Wednesday, September 30, 2020

From a Legal Perspective.

 





"From a legal perspective they can't prove anything"
said my lawyer.
I was sitting on top of the Chrysler Building,
where I had found sanctuary 
from the Anti-Foofery mob
that was hounding me
into an early grave.

My lawyer, Jim Dick Henderson
('JD' to his friends),
was hovering nearby
seated in an autogyro.

"Can I come down yet?"
I asked him.
It had been several days
since I'd changed socks.

Without saying a word
he grabbed a hold of me
and we descended into the
busy streets of Chicago.

"That was a fast trip"
I told him.
"Anything for a client"
he replied.
Then he was gone 
in a cloud of perfume.

Left to my own devices
I decided to visit a fake
museum.
Not a museum that displayed
fakes, but a building
pretending to be a museum.
It's all the rage in the Midwest.

I walked into a post office,
which looked pretty fake to me.
"What kind of fake museum is this?"
I asked the lady clerk,
who looked so bored
her cheeks were concave.
"Cash or card?" she asked.

I left after buying a t-shirt,
a cap, and a snow globe.
But by then the Anti-Foofery 
goons had located me again.
So I ran down a dark alley,
looking for a dead end.

When they caught up to me
I began spitting sunflower seed 
husks
at them, like a machine gun.
That disoriented them enough
for me to cloud their minds
and walk right through them
to safety.
I can do that when I take
my vitamins.

From Chicago
it was a hop, skip, and a 
jump
to San Francisco --
where I varnish swimming pools.
And all the Anti-Foofery boys
around here have been burned up 
in the wildfires. 






The Excellent Vines

 



These are excellent vines.

They come from America.

Won't you buy some?

They are resilient and versatile.

So fine for mushroom baskets.

So strong for welcome mats.

So loyal to make flags with.

Please buy my vines.

My master will beat me

if I don't sell them all

by sundown.

Every strand comes from America.

America! Where there is freedom

to grow and fruit like a vine.

America! Great farmers who

grow rich from their fat soil.

America! Where the mailman

delivers your vote.

You can burn these vines

in your stove.

For warmth, or to heat stew.

They are very aromatic.

And lucky, too.

Tie one around your

true love's neck,

and they will never stray.

If you will buy my excellent vines

I will throw in this 

excellent 

red plastic bucket.

For free.

See, the sun is setting.

I don't want to be beaten again.

In America, I think,

they just throw these vines

in the trash.

And no one gets beaten. 

Monday, September 28, 2020

Silly Sketches. Monday Sept 28.

 

I shoulda stood in bed.





"They did WHAT with my mail in ballot?"







"I'm not wearing it because of the virus; I'm wearing it because I'm ANTIFA!"






"Oh, I thought you said be a Scream Player . . . "






"I'm the inspiration for Shaw's 'Arms and the Man'."






"Sure, I've considered being a vegan -- have you considered being a spider?"




Experiments in Collage. Vol. 27

 






Sunday, September 27, 2020

Crazy Henry Goes to Minnesota.

 



"I got a funny story about Groucho Marx" said Crazy Henry one Sunday afternoon, trying to cheer me up.

Ever since I'd lost my job and got evicted I had lived in his spare bedroom, and I felt bad about it. I recognized his kindly attempt to sweep my gloom under his dusty rug, so I glanced up at him from the sofa, where I was stringing horse chestnuts, and tried to listen.

"See, it was during World War Two, and Groucho was in his front yard in Beverly Hills . . . "

That was all I could take. 

"Beverly Hills!" I interrupted. "Don't talk to me of mansions and movie stars when there's nothing for me to do but string these damn horse chestnuts together to make a few measly bucks a day!"

"But, see, Groucho was working in his flower garden, cuz . . . "

I stood up. I had made up my mind.

"I'm going home" I told Crazy Henry.

"You don't got a home; you got kicked out" he began, but I cut him off.

"I mean back to my roots in Minnesota. Our roots, really, since you grew up there too."

"Oh. What are you gonna do there?"

"We have family and friends; they'll help me find a sense of myself again!" I said, melodramatically. I was immediately ashamed of my histrionics.

"Sorry" I said to Crazy Henry. "You're the best friend I can ever have. But I gotta do something -- I'm going crazy just sitting around here!"

"Well, then" said Crazy Henry, "let's go together. I might as well visit the old gang too!"


So on Monday we left for Red Wing, with Crazy Henry generously paying all our expenses, to look at the graveyard where our grandparents and great grandparents were buried. I felt a great bond with mine -- eking out a pallid existence as street car conductors, potato boilers, and county clerks. Crazy Henry spoiled my mood by trying to finish his Groucho story:

"So it was World War Two, see, and Groucho was working in his flower garden cuz there was no help available cuz everyone was drafted, right? Then this lady . . . "

I walked away from him, rather abruptly. I guess rather rudely, too. I wanted to think about where I came from and where I was and where I could be going. My parents had moved to Duluth and been killed in a combination tsunami and avalanche during the winter. What had their lives mattered? What did my life matter?


"Let's go see the old high school up in Minneapolis" I told him.

But when we got there we didn't go in. The place had been turned into something called a 'Business Center' where entrepreneurs could rent office space and conference rooms. We drove by our old childhood homes, across the street from each other. They both had new siding, and AstroTurf in the front yard.

"Let's go to Little Tokyo in Dinkytown" I told him. "Maybe a good cheap meal there will give us the resolve our parents once had."

At the restaurant Crazy Henry tried to finish his Groucho story.

"So anyway, this lady walks by and sees Groucho working in his flower garden, and thinks, y'know, that he's the gardener or something, so she . . . "

Just then Wendy Ling stopped at our table to say hi. Both Crazy Henry and I had a crush on her during high school. Now she was a doctor working at the Children's Hospital at the University of Minnesota. She was really happy to see us, but we didn't ask her to join us; her language was something awful. Somehow she had acquired an English accent. And she used the F-word in every other sentence, to tell us how f-king happy she was to see us, and how f-king hard she worked at the hospital, and what the f-k was up with Trump and his f-king cabinet. When she finally left to start her shift, Crazy Henry and I couldn't talk -- we just shook our heads slowly back and forth, like two old oxen in tandem, mourning the loss of innocence and grace in the world.

We didn't stay much longer in Minnesota. We passed a health boutique that sold all sorts of organic energy drinks. 

"You still got all those horse chestnuts out on the patio at my place?" he asked me.

"Sure" I said.

"I bet they'd make a good energy drink! Let's go back and work on that -- we can be partners!"


Six months later our energy drink Buckeye is on shelves everywhere in the Midwest. We sold the company to Nestle for a tidy sum. I have my own apartment again, and Crazy Henry finally finished the punchline to his Groucho story:

"She doesn't pay me but I get to sleep with her."

I think he left out part of the story. 

Experiments in Collage. Vol. 26

 









Saturday, September 26, 2020

Silly Sketches. Saturday. Sept 26

 



"Amy Coney Barrett Meets Congress!"





"I've been swallowing Trump's words for four years and haven't burst yet!"





"Just close your eyes, then kiss me, and your mail in ballot will magically appear!"





"This is your brain on Trump."  






"I won't go back to school until the lunch ladies wear masks over their entire face."








"The areas marked in green are those districts voting for John Galt."


Experiments in Collage. Vol. 25

 







Today's Timericks. Saturday Sept 26. 2020.

 

Wanted for pettifogging in ten states.



More Homes Are Going Dark as Moratoriums on Utility Shut-Offs End.  (WSJ)


Curse the darkness, since the light
is turned off till check I write.
They won't give a guy a break
when there ain't no work to take.
Sure, THEY need to make a buck --
but what about my rotten luck?




Portland Prepares for Violent Showdowns, Proud Boys and Tear Gas. (NYT)

When the Proud Boys come to town
they will never fool aroun',
but get down to brass tacks quick,
making people mighty sick.
Violence in cause of "truth"
is like drinking straight vermouth;
without any moderation
it can but cause nauseation.


Thousands of Proud Boys plan to rally in Portland, setting up another clash in a combustible city.  (WaPo)


Portland surely don't deserve
such an odious hors d'oeuvre
as the Proud Boys seem to be;
neo nazi lunacy!
Why cannot they too be sorted
by the Feds and then deported?





Friday, September 25, 2020

Silly Sketches. Friday, September 25.

 


"Wait'll you see how we dress up humans when CATS take over!"





"If Johnny coughs once and Suzy sneezes twice, how many days will they be in quarantine?"







"We don't believe in wearing masks -- but then, we have bird brains."







"Yeah, I'll be Trump's running mate -- when the Pope wears a yarmulke."










"I'm sitting on my Xbox."