freelance writing program
(writing and editing articles).
Inquire within (423 S 4th Ave.). As a
new vendor, you get ten free papers
and a badge to go sell.
Safety — The best solution for safety
is to be around other people, and sleep
during the late day hours or around
other people near churches. Tent
encampments, the Delonis Center
and Peggy's House have lodging
potential. In a worst case, perhaps
sleep in the ER of the University of
Michigan Hospital, if you can be
discreet.
Clothing — Goodwill, House by the
Side of the Road or the Salvation Army.
Showers — If you have money, the
Washtenaw County Recreation Center
on Washtenaw Avenue has lockers and
showers. The Delonis Center has laundry
and showers. Inquire within for
both.
Social networking — Take free
classes where offered, keep your eyes
open as you walk down Main Street
and Liberty Street. There are professional
social networking shops. The
YMCA off Huron or Washington is
another option.
Mental Health Resources — Community
Mental Health is at the Annex
on Fourth just north of Huron. This is
where you can get help and get a caseworker
to talk to.
Transportation — The AATA has
reduced fare for children, seniors and
low income people. At the Blake Transit
Center you can buy a weekly or
monthly pass.
Be safe and take care!
׉	 7cassandra://4R_Gy7hBl7EAQighHJJg7X81hQ8UfuDyS4WJoWQveBwP8` g#˳.׉E|OCTOBER 4, 2024
HOMELESSNESSS
Outrage over resolution to increase
downtown policing shuts down
Ypsilanti City Council meeting
By the start of Ypsilanti City Council’s
October 1 meeting, the hall
chambers were already standing
room only. The increased attendance
was due to an agenda item introducing
Resolution No. 2024-229. It reads
the following:
“Whereas it is in the interest of the
entire Ypsilanti community to have a
safe and welcoming downtown for all
Ypsilanti residents, business owners
and visitors and;
Whereas the downtown currently
has areas where safety is a significant
concern for many of Ypsilanti residents,
visitors and business owners
and;
Whereas it is inappropriate to focus
on the safety concerns of a subsection
of the population without addressing
the safety concerns of the entire downtown
population and;
Whereas the effort to concentrate services
for a vulnerable population in the
downtown core has had a significant
negative collateral impacts including
open air drug dealing violence and
threats to public safety and health and;
Whereas business owners and property
owners have a right to expect the
city to take measures to ensure the
safety of all interest a promoting a safe
and private vibrant downtown that
serves the diverse clientele; now therefore
be it
Resolved that the city manager is
hereby directed to use all appropriate
resources including police resources
and police presence to ensure a safe
downtown for all residents, visitors
and business owners; be it further
Resolved that these resources shall
be used in a manner consistent with
respect for the civil rights of all residents,
visitors and business owners.”
Introduced by Ward 2 Council
Member Patrick McClean, this resolution
comes after a more than yearlong
narrative battle over what safety
means on Washington Street in
downtown Ypsilanti. This stretch of
the neighborhood includes the
high-traffic Ypsilanti Transit Center,
Growing Hope’s Marketplace Hall,
newly reopened Deja Vu Strip Club,
Beer Cooler liquor store, the Tap
Room and Bobcat Bonnie's bar
restaurants, in addition to small
clothing,
food and other
service-based
businesses.
The Ypsilanti District Library downtown
branch — usually providing free
Ypsilanti residents waitling in
line for public comment completely
filled City Hall on Oct. 1.
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
restrooms, air-conditioned/heated
space to sit and relax, outlets, wifi and
other supportive services — has been
closed since July 2023.
Fed-Up Ministries moved their
headquarters to the Growing Hope
Marketplace Hall in June of this year.
Services including meals, showers,
air conditioned indoor space, survival
supplies and activities were
accessible almost daily. Care-Based
Safety also began their pilot placebased
non-police response program
at the same location this summer.
Earlier this year CBS sought funding
from the City of Ypsilanti, but on
June 4, 2024, the expenditure for an
unarmed alternative to police fell
short by one vote.
A wide variety of Ypsilanti residents
spoke about Resolution 2024-229
during public comment on Oct. 1 —
housing and shelter activists, renters,
homeowners, business owners,
people experiencing homelessness,
addiction and recovery — and a vast
majority of speakers spoke against
the passage of the resolution. Many
echoed the phrase, "Police do not
make us safe" and referred to the resolution
as "violent."
The business owners who communicated
support for more policing of
Washington Street articulated that
they didn't think the resolution
would accomplish much.
There was obvious outrage towards
the council members, with many
speakers purposefully ignoring the
rules of public comment. When
Mayor Nicole Brown pleaded for
respect in the chambers, one speaker
responded, “This resolution is disrespectful
to us all.”
This outrage was directed equally,
if not more, towards Stewart Beal, a
landlord present in the chambers
who has been criticized by his tenants
for poor housing conditions and
high eviction rates. Beal has publicly
pushed this safety narrative with frequent
Facebook posts that led to the
proposed resolution.
When Council adjourned for 10
minutes after a different speaker continued
speaking after the three
minute allocation was up, the crowd
erupted into chants protesting Beal,
and Mayor Brown adjourned the
meeting for the night.
The protestors marched out of the
chambers chanting "Shelter not
police!" One activist remained in the
chambers and was arrested. The protestors
switched their chant to "Let
them go!" and this collective pressure
released them immediately.
The vote on Resolution 2024-229
did not occur Tuesday night. Council
is meeting again Oct. 4 at 7 a.m. but
the resolution is not on the agenda.
Formerly homeless activist Seth
Best reflected at the end of the night,
“Both sides think safety is the problem.
Both sides want to spend money
on the solution, but one side refuses
any solution that involves vulnerable
people getting something life-saving
for free — and are willing to pay even
more to ensure they don't.”
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
What’s
Happening
at the Ann
Arbor
District
Library
Open 10am–8pm Daily
Hang out in any of our five
locations across town, browsing
books, magazines, newspapers,
and more, or check out movies,
CDs, art prints, musical
instruments, and home tools—
you name it! Study and meeting
rooms, fast and free WiFi, and
plenty of places to sit and hang out.
Fifth Avenue Press
AADL founded Fifth Avenue
Press in 2017 to support the local
writing community and promote
the creation of original content.
The imprint publishes works by
authors who live in Washtenaw
County. Consider submitting
your finished manuscript to Fifth
Avenue Press at fifthave.aadl.org.
Preschool Storytimes and
Baby Playgroups
Join our storytellers on weekdays
inside the library for fun songs,
stories, puppets, and movement!
Visit aadl.org/storytimes to view
a list of upcoming in-person
storytimes and playgroups. You
can also stream and download
our recorded storytimes online at
AADL.TV.
FEATURED EVENT
AADL Halloween
Costume Contest
Sunday, October 27 • 12–3pm
Downtown Library
Do you have a creative, cool, cute,
or spooky costume? Come in your
flashiest, most beautiful, or most
outrageous costume to AADL’s
annual costume contest! To enter,
you must be seen by the judges
between 12 and 2 pm. The award
ceremony will be held at 2:30
pm. We will have a photo booth
in the Lobby to commemorate
the day. Check out aadl.org/
costumecontest for details!
5
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
WAR
365 days of war: the good, the bad and the ugly
Wars and rumors of war — we are
now at war and one can only imagine
the end results of this war. We did not
ask to be in this war; no one asked for
this war. Things like this happen every
so often in human affairs. It’s like an
old volcano that's bound to blow its
top.
I believe in non-violence, and I
desire peace. Many like myself believe
in non-violence and desire peace. But
there comes a time when an adversarial
force won’t allow peace, thus creating
a negative pervasive force so great,
we end up in a space where peace no
longer exists until the aftermath.
Let me start by saying: in this war no
one is safe! I mean no one. As we now
see daily, children and women being
killed en masse should be an indication
of the intent of such an adversarial
force. A genocidal massacre is taking
place in real time (right now) in Palestine
— live and in living color in the
twenty-first century. This is old school
warfare, but the only difference is, we
have front row seating as we watch
things unfold. But measures were put
in place after WWII ended on September
2, 1945 to prevent things of this
magnitude from taking place in the
20th and 21st century. On October 24,
1945, in San Francisco, CA, the United
Nations was founded.
Then why does the United Nations
have no real effect on what takes place
on the battlefield in Gaza? All these
discussions, but no cease-fire? Let's
examine the UN and its inability to
solve world conflicts.
The answer is simple: Those nations
who hold veto privileges in the UN
assembly are the five permanent
member states of the security council.
Who might those be? The United
States, the UK, China, France and
Russia. With this privilege and power
they rule. There is more, but in short,
this is why war-crimes committed by
the Israeli Defense Force on the Palestinians
continue to happen to this very
moment — because of the backing and
support of three nations: the United
States, the United Kingdom and
France.
Protests take place daily and weekly,
but no cease-fire. The people of these
nations want a cease-fire, but rulers
and leaders of their nations do not.
Three of the most powerful nations
stand with Israel. And these three
nations hold veto power. Even though
these three nations are the minority
amongst all the other nations, the privilege
of the veto trumps in this arena.
We also need to take a look into the
contracts of nations and their affiliation
with other nations. There are 193 UN
Member States. Each Member State has
one seat in the General Assembly.
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
Remember, only five members in this
assembly hold and have veto power. All
other members (nations) have no real
say on what truly happens on the battlefield.
Surely, smaller nations try their
best to align themselves with bigger
nations who might benefit them in one
way or another. At the end of the day
these five nations call the shots. Is it
rigged? If so, that might explain why
there has been 365 days of war and
non-stop bombing and total neglect of
innocent Palestinian civilians.
Hypocrisy from the highest level of
authority will be the downfall of these
bigger nations, especially so-called
democratic nations. Those in power in
these nations have plans for global
domination. My personal observation:
it looks like it’s coming down to Nationalism
vs its civilian population. The
reason is because the citizens and governments
of these nations, or empires,
are becoming more restless as time
goes on, and the citizens of these
empires are becoming willing to challenge
systematic authority. The powerful
in these nations continually
respond in the typical violent manner
in order to try to quell dissent.
There are nearly eight billion people
on planet Earth. 1% of the population
retains a majority of the wealth of the
planet. Something is not right with this
picture. With the middle class virtually
eliminated, look at the disproportionate
wealth gap, mental illness, poverty,
the new racial-class segregation and
culture wars. This is what we are facing
within these so-called democratic
nations, a war from within. Whether it
be foreign or domestic, we are at war,
and the majority of the population
doesn't realize it, nor the seriousness
of the situation.
This war will consist of different
types of components, but in plain language
this will be war between the
haves and the have nots, landowners
against those who have no land at all.
This war won’t be just nations fighting
other nations; major struggles and
conflicts will take place within nations,
where government infrastructure
won’t be able to stand on its own, thus
leading to change (revolution) within
these nations. War
is
inevitable.
Change is inevitable. The eruption of a
volcano is inevitable. Hold on ladies
and gentlemen, it can blow any
moment now!
I would like to focus now on a particular
aspect of this war because most of
the world’s population will be involved.
When most people think of war, they
think of guns, tanks, battleships and
more, but one should know that war
can impact everything under the sun.
Most noticeable is the war on information
and public opinions. All nations
control what they want people to see
and hear, some more than others. Good
and accurate information comes with a
cost. If one chooses to stand on good
journalism ethics, by bringing forth the
truth, one must know his or her life
could be in danger. In this line of work,
the players “play for keeps.” Information
rules the nations. Those in power
know this, so they seek to control the
flow and consumption of information.
Nationalism is identification with
one’s own nation and support for its
interests, especially to the exclusion or
detriment of the interests of other
nations. Sovereignty means supreme
power or authority.
These are a few of the serious components
we are dealing with. So, media
networks are formed of a biased nature
which leads to division, deception and
confusion.
The recent news and events is ugly
personified, hypocrisy on the highest
level. I would have never thought we
would bear witness to a genocide in
Palestine. However, things of this
nature have happened before in
recorded history. What happened to
George Floyd isn't something new; it
was just caught on video for the whole
OCTOBER 4, 2024
Signs at a Pro-Palestine rally
in Ann Arbor, October 2023.
Photo credit: Mike Jones.
world to see. We who live in the United
States are living where once indigenous
people lived. America is a product
of genocide.
Let’s take a look at the major media
networks: ABC, NBC and FOX. We will
say, ABC is somewhat neutral, and NBC
is Democrat and FOX shares Republican
views. Each of these networks put
their own spin on the information
released to their audience. So much so
it’s obvious. I hate to say it, but it is
almost fake news because you see and
hear what they want you to see and
hear. They put their own spin on the
facts or hide certain facts, which misleads
their audience. Those in power
and these networks do this without
pause because they know most people
don’t do their research and will believe
whatever information is given.
At the core of journalism is truth
(facts). Whether one likes it or not, the
facts are the bottom line all the time.
Those who choose to be informed, such
as myself, rely on good, accurate news
to be able to make a good conscious
decision. By doing so, we have to learn
to take a close look at what and where
we receive information of any sort.
Journalism and media outlets bear
the burden of the good, the bad and
the ugly — a constant pressure from all
directions in the struggle for truth. The
good lies in the hearts of those who
have been charged with responsibility
to resolve problems through the
means of accurate and truthful information,
and in the audience that
receives that information and puts
good use to what was given.
׉	 7cassandra://cbtH-ECt20tisAYroXJMcDZYpqKyGKFk23JG-tBP8-8R4` g#˳0׉EOCTOBER 4, 2024
VOTING
DAVID KE DODGE
Groundcover contributor
Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) is a
method by which voters in democracies
cast ballots by ranking candidates
according to their appeal and
preference to each voter. Thus, if the
ballot has five candidates running for
one position in the office for which
the candidates are running, a particular
voter will place a number “1”
beside the name of the candidate
which the voter most favors, a number
“2” beside the candidate whom the
voter next most favors, and so on,
with the candidate whom the voter
least prefers receiving a number “5”.
By a methodology which I will not try
to explain here, the candidates are
sequentially eliminated from the
ballot according to their unpopularity,
as evidenced by their having the
fewest number of “1” votes.
Each stage of the eliminations
leaves each voter’s ballot changed by
an elimination of the most unpopular
candidate from their ballot, and a
“moving up” in rank, by 1, of all the
candidates who that voter liked less
than the candidate who was eliminated
in that stage. If, after a particular
stage, a candidate has enough #1
votes to exceed 50% of the total votes
cast, that candidate is declared the
winner.
Advantages to RCV
There are a plethora of advantages
of RCV to candidates and voters who
love their nation:
• During campaigns, a strategy of
candidates to attack one of their
opponents is not so appealing; the
candidates realize that attacking one
or more of the other candidates may
alienate the voters who support those
other candidates, so rank the offending
candidate low on their ballot. The
result is that candidates limit their
campaigns to running on policies and
positions on issues.
• Because the candidates run on
policies, the winners of the elections
tend to disfavor gridlock, and thus
serve terms of office promoting the
public's authentic interests; legislative
officers and administrators are
more willing to reach across the aisle
to garner support for proposed laws.
As a result, more productive legislatures
and administrators are elected.
• Voters who don’t like either of the
candidates of the two major political
parties, and decide to vote for a third
(or fourth or fifth…) party candidate,
won’t necessarily be “throwing away”
their vote. If enough voters share such
sentiments, neither of the two main
parties’ candidates will be elected.
• Multiple interests will be reflected
in the vote results — minority parties
will be found in some elected offices.
• Being a voting strategy which
gives results similar to multiple runoff
elections, the winner of an election
will receive a majority of the vote,
rather
than the largest plurality;
democracy will be more vital, and
hence, government will enjoy greater
trust and respect.
• Parties and elections will be less
subject to domination by small numbers
of activists who are regimented
to take control of local party processes
for nominating candidates, and hence
exercise power and influence far
beyond what their small numbers can
justify.
• Participation rates in elections
will likely be greater; surveys of voters
leaving precinct stations after voting
for the first time by RCV show a
marked increase in the voters’ satisfaction
with the experience.
Challenges to RCV
I’m yet in an early stage of taking a
serious look at RCV; it’s appealing to
me, but I anticipate there may be
problems:
• The means by which our leaders
will be selected is more complex —
it’s far easier to understand the details
of how one of two candidates wins the
election, by the most “X’s” beside his/
her name, than it is to understand the
complexity of a computer repeatedly
counting and eliminating candidates
and ultimately declaring a winner
who some bureaucrat on a silver
screen announces to the public as the
winner. In a nation which was once
witness to a familiar, gradual, nationwide
unfolding of state-by-state
results until a candidate was declared
the winner of the electoral college,
there was a sheen of “legitimacy” to
the process which has been increasingly
automated, with increasing distrust
in our electoral institutions;
• The nation will have taken another
step toward turning over the keys of
our power-assignment institutions to
technocrats, instead of precinct workers
who have a love of democracy and
have historically shown their work to
be found accurate by recounts; some
means of vetting the technocrats for
devotion to democracy, perhaps by
the administration of polygraph, is
necessary.
• RCV has a number of potential
vulnerabilities to evasion of its
intended performance. For example,
there is a question of how names get
on a ballot — if the process is not
carefully thought-through, a ballot of
five candidates might have two Democrats
and three Republicans. The
devil is in the details.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Ranked Choice Voting – enhancing democracy
How it can happen here
I’ve been aware of RCV for some
time, and have recently learned of the
existence of an organization in Michigan
that is working to amend Michigan’s
Constitution by an initiative to
place RCV on the ballot in the 2026
election. That organization is named
“Rank MI Vote.”
RMV is very much a grassroots
movement of private citizens. It is just
starting to gain momentum in its
efforts, and the people who join today
will find themselves very involved in
fundamental planning, conceptualization
and decision-making. But an
overall plan of action exists and was
revealed in a Zoom meeting of its
members on Tuesday, August 20,
2024. If you wish to fill yourself in on
their overall plan-of-action, you can
get RMV to send you a link to the
Zoom meeting by submitting a
request to:
communications@rankmivote.org
RCV is becoming increasingly used
in cities, counties and states across
the nation, including cities in Michigan.
Once supported by many U.S.
citizens of all political stripes, as RCV
has been increasingly used in elections,
it has accrued opponents as
incompetent, extremist and/or corrupt
politicians
find themselves
losing elections. Some such opponents
are even participating in
attempts to repeal the laws which
provide for RCV.
In addition to RMV’s Michigan
presence, “Fair Vote” is promoting
RCV nationwide. GET ACTIVE!
Engage! Our self-determination is at
stake.
7
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
POETRY
For Ronnie, Robert and Old
Joe Gone to Rest in Peace
I write poems
About great things.
I write poems about wars and walls and towers,
Starting and ending, rising and falling.
I write poems about leaders,
Some who are good people,
And others who make themselves into volcanic moutains.
I write poems about nations collapsing,
And about hope of a better world dawning.
But it is the poems I write about "small" people
With large and loving spirits
That are my heart-poems!
Perhaps they are the poems I treasure most,
Because I feel and believe
That writing about such modest
And often impoverished but ever noble souls,
Is the closest I can come to describing reflections
Of the likely struggling
And gentle soul of God.
OCTOBER 4, 2024
PHILIP SPINK
Groundcover vendor No. 630
׉	 7cassandra://ZRieUNZzjxen8e18KzgAydDpPDfoQBky_sbyNchZ0QwQ` g#˳2׉EOCTOBER 4, 2024
PUZZLES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
ROCKING SIMILIESby Tracy Bennett
9
Groundcover Vendor Code
While Groundcover is a non-profit,
and paper vendors are self-employed
contractors, we still have expectations
of how vendors should conduct
themselves while selling and representing
the paper.
The following is our Vendor Code of
Conduct, which every vendor reads
and signs before receiving a badge
and papers. We request that if you
discover a vendor violating any tenets
of the Code, please contact us and
provide as many details as possible.
Our paper and our vendors should be
positively impacting our County.
• Groundcover will be distributed
for a voluntary donation. I agree not
to ask for more than the cover price
or solicit donations by any other
means.
• When selling Groundcover, I will
always have the current biweekly
issue of Groundcover available for
customer purchase.
• I agree not to sell additional
goods or products when selling the
paper or to panhandle, including panhandling
with only one paper or selling
past monthly issues.
• I will wear and display my badge
when selling papers and refrain from
wearing it or other Groundcover gear
when engaged in other activities.
• I will only purchase the paper
from Groundcover Staff and will not
sell to or buy papers from other
Groundcover vendors, especially vendors
who have been suspended or
terminated.
• I agree to treat all customers,
staff, and other vendors respectfully.
I will not “hard sell,” threaten, harass
or pressure customers, staff, or other
vendors verbally or physically.
• I will not sell Groundcover under
the influence of drugs or alcohol.
• I understand that I am not a legal
employee of Groundcover but a contracted
worker responsible for my
own well-being and income.
• I understand that my badge is
property of Groundcover and will not
deface it. I will present my badge
when purchasing the papers.
• I agree to stay off private property
when selling Groundcover.
• I understand to refrain from selling
on public buses, federal property
or stores unless there is permission
from the owner.
• I agree to stay at least one block
away from another vendor in downtown
areas. I will also abide by the
Vendor Corner Policy.
• I understand that Groundcover
strives to be a paper that covers
topics of homelessness and poverty
while providing sources of income for
the homeless. I will try to help in this
effort and spread the word.
If you would like to report a violation
of the Vendor Code please email contact@groundcovernews.com
or fill
out the contact form on our website.
ACROSS
1. Comedic pranks
5. Crisler Center, for one
10. Crumb-carrying insects
14. Supermodel Macpherson who
had a role on "Friends"
15. Wanders all over
16. Bubble on the stove
17. Absolutely spotless
20. Marie Kondo's "life-changing"
method for tidying up
21. Like many a professor with job
security
22. Exclamations heard after a
stubbed toe
23. Information
25. TV dad on "Black-ish"
26. In absolutely perfect health
31. Early anesthetic
34. Employ
35. Feel poorly
36. Greeting between old-time sailors
37. Way in
39. Radio band letters
40. Tool with teeth
41. Night light?
42. Stews
43. Absolutely leak-proof
47. Tic-tac-toe win
48. The "Y" in MYOB
49. Cardinals, on scoreboards
52. Artist's studio
56. Potato dumpling dish of northern
Italy
58. What 17-, 26- and 43-Across
might be, if they "band" together
60. Marriage rights activist Windsor
61. Dogg who was a torchbearer at
the 2024 Paris Olympics
62. ___ the act (stop pretending)
63. Badminton dividers
64. Displays a form of sleepiness
that's sometimes contagious
65. The : in (-:
DOWN
1. Lizard with clingy toepads
2. Permit
3. Narrow valleys
4. Fashion line?
5. Where Noah's ark landed at last
6. Spanish-speaking Muppet on
"Sesame Street"
7. Actress Longoria
8. Eye of ___ (part of a witch's brew)
9. Tennis great Arthur
10. Utterly ridiculous
11. Football powerhouse that last played
(and lost to) the Wolverines in 2019
12. Mosaic piece
13. Go downhill fast, say
18. Lowest point opposite a zenith
19. Sundance film, typically
24. Pottery class project (back when
every household allowed smoking)
26. Tina of "30 Rock"
27. Put on TV
28. Saute
29. Raise up
30. Stately shade trees
31. Toward the rising sun
32. Cuisine served at Tuptim on
Washtenaw Avenue
33. "What's your life like these days?"
37. McNamara terminal approx.
38. Lil ___ X
39. One of two huggers
41. Keeping a stiff upper lip
42. Angry uproar
44. Sacred places, quaintly
45. "Oh, tell me more, please!"
46. Preceding periods, as to elections
49. Like many Halloween films
50. Sudden pang
51. Talks like Daffy or Sylvester
52. "So true!"
53. Sassy impudence, slangily
54. Popular online marketplace
55. Novelist Jaffe
57. Give up, as territory
59. "That smarts!"
g#˳3g#˳2
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
THINK ABOUT IT
Fear is a survival mechanism for a reason
Do you ever get the feeling that
something is off? That what is taking
place before you, indeed the world
you live in, has an artificial presence
you can't put your finger on? And you
begin to wonder if you're being
screwed with. No, you're not going
crazy, and you’re not alone in the suspicions
of seemingly scripted events
for the purpose of manipulation. I
have days when I wonder if I've been
psychologically toyed with to an
extent. I might as well start taking the
whole Matrix simulation theory
seriously.
Now, I'm not the type who is adamant
in his somewhat paranoid belief
that we are the unwilling subjects
kept firmly in check by a corrupt
system that will stop at nothing to
acquire and maintain power in order
to ensure agendas that not only lack
benefits for the common man, but
completely dominate him and
demand his subservience. To break
our will so thoroughly nobody would
dare question, much less challenge,
our assigned place in the world. No,
I'm not exactly a hardcore enthusiast
of conspiracy theories of ill-intentioned
government plotting a tyrannical
New World Order establishing a
slave/servant class composed of
lower and impoverished classes and
other undesirables. I want to be clear
that I hold no rock solid belief or conviction
in that kind of paranoia.
Unfortunately, however, though I
don't anticipate such a bleak outcome
for humanity, I cannot with certainty
discard the possibility that the
system we grant custody of our rights
and freedoms would harbor nefarious
intentions for the world's less
fortunate.
Now there are a lot of variables and
factors that would make the transition
into such a despicable system of
governance somewhat rocky at best.
And despite the embarrassingly large
number of people who wouldn't be
bothered by such a display of hypocrisy
(at least where America is concerned)
there will be people who are.
I really don't think these people
would embrace the total omission of
their already uncertain chances of a
better life. It would be a scenario that
runs a very good chance of igniting a
civil war. And ironically it would
essentially be over the same line of
ethics that the last American Civil
War was fought over – human rights
and America's official stance on slavery.
I can see where the wealthy just
love and eat such a practice up.
I also see how pathetically selfish
and immature such an ideology
would seem in today's world. Perfect
for spoiled brats who want to have
JAMES MANNING
Groundcover vendor No. 16
their way while operating with the
absence of any accountability. That's
entirely possible and probable by
simply dehumanizing the lower social
classes and undesirables. I can definitely
see how a certain degree or
legal word play would be employed to
justify reverting back to the practice
of outright slavery. Sure, it will be
called or labeled as something different.
But at the end of the day it will be
outright slavery.
I truly wish it was paranoia and my
own mind coming unhinged that was
the reason behind me making these
observations, that they are baseless,
unrealistic and delusional. But these
fears are and have been confirmed by
the simple fact that these practices
occur all around us. There's no shortage
of programs and organizations
that take advantage of people in
unfortunate situations and have no
moral dilemmas taking these people
and using their desperation to entrap
and exploit them. And if that isn't
proof enough you can always look at
the market of human trafficking. That
doesn't really need any explanation to
tell you what the hell this is all about.
You have to wonder why our country
has such a vague stance on it.
We're supposedly against it but I fail
to see any serious effort to do anything
about it. Other than the occasional
raid on — excuse the expression
— whorehouses here and there, like
something that just happens to fall in
the lap of law enforcement, a matter
of convenience. But nothing ever
huge, no real campaign to eradicate
it. So it's back to that standard American
mindset of indifference that
enables the continued existence of
such a thing. Can we really say with
certainty that we're not being psychologically
conditioned to adopt
the kind of mindset that will opt to
look the other way to the benefit of
sociopaths that profit from these
atrocities? A mindset of “better them
than me.” I'm sure it's a great comfort
to these victims that we're doing all
we can to pretend they don't exist.
The thought that we are intentionally
manipulated to turn our backs on —
and if need be, to destroy — each
other is a fear that troubles my
thoughts every day. A constant nagging
suspicion that we are all being
herded down a path of ruin.
As negative as all that sounds I still
have to reflect on certain facts that
are in contrast to such a sense of
defeatism. For myself, the first and
most important one being that nothing
is over and lost yet. Second, that
anything is possible and it's not a certainty
we’ll all be serving cruel overlords
in the coming years. Also the
fact that we're talking about the
oppression of a society in which the
vast majority holds a firm ideal in the
concept of freedom. And like myself,
there are people willing to fight like
hell for it. Especially when those
ideals are being attacked. So if any
B.S. is pulled there is no way it's going
to go on unchallenged. But really, I
wanted to write this article to address
my own fears in one way, and to
serve as a warning in another.
Because God, does it bug me when I
see the levels of outright vanity and
hypocrisy on display. And it makes
me think of how it is exactly what’s
expected of a plan that doesn't hold
the best intentions for everyone.
Acknowledgment to a fear that we
should fight for what we cherish
while we still can.
OCTOBER 4, 2024
exp. 01/31/2025
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PEACE
Day of Che
Che Guevara is among the best
known revolutionaries of the 20th century.
He is widely honored in Cuba.
Originally from Argentina, Ernesto
Guevara was “Che” in Cuba from
Argentinian-Spanish slang for “pal” or
“buddy.” He became a top Commandante
with Fidel and was the brilliant
military strategist at the Battle of Santa
Clara, which sealed the defeat of the
Batista dictatorship. I believe the
armed struggle began after Batista
canceled the election in which Fidel
was a candidate.
I’ve already written about the attack
on the Moncada barracks, which like
Harper’s Ferry, was a big defeat. Unlike
John Brown, Fidel was sentenced to
prison rather than execution. Upon his
release he went into exile in Mexico.
Che was in Guatemala when President
Eisenhower, at the behest of United
Fruit Co., authorized the coup against
the popular President Arbenz. Che, as
an Arbenz supporter, was forced to flee
and went to Mexico where he met
Fidel.
The rest is well-documented history.
Luisa Yanez wrote “On the Trail of Che
Guevara,” a great read from the Miami
Herald; learn about the mystery of
Che’s bones. Every year, hundreds of
thousands make a pilgrimage to Che’s
tomb/memorial in Santa Clara.
Alberto Korda took the legendary
photo of Che that is everywhere. It captures
the pathos, perseverance and
passion of the revolution. On March 4,
1960, the French freighter La Coubre
exploded in Havana Harbor, killing up
to 100 people and injuring several hundred
more. Che participated in the
rescue operation. The following day,
the Che photo was taken.
Jack Kenny, our Ann Arbor photographer,
traveled to Cuba in the 1990s,
met with Korda and came back with a
good part of his collection. Jack’s work
may be found at the Makeshift Art Gallery
on Liberty Street.
October 8 is the Day of Che in Cuba.
By significant coincidence it is also my
birthday. My 75th in 2017 was a great
party in Cuba. This year I will be 82. We
are setting up an October 6 event (the
Sunday before), at the Friends Meeting
House from 4 to 8 p.m. It is a potluck
party with a film screening of “Salt of
the Earth” at 7 p.m.
This film embodies the spirit of Che
as much as “The Motorcycle Diaries,”
which is also a great film. I got the book
“Salt of the Earth: The Story of a Film”
to get a better feel for freedom of
speech and the struggle for the mind of
Hollywood. The witch hunts of McCarthyism,
also called the Second Red
Scare, sent many people to prison and
exile. If you knew a communist you
may have been subpoenaed and
father find water with a branch that
pointed down at the right spot.
Please review the “People’s Peace
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
threatened with the loss of your job. It
was a replay of the Inquisition, a tragedy
that plagued
Europe for
centuries.
World War I was the context for the
Russian Revolution. The first Red Scare
in America came immediately after the
Bolshevic Revolution took power in
Russia. Violent incidents and rumors
of violence were the excuse for many
raids, arrests and deportations in the
United States. Sacco and Venzetti were
executed based on their anarchist
beliefs more than any evidence of
violence.
The anti-communist fervor that is an
undercurrent in American culture has
a long history and anyone who
declares themself to be a socialist, let
alone a communist, cannot be surprised
to find themselves under attack.
The Korean War and the Vietnam war
were anti-communst crusades. The
prejudice that comes from othering
human beings feeds on fear, scapegoating
and the creation of enemies if
none exist. Indigenous people become
savages as supremacism goes on a
rampage.
I met a veteran who became an
expert at kicking in doors and shooting
anything that moved inside. He
thought his training in Iraq would
qualify him for a job with the police.
The mercenaries that I saw during the
Detroit newspaper strike, and again at
Standing Rock, believe that peace and
justice activists are the enemies and
their addiction to violence motivates
them to act against us. We see this
same dynamic in Palestine today as
children and the World Central
Kitchen become targets of bombs
while snipers pick off medical workers
and journalists.
Peace is needed. There is plenty of
work to do as we begin the healing. Let
us end the war on ourselves. Smile in
the mirror as you see who you are in a
judgment-free zone. Honest health
care would get toxins out of our food
and water. Food would be medicine as
we tune in to the wisdom of the body.
Applied kinesiology, commonly known
as muscle testing, is an important skill.
Water dowsing works in the context of
tuning into the wisdom of the body and
the wisdom of the earth. I have seen my
Bank” Groundcover article (May 17)
and “Move The Money” article (August
23). It’s time to put basic research
about money into practice. The first
law of thermodynamics will go into
play – everything we need is at hand.
Let’s talk and go to work as we share in
simplifying our lives. Peace is the way.
We will begin and end with some
mindfulness practice that empowers
peace of mind. A natural breath is a
miracle of presence. I am looking forward
to meeting you on October 6 at
Ann Arbor Friends Meeting House.
My writing is preparation for a discussion
on money, sharing of resources
and organizing the details. Jim Clark
told me about auxiliary dwelling units
which is an ordinance in Ann Arbor. It
may be the basis for a series of tiny
houses as first done in Seattle.
When we love one another we live in
a fresh world and can live visions of
peace. "Yes" and "no" are powerful
words. “How about this?” Is a phrase
that introduces new options. The
blessings of a fresh mind are
bountiful.
Remember the famous slogan,
“think globally, act locally?” Try a
thought experiment with your breath.
The average breath has 2.5 X 10 to the
22nd power number of molecules, 22
zeros is a large number. Check Google
for the probability that a goodly
number of those molecules have been
around the world and breathed by
every plant and sentient being that
ever existed. That’s just one breath.
How many dinosaurs do we meet in
our breath? This is an example of how
intimately we are interrelated.
Science is now theorizing that consciousness
is connected to dimensions
we cannot perceive. We need to
explore mental consciousness and
contemplate the Clear Light of the
Void, also known as "the all-good
expanse of primordial purity.” God,
Allah and unconditional love are in
this field of word play. As is taught, one
moment of the clear light of the mind
can erase eons of karmic obstacles and
habitual patterns.
We can forget about the need to
prove anything and rest in the natural
state of spontaneous activity, uncontrived
and decisive. The earth invites
us to be at ease and do good work.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Tofu-veggie stir fry
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
1 14 oz. package firm or extra firm tofu
3 cups chopped green beans
2 cup diced carrots
1 cup chopped red pepper
4 T. toasted sesame or coconut oil for
sauteing
Sauce:
½ cup soy sauce (low sodium)
2 T. fresh grated ginger (I use a little
less)
3 T. brown sugar
2 T. maple syrup
2 T. cornstarch
Directions:
In a small mixing bowl, whisk
together all of the sauce ingredients
and set aside.
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F and
begin drying your tofu. To drain,
remove it from the package and place
between two thick towels. Then place a
plate or bowl on top of it.
Let it dry for about 15 to 20 minutes,
changing your towels if they get too wet.
Once dry, chop tofu into 1-inch cubes
or rectangles.
Arrange tofu on a lightly greased or
parchment-lined baking sheet to prevent
sticking and bake for a total of
Sunrise, sunset
SHAWN SWOFFER
Groundcover vendor No. 574
OCTOBER 4, 2024
25-35 minutes, flipping once halfway
through to ensure even cooking. This
will dry out the tofu and help give it a
more meat-like texture. Once it’s golden
brown and a bit tough and firm, remove
from the oven and set it out to dry a bit
more while you prep your vegetables.
In a large skillet over medium-high
heat, add the sesame oil or coconut oil
and swirl to coat the pan. Add veggies
and toss to coat in oil. Cook for 5-7 minutes,
stirring often. When the vegetables
have some color and have softened
a bit, add the sauce and stir. It should
bubble and thicken. Then add the tofu
and stir.
Cook the mixture for 3-5 minutes,
stirring often. When veggies are cooked
to your preference, remove from heat.
Serve immediately, as is or over rice for
a more filling meal.
$5 OFF
NATURAL FOODS MARKET
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
ANY PURCHASE OF
$30 OR MORE
One coupon per transaction. Must present coupon at the time of
purchase. Coupon good for in-store only. No other discounts or coop
cards apply. Not valid for gift cards, case purchases, beer or wine.
OFFER
EXPIRES
9/20/2024
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,October 4, 2024g#ɫ}\=O