I am a Capitol Rioter.
I was there, in the middle of things,
when it all went down.
I thought I was doing the right thing.
Now . . . I'm not so sure.
It all started innocently enough.
I was sitting on a butt-sprung couch
in my neighborhood used book store,
glancing through Goldwater's
"Conscience of a Conservative"
when the calico cat on the counter
said clearly and distinctly to me:
"You're needed in Washington
to knock some sense into Congress."
The next day I was on the bus
to Washington, District of Columbia.
When I got there I found kindred souls
gathered outside the Smithsonian,
chanting and waving placards that read:
WE ARE NOT AMUSED.
I can't say there was any one person
or persons who organized our march;
to me it appeared completely spontaneous
and undirected. I was actually
headed down the street to get a hamburger
when the crowd surged towards Capital Hill,
and I was forced to go along.
I didn't really want to topple that
marble bust of Thomas Jefferson in
the Rotunda. Or throw granola bars
at departing legislators.
But everyone else was doing it.
So I went along.
It seemed to be my patriotic duty.
Bunker Hill all over again.
But the next day,
when reports started to circulate
that we were all being branded
as 'terrorists' and would be
hunted down and prosecuted
by the FBI,
I left town and moved to
a foreign country where my
hefty bank account assures me
complete anonymity.
And I help baby sea turtles hatching
during the full moon to make
it safely into the ocean.
That is an activity that gives me
peace and assurance of life's
basic goodness.
I'm beginning to think
that calico cat was
all wet.