Thursday, November 7, 2019

Verses from Stories in Today's New York Times -- Trump Is Fighting So Many Legal Battles, It’s Hard to Keep Track -- Bernie Sanders Is Flush With Cash. Here’s How He Plans to Spend It. -- Queen Elizabeth II Will Go Fur Free .




@peterbakernyt

Trump has got more lawyer's fees
than a dog has ticks and fleas.
Soon the law schools will endorse
"Suing Trump" as a new course.
How much longer can 'il duce'
 circumvent the hangman's noose?

*********************

@reidepstein  @melbournecoal

Bernie Sanders, buddy boy,
how about you spread some joy
and share out a little dough
to the legions of the po.
Don't you buy more TV ads --
Pampers give to single dads.
Stay off Facebook for a while --
pay for dentures; make folks smile.
In the White House you can't git
if the humble you have quit.

**********************************
@gettinviggy


"We are not amused" she said
"that another fox is dead."
So the Queen by royal command
fur upon her person banned.
Now she dons long underwear
before she goes to take the air.




Crazy Henry and the Snow Boat.



"The Snow Boat's in town!" yelled Crazy Henry at me when I answered my door. He waltzed in and seemed to sizzle with childish delight as he bounced from the couch to the recliner to the coffee table and finally back to the couch. He shivered with glee.
"Cappy Rime just brought her in -- she's at the Saint Paul docks right now, taking on cargo and passengers!" 

"What, that old broken down paddle wheeler the city was gonna let the Fire Department burn for practice?" I replied sharply. I had been busy counting crab apples, and now I'd forgotten where I left off. "Your bread dough ain't got any yeast in it. Probably a nervous break up, that's what it is. Here, lay down and I'll bring you some crab apple tea . . ."

But Crazy Henry leaped from the couch to wave a newspaper in front of my face. It was the Minnehaha Nickel Shopper -- a very reliable rag.

"Here! Right here! Lookit!" he said urgently. And by golly, there it was -- an announcement that Captain Rime would sail with the Mississippi tide late that day for snowy parts unknown. Tickets were still available.

"Wow!" I couldn't help exclaiming. I didn't want to believe it was true, because everybody knew Cappy Rime and the whole Snow Boat thing were just a pleasant wintertime idyll told to kids by a warm fire while they sipped hot chocolate. But if it was in the Nickel Shopper it had to be true.

And suddenly the old snow lust was upon me. As a son of the Upper Midwest I needed to hear the hiss of snowflakes rubbing together in companionable riot as they fell across the tired brittle autumned-out land. That first heavy snowfall always felt like baptism into a crisp new cult promising endless possibilities.

"Okay" I said, throwing all the crab apples into the trash. "Let's go!" 

Cappy Rime welcomed Crazy Henry and me on board personally. He was tall and thin, with a short white beard and kinky white hair. His dark blue officer's blazer was spotless and fit him snug and trim. On his shoulder sat a snowy egret. 

"Where to first, Cappy?" I asked him. He seemed to encourage familiarity.

"Frostbite Falls, matey" he replied. 

We left the dock, churning up the water, flinging carp and bullheads from the paddle wheels onto both shores with a merry plop. And out of the double smokestacks came a pure white mist that spread all around the sky. Soon it was snowing thick and fast.

"I'm glad you talked me into this" I told Crazy Henry, who was trying to catch snowflakes on his elbow. 

Have you ever noticed how everything looks better through a curtain of chastely falling snow? The grubby shoreline, made up of hopeless derelict barges and crumbling warehouses, suddenly took on the appearance of  hopeful derelict barges and crumbling warehouses with redemption at hand.

But I noticed Crazy Henry had that dreamy look on his face -- he was presently going to be up to something amazing and ticklish. I can read him like a Kindle. 

And so it came to pass while I was enjoying the slow easy glide of the winter river, Crazy Henry went to ask Cappy Rime if he could steer the Snow Boat for a while. And Cappy, the genial old fool, told him yes. 

That's why Crazy Henry and I were holding onto a single cork life preserver in the middle of the chill Mississippi, while the old Snow Boat sank quietly with all hands. Crazy Henry had steered the paddle wheeler right over a drifting creosote telephone pole and ripped a hole in the hull big enough to drive a Humvee through. 

I could think of no comment deep or stinging enough to throw at him, as the river current carried us silently down to Iowa. We eventually made it to shore and were taken in by a family of kindly corn chandlers. 

Winter never came to Iowa that year, and all the Turkey Red wheat rotted in the ground. When April rolled around Crazy Henry showed me an ad in the Keokuk Nickel Shopper about an ethnic banana pudding bake off to celebrate the birth of Hanuman. Then he asked me if I wanted to go. For reply, I chased him into the sunset with a pea flail. 


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Verses from Stories in Today's Washington Post -- This tiny rural town just repealed its dry laws — 86 years after Prohibition ended -- Alabama warns against ‘disruptive behavior’ during Trump visit to LSU game -- An elderly man in Hawaii died after falling into a lava tube hidden in his backyard.




@thedeannapaul

If a village does not choose
to allow the sale of booze
who are we to scoff and sneer
that they never drink a beer?
What's the point now, after all,
to our love of alcohol?
Headaches and a breath so sour
you gotta give your throat a shower.
Though demon rum is here to stay,
I hope for sober joy some day . . . 

****************************

@jacobbogage

It is now a trend, I fear,
to give the Prez a big Bronx cheer
when he goes to football game --
now isn't that a dirty shame?
We ought to reverence his worth,
and not give in to boorish mirth.
What would Putin do if he
were put to such hilarity?
(Siberia would see a spike
in those dumped off to take a hike.)
I hoping that it's still way too soon
for students here to shoot the moon!

*************************
@Meagan_Flynn

Life some cherries in a bowl?
Not above a lava hole!
Keeping Death at bay and foiled,
only to be quick parboiled?
Such injustice I decry!
(And I hope I never fry.)
If my backyard isn't safe,
then God is dead and I'm a waif.

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Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Verse from Stories in Today's New York Times -- Democrats Win Control in Virginia and Claim Narrow Victory in Kentucky Governor’s Race -- ‘Extremely Evil Misconduct’: Thailand’s Palace Intrigue Spills Into View -- Why $4.5 Billion From Big Tech Won’t End California Housing Crisis.



Democrats in old Kain-tuck
really got a piece of luck.
In Virginny they steamrolled
all that pachydermic fold.
This here country, I do think,
hopes to see Trump in the clink.

@jmartNYT

***************************************


@hkbeech

Aides to Thailand's newest king,
on a catapult do swing.
If they give him any grief,
he knows how to get relief --
sends them shooting off to space
(just to save a little face.)
And outside of old Siam
other despots play that scam.
I can think of one right here;
a Goldilocks that most folk fear.
But I very much exult
in his end by catapult!

*******************************

@ConorDougherty


Out in Cali - forn - eye - ay
 fat cats need their slaves to stay.
Building hovels for their serfs,
like the kind wherein live Smurfs,
eases consciences all right
and looks good in the spotlight.
But who needs more shoddy cages --
why not pay some living wages?



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Verses from Stories in Today's Washington Post -- Rebuked for racial bias after trying a man six times, this Mississippi DA ran unopposed and will win -- Harvard Law School traces its origins to an Antiguan slave owner. Now the country wants reparations. -- Facebook reveals new privacy mishap involving apps for groups.


.


@thedeannapaul

Way down south in Mississip
they're electing such a drip.
Running unopposed is he,
though he's stupid as a flea.
Biased minds who think they're right
bring us all into the night.

***************************
@Meagan_Flynn

I thought we fought a Civil War
to settle up the blasted score.
But kibbitzers are still around
who want some money to impound,
because they think that they will be
enriched from shameful history.
I guess some folk you never please;
each sleeping dog has got some fleas.

***********************

@TonyRomm


Why is it I'm not surprised
that Facebook has been compromised
by another data breach
that may have a far flung reach?
Leaking like a rotten boat,
managing to stay afloat  --
wish I had their dad blame knack
of somehow staying in the black.


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Tuesday, November 5, 2019

Verses from Stories in the New York Times -- Sondland Updates Impeachment Testimony, Describing Ukraine Quid Pro Quo -- Iran Steps Further From Nuclear Deal With Move on Centrifuges -- Swimming Against a Tide of Expensive Sushi.





@nytmike

I never knew that quid pro quo
could generate such massive woe.
The whole darn world is topsy turvey
as the Prez continues nervy.
'You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours'
is stickier than fresh s'mores . . . 

************************
@mwolgelenter  @SangerNYT

In Iran a promise made
is as weak as lemonade.
When the mullahs guarantee
anything, you'd better flee.
If fanatics rule the roost
they'll treat the truth like Monsieur Proust.

********************
@pete_wells



I don't see raw food's appeal;
damn the sushi -- give me veal!
Little bits of fish on rice,
coming at enormous price,
can't compare to cheap french fries
or some greasy pizza pies!

The Man Who Never Got Up Passes Away at Age 99. We think.



The 'man who never got up' (more properly 'the man who never got up again') was born on a farm near Sheldon, Iowa. Benjamin Jones Krumfeld, known to family and friends as 'Benny,' passed away on Tuesday afternoon at the age of 99, according to his CPA Ronny Kister, of natural causes. His exact age may never be known, because Krumfeld refused to use any kind of numbers or statistics or dates in his many conversations with reporters, friends, and family members over the years. In fact, he gave up talking altogether in 1999, after announcing it was too strenuous. After that, he wouldn't even write notes. He managed to nod for 'yes' and shake his head for 'no.' but otherwise remained uncommunicative but apparently happy until his demise.

Having no empathy for farm life, Mr. Krumfeld left home at age 16 and wandered throughout the Midwest for the next ten years, working under titles such as 'Benny the Boxer,' 'Benny the Bean Counter,' 'Benny the Bouncer,' and 'Benny the Blowhard.' Finally, at the age of 26 or thereabouts, he decided on a career path that brought him fame and apparently enough fortune to live comfortably in stasis for the rest of his life. 
With money inherited from his father Benny bought a front porch in Fanksville, South Dakota -- a small farming community just west of the Marmalade Fields. He didn't purchase the house that went with it, only the front porch. 

And then he sat down. And never got up again. 

There was no fanfare involved, no press releases or ballyhoo of any kind. He simply selected a bentwood rocker and then managed to placidly sit in it for the rest of his life. 

For the first two years no one seemed to notice, or care, that he remained fixed in the same place, slowly rocking back and forth with a placid smile on his friendly freckled face. The family that owned the house at the time were immigrants from Switzerland, and they always claimed that such behavior was commonplace back in Geneva -- so they never gave it a second thought. 

But one day a young reporter, named Lazlo Huzzard, who eventually changed his name and became Justice Antonin Scalia of the United State Supreme Court, began to wonder about this man who never got up as he passed him on his way to and from work at the Badlands Argus. On a warm summer day in 1959 he stopped by the porch and asked permission to talk to this man who never got up.

Benny said that was okay by him. He offered the reporter a wicker chair and a glass of lemonade, and history began to be made. Not History, admittedly, but history -- interesting enough to get Benny a long winded obit anyway. 

Huzzard asked him why he sat there day after day. Krumfeld said simply "I sat down one day and decided to never get up again."

The interview that followed was published in the Argus that weekend, picked up by the wire services, and shot around the world. After that, the man who never got up welcomed a steady stream of visitors to his porch. Some came to gawk. Some came to ask him questions. Some gave him food and drink. Others gave him warm clothing for the winter. No one ever figured out how he could stay in his chair and never use the bathroom. One theory was that he had at least one double, who took his place for bathroom breaks and the like. But when video cameras were secretly installed near his porch by the lilac bushes, they recorded nothing but a man slowly rocking and smiling to himself day and night. He. Never. Got. Up. 

He refused to let cults or political organizations exploit him in any way. He never endorsed any person, place, or product. In his final years, when he gave up talking, he would play cats cradle with a dirty piece of string for hours on end. The deadly tornado of 1989 that destroyed much of the surrounding area made a wide berth around his porch. He told astonished reporters he didn't even know about it until they told him. At night he seemed to sleep soundly in his chair, snoring lightly. 

His last known words, before he went silent, were "Life is like an inglenook -- some people think they know what it is, but nobody really does." 

He left no will behind, and remaining family members will take his remains back to Sheldon and have him buried in the civic cemetery. A spokesperson for the family says that they will lay him out flat in the ground and his rocker will be donated to a flea market in Napier, Illinois.  

When President Trump heard of his passing he immediately tweeted about him: "Nice Guy. I met him in Dallas in 1963."


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Verses from Stories in Today's Washington Post -- At Japan’s dolphin hunt, a struggle between local traditions and global anger -- A conservative radio host compared ‘boomer’ to the n-word. Even Dictionary.com was appalled. -- More than 11,000 scientists from around the world declare a ‘climate emergency’.




@simondenyer

When the hungry Japanese/
sail out to the seven seas/
They're not fussy what they catch/
they'll eat dolphins by the batch/
If you should fall into their net/
humanity they might forget!

**************************
@TheArtist_MBS

Radio talk show hosts sure are
ignoramuses on par
with the monkeys in the zoo --
would you trust their narrow view?
When it comes to subtle jest,
they like throwing feces best.

***********************************
@afreedma

We are now a snowball, lad,
thrust into a Hades sad.
As the temp continues up,
we are effervescing -- yup!
Scientists may rant and rave,
but I doubt the day they'll save.
What we need are legislators
who don't act like alligators . . . 


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Saturday, November 2, 2019

Trombones have been known to sneeze.




"Trombones have been known to sneeze" said Crazy Henry to me last winter, while we were trapped inside a hollow glacier.
Since his comment had nothing whatsoever to do with our predicament at the time, I found it easy to ignore. 
After we were rescued and back home safe and sound, though, I brought the subject up again -- right after the banquet in our honor given by the Polar Club; they've got a nice dining hall that they rent out for weddings most of the year down on Central Avenue. 
"What did you mean when you said trombones have been known to sneeze?" I asked him while we rode home in a taxi.
"I never said such a thing, I'm sure" he replied, stifling a belch. There had been barrel-cured sauerkraut, loaded with fennel seed, at the banquet. 
"You most certainly did, you dingbat!" I replied, getting heated. If he was trying to pull that old 'memory lapse due to trauma' monkey business on me I was having none of it. I fought off the ice panthers with my bare hands right next to him back in that hollow glacier, and I remembered everything crystal clear.
"Did I?" was his only reply. Then he lapsed into intolerable silence. Ever since our triumphant return, Crazy Henry had been somewhat withdrawn, not to say gnomic, in his dealings with me. Certainly a man changes after he has lived on nothing but icicles and frozen lichen for weeks at a time; but I always credited Crazy Henry with an unbeatable ebullience that would keep him happy-go-lucky all his life. But nowadays he would smile cryptically and remain quiet like Buddha, instead of caroming around like a Jerry Lewis movie. I missed the old Crazy Henry. 
"You've changed" I told him quietly.
"Have I?" he replied. Then he went back to his silent brooding.

I didn't see him again for several months while I dictated my "as told to" book to a retired journalist from the New York Times. He got the thing edited and to the publisher in record time, and I fully expected to have a bestseller on my hands by Arbor Day. But then the PETA people got wind of the ice panther episode and began agitating against me and the book -- so, as far as I know, it's never going to see the light of day. Thanks a lot, Ethical People. 

And then one day as I was taking a walk in Van Cleve Park I saw Crazy Henry sitting on a bench, feeding popcorn to the birds.
"I don't think that's very healthy for 'em" I said as I sat down next to him. "The popcorn expands inside their guts and they get constipated or something."
"You're thinking of chickens eating grit" he said to me. Then smiled that old silly smile of his at me -- and I knew that my old Crazy Henry was back.

In the following weeks we tried to invent dehydrated dill pickles in Crazy Henry's kitchen -- the market for such an item was bound to be tremendous. Or so Crazy Henry thought, and I was happy to go along with him, since I really like dill pickles. But in the end you really couldn't tell our invention from dill pickle flavored potato chips, so we gave up on it. And then it happened . . . 

"Did you know that trombones have been known to sneeze?" Crazy Henry asked me as we were watching Teen Titans Go on Cartoon Network. 
"Aha!" I jumped up from the couch, waggling my finger triumphantly in his face. "Aha" I repeated, suddenly losing my enthusiasm for the whole subject, deflated and exhausted. "Do they?" I said quietly, then lapsed into a gnomic silence -- wishing with all my soul that we were watching some original Tom and Jerry cartoons instead of Teen Titans Go. The animation today is cretinous, and the humor completely referential and isolating. An idea came to me.

"Hey" I said to Crazy Henry. "I bet you could do a better job at making cartoons than these guys . . ."



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Friday, November 1, 2019

Verses from Stories in Today's Washington Post -- Trump is changing his residence from NYC to Florida. ‘Good riddance,’ New Yorkers say. -- Trump abandons proposing ideas to curb gun violence after saying he would following mass shootings -- Think you’re anonymous online? A third of popular websites are ‘fingerprinting’ you.




@ReisThebault

The Big Apple sighs with relief
as they lose Commander-in-Chief.
In Florida, pain
as that hurricane
arrives -- causing nothing but grief.

**************************
@jdawsey1


The President derives no fun
from any kind of smoking gun.
His people want him to prepare
to go to Congress and forswear;
And so there's little time to strive
to banish any forty-five.

*********************************
@geoffreyfowler

Think you're snug with firewall,
that all hackers you can maul?
Are you sure your info's safe
and secure from pry and strafe?
Maybe you should moan and wince
over cyber fingerprints
that your phone or your pc
gives to that big company
that will haunt you with their ads
and so many sly doodads
that before you can say 'boo'
make you feel like stomach flu.
If you would be off the grid,
denude yourself just like a squid
and dive to depths where CNN
cannot find you out again.