Monday, November 11, 2019

Postcards to the President








Rash Judgement

Image result for book of mormon



"For behold, the same that judgeth rashly shall be judged rashly again . . . "
Mormon 8:19

We push for judgement and condemn
so rashly that I fear
real justice has been sacrificed,
replaced by shallow jeer.
Help me to judge another, or myself,
with cool restraint,
so when I'm called before thy bar
I'll stand without a taint! 



Sunday, November 10, 2019

Dead Tourists




@RCPaddock


I had to ask dead tourists
what they thought of all the strife
around the Lake of Toba,
now that they had disowned life.

They drifted down to meet me,
or they rose from out the ground;
some were dressed in whiteness,
while some others were done brown.

They sighed as they commingled
and recalled the leaky boat
that ended their brief holiday
because it didn't float.

They bade me take a message
back to Bataks and all others,
to government officials
and their sisters and their mothers:

"Don't worry about Santa caps
or pigs while it's today.
No fatwa ever helped a man
to find a better way!"

"We can tell you from our graves
that peace and purity
depend less on decorum
and much more on charity!"

"Learn to love thy neighbor
or you'll find a heavy hand
is laid upon you constantly
in ev'ry Promised Land!"

And then their souls went back unto
the depths, or heights, again.
And I was left to ponder
on the silliness of men.

No matter our religion
or our prejudices rife,
if we don't work at stopping hate
we'll have no afterlife . . . 

(from an article in the NYT:  Indonesia Wants 'Halal Tourism.' But Some Want to Wrestle Pigs.)

The highlight of a two-day festival near Indonesia’s Lake Toba is a contest in which blindfolded men and boys try to catch a piglet.

A pound of lambs



"Give me a pound of lambs" said the short balding man in the brown leather coat.
He was standing in my kitchen while I ate a ham salad sandwich. I hadn't seen him come in.
I was resigned more than surprised or angry at his appearance; my wife refuses to let me lock the doors. She is from North Dakota, where it's against the law to install a domestic deadbolt. So we get all sorts of lunatics seeping into our place.
I did not feel the need to respond to the short balding man in the brown leather coat. He, apparently, did not feel the need to repeat his request. It was a standoff, then. I ate my sandwich, he stood there -- all five-foot-two of him.

When my wife came in I was drinking a glass of horchata. The short balding man in the brown leather coat gave her a start.
"Cripes!" she yelled.
"Give me a pound of lambs" said the man.
"Who's this?" she asked me.
"Dunno" I said, rinsing my glass in the sink. "He showed up while I was eating my lunch. I didn't offer him anything to eat, by the way."
"What's his name?" she asked me, her mouth forming an unpleasant moue.
"Dunno" I said as I wiped down the counter top. "I'm not encouraging him with inquiries." 
"Give me a pound of lambs" said Shorty, as I had decided to call him. His voice was neither irritating nor soothing. Everything about him invited a mild dyslexia.
I offered to make Suzy, my wife, a ham salad sandwich, but she silently pulled a container of yogurt out of the fridge and sat next to me spooning it into her mouth. I could sense she wanted to tell me something unpleasant. 

"Give me a pound of lambs." I noticed Shorty's shoelaces were untied, and frayed. I wondered if he would leave if I asked him to leave. Well, I wouldn't ask him. It was Suzy's bright idea to keep the house unlocked; she could ask him to leave, or fly to the moon, or whatever she wanted.

My back suddenly started to itch. My skin is very dry this time of year. I keep a bamboo backscratcher in the kitchen for dry skin emergencies, so I was vigorously reaching for the sweet spot with it when Suzy told me she had bought a mirror online for six-hundred dollars. 

I immediately had to drop my backscratcher and leave the house, so I wouldn't say unruly and crude things to her. I left my phone behind. Shorty followed me out the kitchen door. I felt sucker-punched. 

We walked to my brother's sign painting shop. He wasn't there, but his assistant let me sit in his office and doodle on some canvas with an old dowel and a bucket of black paint. I should have told him to keep Shorty out, but didn't have enough interest in my own privacy to make the request.

"Give me a pound of lambs." I felt sorely tempted to flick Shorty with some black paint. Then it occurred to me that maybe he was married, too. Maybe he had to run away because his wife had bought a sheep farm. Maybe his wife ate nothing but yogurt, as well. Maybe he was unhappy with himself because he was unhappy with himself. But probably he was just a reiterating imbecile caught in my drift. He symbolized nothing about me, and we had nothing in common. I have always despised brown leather coats. 

My brother came back pretty upset. Our mother was dying, he told me. She was in the hospital right now, tubes running in and out of her, and dying and asking for us. 

"Give me a pound of lambs." 

"Who the hell is that?" my brother asked me.

"My wife's uncle" I said, feeling avenged. 

"Well, c'mon -- we'll take my truck to the hospital. What about the uncle?"

"Oh, he might as well go with us" I said airily. My brother just shook his head and pulled brushes and stepladders out of his truck to make room for us in the cab. 

Mom was pretty bad. Her wrinkled skin lay on her like rows of yarn. Her eyes were gummy. She could talk, but she didn't want to talk. I wanted to hold her hand but she had so many tubes and things attached to both of them that all I could do was pat her on the shoulder. 

"Is she going?" I asked the doctor. He said yes, it could happen pretty soon now. So my brother and I sat in her room amidst all the half-eaten casserole dishes sent by her neighbors, waiting and sniffing.

"That one must be apple cobbler" said my brother, pointing to a white ceramic dish.

"That's gotta be tuna fish casserole" I said, pointing to the tin foil container on the window sill. "I wish someone would push it out."

"Give me a pound of lambs." I'd forgotten Shorty was there. Now was definitely the time to give him the old heave-ho. I buzzed for the nurse. At the sound of Shorty's voice Mom tried to sit up; we helped her.

"Charlie, is that you?" she said weakly. "Is that you, Charlie? I knew you'd come back for me!" She lay back, tears streaming down her face. 

The nurse came in and said "Yes, what is it?"

"My father wants a pound of lambs" I told her.  

  


Saturday, November 9, 2019

Verses from Stories in Today's New York Times ** Why Pete Buttigieg Annoys His Democratic Rivals ** Remember Family Films? Disney Plus Is Making ’Em Like They Used To ** Spyware Maker NSO Promises Reform but Keeps Snooping.




@llerer  @reidepstein

A small town mayor has become
a Democrat contender;
he's brushing others to the side,
despite their cash and gender.
His last name is a garbled skein
that nobody can utter --
unless you've had a couple snorts,
or grew up with a stutter.
He's harvesting the sour grapes
to make a vintage rare --
and if he wins the White house
he will make the Maltese stare!

****************************
@brooksbarnesNYT


Sure I want some fam'ly films
to keep my kids enthralled.
Something without sex or drugs
or things from rocks that crawled.
But puppy dogs and pixie dust
just ain't my cup of tea;
so while the kids watch Disney Plus,
it's a Mortal Kombat spree . . . 

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

@vindugoel  @nicoleperlroth
All the world's a stage, y'know,
the audience don't leave;
there's always someone snooping
and then laughing up their sleeve.
Companies are promising
no spyware will they make;
and if you do believe that
I've got water you can rake. 



Postcards to Senator Mitt Romney






Verses from Stories in Today's Washington Post ** Mulvaney asks to join lawsuit over conflicting demands for impeachment testimony ** India’s Supreme Court clears way for a Hindu temple at country’s most disputed religious site ** For migrants giving up on Europe, Greece offers a way out: Voluntary deportation.




@D_Hawk

When you're being pulled in two,
and you don't know what to do,
just repeat this simple phrase:
"Who is it my wages pays?"
This will help you to decide
what to tell, and what to hide.

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

@jslaternyc

I think it is extremely odd
the violence we use for God.
As if He needed flesh and bone
to suffer, weep, and always moan.
I think that most religious views
are just a dark satanic ruse
to keep us bickering until
we forget about God's will.
In India or Amsterdam
theology is mostly sham.

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

@chicoharlan

Oh, those crafty refugees!
They come and go just as they please.
First they're here and then they're there,
and we get stuck with paying fare!
Why don't they stay put like I do?
I'm satisfied to sit and stew.
Back home they say is terror, yes --
but they don't know the IRS.
Each country has its own designs
for driving us out of our minds . . . 


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Postcards to the President







Friday, November 8, 2019

Verses from Stories in Today's New York Times -- Happy Friday! What if You Always Had It Off? Why Don’t You? -- Bolton Knows About ‘Many Relevant Meetings’ on Ukraine, Lawyer Says -- Trump Rules Out Complete Rollback of China Tariffs as Talks Continue.




@NirajC

Ah, to work four days a week!
Life would ne'er then look so bleak.
Three day weekends in supply
for long naps or some bonsai.
Friday is a waste just now;
no one comes in anyhow.
Think if Monday, too, were gone;
we would face a brighter dawn!

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

@peterbakernyt

Mr. Bolton's playing coy;
he is such a clever boy.
Does he know enough to harm,
or is he just full of smarm?
Guess we'll never know, unless
he decides to up and 'fess. 

****************************
@arappeport

Sweet and sour is our boss;
sometimes happy, sometimes cross.
Even China can't predict
are they winning, are they licked.
He might give them breaks galore,
or produce a mighty roar.
Trump can never much decide . . . 
is he Jekyll, is he Hyde?








Verses from Stories in Today's Washington Post -- House GOP looks to protect Trump by raising doubts about motives of his deputies -- Book by ‘Anonymous’ describes Trump as cruel, inept and a danger to the nation -- Commerce Department aides knew Alabama hurricane forecasters were not responding to Trump, but still rebuked them.




@karoun @rachaelmbade

When the people make a fuss,
throw your staff beneath the bus.
One by one they walk the plank,
so your record stays a blank.
This is how you operate
if your mind is second-rate. 

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

@PhilipRucker

Anonymous, anonymous;
that word is sure synonymous
with sneaks and cheats and cowards, too,
who don't want their name you to view.
Such books, without a nom de plume,
have no place in a good newsroom.

***************************************
@capitalweather  @afreedma

Let's confess that when it rains
the White House man ain't got much brains;
he forecasts weather like a schnook
and never elocution took --
so when he prates of hurricanes
you'd best put on your tire chains,
cuz it gets deep and if you squawk --
or if you don't -- you'll get a knock.