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~ Finding, formulating and solving life's frustrations.

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Tag Archives: USA

Joy or Hate?

21 Monday Oct 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, poetry

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Tags

Democracy, life, poem, poetry, politics, truth, USA

Swaying, braying, 

Faker-praying, 

Nasty to the bone.

He’s all alone. 

It’s sad. It’s bad. 

His twig was turned.

Daddy spurned. 

I grant it’s sad:

Just a lad;

Criminal dad.

(What will you tell your kids?)

Happened often down through time. 

Many turn themselves to crime.

Many never blessed with love

Meet each chance with slap and shove.  

It’s still a person’s moral choice;

How to use their given voice:

To love and soothe and sing.

Or grab some slime to sling.

Choose to show some class;

Or choose to grind up glass.

Love to build things up;

Or choose to shoot your pup.

To work by hauling ass, 

Or “work” by kissing ass.

(Which will you teach your kids?)

Not slightly different points of view.

Not this time. Red and Blue:

Teams you root for by tradition.

One of them is sick sedition.

Putrid smiles and opts for war. 

Rotten to his selfish core. 

(How will you tell your kids?)

History knows how Hitler died.

The selfish path’s not one to ride.

The cancerous growth of endless greed. 

A poison plague; a cruelty creed. 

It always leads at last to hell.

It never shows a winning bell.

(Who’s a model for your kids?)

(AI-generated image)

Spewing lies to foment rage

Builds instead a lethal cage.

The toll is always huge indeed: 

Farms and cities lost in weed.

Broken lives and busted heads.

Lice and fleas infest your beds.

(What will you tell your kids?)

Lives are lost and no-one gains.

Loves turn frost; broken brains. 

All so ‘Shroom can feel complete;

Putrid can avoid defeat.

Wealthy whiners wave their hands;

Hope the poor will be their fans.

Folks at last will see what’s true.

Wealthy whiners aren’t for you.

They want to play you like a Uke.

Even if it means they nuke

You to oblivion.

And play pretend accordion.

(Will you have a chance to tell your kids?)

Do not fall this fall for Fake.

Do not vote for Karrion Lake.

Do not vote for Traitor Trump

Demented man, born rich—a Grump.

The Kremlin’s chosen Cheerless Chump.

Everyone’s fault—except his own.

Seldom smiles; he’ll often moan.

Toddler’s soul in body grown.

(What do you tell your kids?)

If following fools is fine for you;

Think of what your kids must do. 

A model that is far from sane? 

A man so small—demented brain? 

A rapist and convicted felon—

A painted orange musky melon.

Mindless, heartless, spineless prat;

A seedless, heedless, autocrat. 

(Is he the model for your kids?)

————————————

Author Page on Amazon

The Orange Man

The Mango Mussolini

Essays on America: The Game

The Ailing King of Agitate

The Truth Train

Three Blind Mice

Stoned Soup

Donnie gets a Hamster

My Cousin Bobby

Where does your Loyalty Lie?

Absolute is not just a Vodka

Guernica

A Civil War there Never Was

The Crows and Me

Listen to my Siren Song

All that we have Lost

Cancer Always Loses in the End

The Loud Defense of Untenable Positions

The Declaration of Interdependence

The Joy

Roar, Ocean, Roar

Dance of Billions

Life Will Find a Way

How the Nightingale Learned to Sing

The Best Restaurant in Town

15 Tuesday Oct 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, fiction, story

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Tags

Democracy, fiction, food, life, politics, restaurants, story, truth, USA

(AI generated image above)

“Donnie’s Restaurant,” located in the town center of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, began business in 1854, a quarter of a century before Franklin Winfield Woolworth opened his first five and dime store in 1879. Of course, back then, it wasn’t called “Donnie’s Restaurant.” It was originally called “George’s” named after the original proprietor, George Oglethorpe Parsons. Lancaster was originally named “Hickory Town.” Indeed, for many years, a stately grove of shagbarks abutted the estate upon which George decided to open his general store and tavern. 

Photo by Eduardo Krajan on Pexels.com

If we now fast forward (and who, these days, doesn’t love to fast forward?) to 1985, the name was changed to “Donnie’s Restaurant” by one of George Parsons’s descendants Donnie Parsons. Donnie continued many of the Restaurant’s traditions, including hickory nut pancakes with real maple syrup and local butter; beans and franks in homemade basil tomato sauce; and a one pound serving of prime rib. The prime rib came from local Holsteins. Though not officially “organic,” both beef and butter were free from toxic concentrations of antibiotics and pesticides. 

In the summer of 2015, the restaurant changed hands again and for the first time, the proprietor bore no known blood relationship to the earlier owners. Nonetheless, as luck would have it, his name was also “Donald” so he decided to keep the name “Donnie’s Restaurant” as well as the “Pennsylvania Dutch” architecture fused with Italianate features.

The restaurant’s popularity grew under the new owner during the first few months. He kept the traditional dishes and promised to lower prices considerably as soon as possible. He also promised that he would increase the salaries of the cooks and waiters as soon as economically feasible. He fired most of the servers and replaced them with more attractive women.

(AI generated image above)



If one had judged the success of the restaurant by Donnie’s residence, one would have concluded that the restaurant was doing quite well indeed. Donnie found it expedient to cut costs by replacing some of the daily and weekly cleaning routines of the former owners with well-timed bribes for the health inspectors. At first, the bribing was initially more expensive but Donnie recorded the health inspector’s bribe-taking which reduced the necessary fee considerably. 

Donnie kept the menu unchanged although he found ways to save more money by replacing the most absurdly expensive ingredients. For example, Donnie’s famous hickory nut pancakes were still listed that way on the menu, but instead of paying a fortune for hand-picked hickory nuts, he bought walnuts in bulk from China. Instead of paying a fortune for locally produced butter, he bought butter in bulk from India. Instead of using real maple syrup, he found that most people could not distinguish it from “Aunt Jemima’s” provided he simply ordered staff to pour the sugar syrup into a serving container that was labelled “100% pure Vermont Maple Syrup.”

(AI generated image above)

 

By greatly reducing the cost of hygiene and ingredients, Donnie had the option of raising wages or lowering prices or both. He decided it would be more prudent however, to increase profits. After all, Donnie found that if one promised to lower prices and increase wages, it worked nearly as well as actually doing it. This is particularly true if one promises with passion and sincerity. 

Despite all the time and effort Donnie put into the restaurant, he found that after several months, fewer people actually went to the restaurant. There were still a large group of faithful customers who showed up on a regular basis, but he was not attracting any new clientele and even the faithful didn’t always show up. Donnie considered spending money on an advertising campaign but decided it was too expensive. Instead, he launched his own anti-advertising campaign aimed at discouraging people from dining at other local restaurants. He wrote letters to the editor. He dropped hints in conversation. He privately told several of his staff members that if they wanted to keep their jobs, they had better join in with his whispering campaign. 

A local diner was said to be adding rat turds to bulk up their pecan pie. A fried chicken house went bankrupt from continual reports of Salmonella poisoning despite the fact that there were no actual cases of Salmonella. A sandwich shop, famous for its sourdough bread, had to close doors because one of the bakers had been “caught” urinating in the dough. This too was an out and out lie, but, more importantly, from Donnie’s perspective, it cut his competitor’s business in half. The local “Ponderosa Steakhouse” was said to be using horse meat instead of beef. Again, although completely unfounded, this persistent rumor cut their business in half. 

It worked! As the number of options for restaurant-goers diminished, more business returned to Donnie’s. To celebrate the uptick in business, he painted a lot of gold trim on the doors to the restrooms which were newly labelled “Women ONLY” and “Men ONLY.” He found other ways to cut costs. For inspiration, he needed to search no further than his own smear campaigns. He bulked up his pies with rat turds. He told his chefs to save time by not cleaning cutting boards between cutting raw chickens and preparing fresh vegetables. He substituted horse meat for prime beef. Initially, these changes increased his margins and he was happy. 

These changes, however, did not go completely unnoticed by his customers. Let’s zoom in for a moment (and who, these days, doesn’t love to zoom?) to a couple of long-term customers of “Donnie’s Restaurant” as they sit in their kitchen and contemplate dinner plans.

(AI generated image above)

Mildred sighed and banged the cupboard shut. She peered over at Gerald whose brow furrowed as convoluted and hateful as an Alito decision rationale. He grunted a single syllable: “Well?” Mildred sighed again and tip-toed across the kitchen to the table and sat beside him. 

“We have no pasta, Ger. Sorry. We haven’t been to “Donnie’s” for a while. On the way home, I could run in to Walmart & grab some pasta for tomorrow. Doesn’t a prime rib sound good? You used to love them.” 

Gerald grunted. “Yeah. I dunno. Lately, their steaks and prime rib haven’t been as good. Tough. I think maybe they overcook them. I dunno. Also, they replaced their home fries with whipped potatoes but they kind of suck. I think they may be powdered.” 

Mildred nodded and bit her lip. “Funny you say that. I used to like the meatloaf. But lately, it has tasted…I dunno…off somehow.”

Gerald peered up at the ceiling and once again thought about what could possibly be causing the ever-widening stain. He shook his head slightly and thought, I’ll deal with that later. First things first. Gerald said, “Well, it can’t really be that different. After all, it’s got the same menu and the same name.”

Mildred and Gerald sat in silence for a few moments before Gerald said, “Not much else in town these days. Such a string of gross stuff. You could stand to lose a few pounds anyway. How ‘bout we just go have a couple slices of pie and a cup of coffee? Skip the main course? What say?” 

“That sounds good, actually. Hard to mess up a pie, after all.” 

Hard, but not impossible. 

Unlikely as it might seem, most people don’t care much for the taste of rat feces. Sure, Donald had the chef throw in loads of extra sugar but it didn’t completely obscure the vermin taste. Privately, neither Mildred nor Gerald cared at all for their desserts. An observer wouldn’t guess that from their conversation however.

Photo by Element5 Digital on Pexels.com



“You’re pickin’ at your pie, Mildred. Any good?”

“Oh, fine. Yeah, it’s fine. I should have ordered pecan, I think. I generally like pumpkin, but I think this whole season, I’ve been close to ODing on pumpkin spice. How’s yours?” 

“Um. Great. Really. Not like I remember it when gramma used to make peach pie. She got fresh peaches from the Farmer’s Market. Can’t expect the same from canned fruit, I suppose. But it’s good. Yeah. I’m not all that hungry.” 

“Yeah.”

“Yeah.” 

“Donnie’s” became popular with tourists who wanted to see “what all the outsized complaints were about.” Tourists soon found out for themselves that the various reviews they have read were not exaggerations. The service was terrible. The prices never fell but continued to rise. The ingredients were low quality and having them put together haphazardly by inept cooks didn’t really help much. Still, it was fun to watch “Crazy Donald” come storming out of the kitchen and swear at the servers, the busboys, the hostess, and often, even the customers. Although neither Mildred nor Gerald liked the food, they were not disappointed when it came to the show. Sure enough, right before they paid their bill, Donnie stormed out through one of the kitchen’s swinging doors and knocked a large tray of drinks smashing onto the floor. He ignored his bleeding employee and screamed at no-one in particular:

“What the hell do you mean, it’s not good! It tastes good to me! What the hell’s wrong with you people! I’ll tell you what’s wrong! You’ve had your sense of taste destroyed by fast food and TV dinners and foreign sushi and pho soup and sauerkraut and some of those foreign restaurants even serve raw shark and cooked dog! If you don’t like my food, just leave! Give the receptuous, the receptive, the velocitoraptor! Damn! Whaddayacallit.  The bitch. Give the bitch your credit card number and I give you double your money back.” 

(AI generated image above)

Mildred and Gerald smiled at each other. Fifty bucks for two pieces of pie and coffee? Seriously overpriced, but the show was worth it they both thought (and, these days, who doesn’t like a good show?) 

At least they had thought the show was worth it until they awoke around midnight and spent the wee hours alternating between diarrhea and vomiting. (These days, very few people enjoy the consequences of doing business with a liar). 

—————

Author Page on Amazon

The Orange Man

Stoned Soup

Three Blind Mice

The Ailing King of Agitate

The Ballad of the Ballot

The Truth Train

The Crows and Me

A Civil War there Never Was

Donnie Boy Gets a Hamster

Donnie’s Last Gift

Plans for US; some GRUesome

Essays on America: The Game

Interview with a Giant Slug

Listen to my Siren Song

The Pandemic Anti-Academic

Fish have no Word for “Water”

Where does your Loyalty Lie?

You Bet Your Life 

Roar, Ocean, Roar

Dance of Billions

The Ant

14 Monday Oct 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, apocalypse, poetry, satire

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Democracy, life, poem, poetry, politics, truth, USA

Photo by Egor Kamelev on Pexels.com

Consider if you will: Ubiquity of Ant

Except, ironically, for Antarctica, the Ant

Is nearly everywhere and feculant!

Not billions only, like their larger cousin “Ignorant.”

Twenty quadrillion strong; they’re teeny, giant, valiant.

Photo by u0413u043bu0435u0431 u041au043eu0440u043eu0432u043au043e on Pexels.com

They rush about so jubilant & radiant.

Communicants rely on signals redolant. 

Perhaps there’s no philosoph-ant named Kant. 

Or Einstein Ant, I freely grant. 

(AI created image)

But colony becomes a brain significant

That might outthink the Homo Sapiant.

Perhaps in years to come—the ape so flippant—

With greed outsized and flagrant?

No longer extant. Instead? All extinct-ophant. 

(AI generated image)

And yet I find myself incredulant

We’d toss away our freedom to a mendicant

A tyrant, gyrant, sycophant

A pig disguised as elephant—

A felon, cheat, assaulto-phant; 

A coward; Putin’s supplicant. 

(AI generated image)

I’d think instead we’d drop the orange deviant;

Forgo the hateful bully Cheeto-ant;

Remember we’re a nation immigrant.

Vote the party Kamalant—she’s both good and competant.

Author Page on Amazon

The Ailing King of Agitate

Essays on America: The Game

Absolute is not just a vodka

A Civil War there never was

Guernica

The Stopping Rule

What about the Butter Dish

The Broken Times

At Least He’s Our Monster

The Orange Man

Stoned Soup

Three Blind Mice

Where does your loyalty lie?

The Update Problem

Happy Talk Lies

Wednesday

Labelism

You Bet your Life

Roar, Ocean, Roar

Dance of Billions

The Most Insistent Bark

09 Wednesday Oct 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, pets, Sadie

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Democracy, dogs, life, politics, story, truth, USA

Our dog Sadie barks in many circumstances. She barks if someone comes to the door. Or—until recently—she also barks if someone comes to a door on the TV. She barks if we bring up the topic of a “N-E-W—D-O-G-G-I-E” (Hence, the spelling). She likes to sniff nearby trucks. If there’s a person inside, she ignores them. Unless, they open the door, that is. If that happens, she barks and lunges, though her tail is wagging the whole time. I don’t think she’d “attack” someone unless Wendy or I were put at risk. 

Sometimes, she has barked to be let out to go potty, though now, she simply comes and stares at me while sending the thought that she has to go *big* potty! On our walks, for instance, she barked at someone’s (heretofore unseen and unsniffed) Halloween decoration. She barked because a traffic cone had fallen over. 

Nonetheless, she is far less of a barker than many dogs I’ve observed. 

Her barks, like my words, can be uttered with varying degrees of insistence and urgency. In fact, I hear a rumor that practiced orators can even lie with sincerity and passion. The closest Sadie has come to “lying” is that she barks insistently—hard to distinguish from a “I have to go potty” bark. What she often wants is attention. She’s okay with playing tug, or hide the dragon, or ball in the hallway. Of course, she’s always game for a walk. She doesn’t want to be ignored while we watch news or a series on TV. Even when the movie features a dog, she doesn’t think that counts as “paying her some attention.” (Though she does usually watch those segments). 

Today, however, came the most insistent bark ever. I thought I had seen the top of the Bark Scale, but no. What I had heard before was a “6” on the newly discovered ten point scale.

Here is how it happened. We were in the back garden playing ball (off leash). I was picking up the six squeaky balls for another round when suddenly, the air was split with Sadie’s previously undisclosed 10-bark. At the same time, she stood at attention. And then she charged up the stairs toward the house. (“Flew up the stairs” actually, but I didn’t think anyone would believe me.)

As I tried to catch up with Sadie, several possibilities ran through my mind. Was there an actual intruder? Did a coyote or even a puma come on to the property? Or, was it just my wife coming out onto the deck? 

I turned the corner and saw the trigger. Our cat Shadow was outside on the deck. Sadie insistently “herded” her back inside. The door to the back deck had been left ajar. By me. Not a puny little jam jar, understand; a dill pickle jar. I came up the stairs but Sadie had already solved the problem and ran inside to follow up with Shadow on the scope of her transgressions. I thanked her. 

This is not something that we “trained Sadie to do.” Maybe she found that Shadow’s being somewhere new offended her sensibility in the same way that she objected to our neighbors putting up Halloween decorations without checking with her first. But no. Her bark and physical attitude were much more severe, insistent, and loud! 

I had the impression that she sensed that the cats were not to go outside. She had certainly heard us say that in various ways. She had also observed me nudging Shadow back inside when she wanted to follow Sadie and me out on a neighborhood stroll. And, I often give Shadow a rationale as well. That rationale features coyotes quite prominently. Sadie may know what a coyote is. I’ve pointed one out to her once. But even Shadow knows it’s not a good thing.

(AI generated)

To fully contextualize this, I should mention that generally speaking, despite the fact that Sadie outweighs Shadow by a factor of five, Sadie seems more afraid of Shadow than vice versa. When  Sadie was a puppy, she tried playing with each cat based on the way two puppies might play together. None of the cats took kindly to these approaches and on at least a few occasions, swiped her with claws engaged. She stands up for herself if one of the cats starts to eat her food, but she isn’t nearly so aggressive as she could be. Of course, I’ve only ever observed this behavior when I’ve—er—um—-observed it. When I’m around, there is a quality to Sadie’s bark of asking for my help and I usually provide it, telling the cats not to eat Sadie’s food. 

This made it all the more remarkable that Sadie would be capable of dominating Shadow completely and herding her back into the house. 

I do put a fair amount of stock in Sadie’s evaluation of things. It depends on what the domain is. She’s notoriously bad at valuing the plants in our garden. She leaves them alone for the most part but if a ball falls into one, rather than being satisfied with simply removing the ball, she “punishes” the offending plants viciously. She’s not much good at picking stocks either. Nonetheless, today’s episode made me trust her judgement (and reactions) more. 

I certainly don’t want to play the tritest role in that most famous of all tropes for Westerns:
“Hush, Paint! There’s nobody out there in the dark woods. There’s nothing to worry about!” Want to survive? Pay attention. 

Consider me barking quite loudly. Neighing quite insistently. 

—————-

Where does your loyalty lie? 

Cancer Always Loses in the End

FREEDOM!!

Dance of Billions

Poker Chips

The Ailing King of Agitate

Three Blind Mice

Stoned Soup

My Cousin Bobby

The Orange Man

At Least he’s our Monster!

Author Page on Amazon

The Mango Mussolini

30 Monday Sep 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, poetry, politics

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

life, poem, poetry, politics, truth, USA

The Mango Musso knows a shorter cut!

Just pass it quickly on! Just pass it on! 

The Melon Felon knows a better way!

We need not trek and tote and slog along!

This longish path along the creek’s a pain!

Let’s head instead across the desert’s dunes!

It may look dry; and yet, it’s bound to rain!

He’ll tap his wand; transform to plum dessert!

We know it’s true! It can’t be lies! Oh, no!

Pass it on! He orchestrates the crowd!

He yells it very very very loud!

It must be therefore certainly true of course!

He acts so proud! He screams so loud of hate!

Inhale the toxic fumes of Agitate!

Cannot you see? The hate is clear as day!

He’s out to check and jail and then to slay!

Photo by cottonbro on Pexels.com

And once the drecks, and whacks and nerds are dead,

We just must lie and kill for Master’s sake.

It’s what he said! You see? It’s what he said!

And therefore must be good and new and true!

Photo by Anna Tarazevich on Pexels.com

It’s not my fault I lost my house!

It’s not my fault I lost my spouse!

It’s not my fault I broke my mouse!

It’s not my fault! I need to grouse!

Photo by Skitterphoto on Pexels.com

It can’t be Greeds who stole my gold!

How could they ever be that cold!

It must be folks from other lands!

Who eat our pets; chew rubber bands!

We’ll let Putin end the strife!

He and Felon are such friends!

They’re oh so smart and never would lie!

And ours is not to question why!

They never have to futz with friends!

“There is no truth; there’s only bends!”

And all is well! He tells us so!

Until—-

Photo by j.mt_photography on Pexels.com

Putin points out that he’s ten inches longer

And naturally that makes him oh so much stronger.

Photo by VisionPic .net on Pexels.com

And then at long last all that money we wasted

On H-bombs—It won’t be wasted any longer!

No. Instead, we’ll all get lambasted!

We get to be cooked like a turkey is basted!

The taste of death is all we tasted!

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

The Melon Felon himself once said:

“What good are nukes if we can’t even use them?!

What good are people if I can’t make them dead?

Did I mention I have the world’s smartest head?”

No more migrants! No more pets!

No more people! Everything’s solved!

Civilization at last completely dissolved!

No more jets! No more bets!

(But who could blame you?

All you needed to draw 

Were five sequential spades

And you would have won that hand).

That little hand. Who plays a one man band!

He plays an accordion of the mind.

Makes promises just as solid as sand.

Don’t seek truth! You’ll never find!

Photo by Johannes Plenio on Pexels.com

He wants to choke and each light dim

Who isn’t him or progeny.

He wears religious cloak

And wraps the flag around him.

Photo by Michael Willinger on Pexels.com

Orange you glad now you didn’t face 

The truth about His Felonious Grace?

Just swallow these lies and you will see

The painful end of all humanity!

Original drawing by Pierce Morgan

————

Where does your Loyalty Lie?

My Cousin Bobby

The Update Problem

What about the Butter Dish?

The Ailing King of Agitate

The Truth Train

The First Ring of Empathy

Plans for US; some GRUsome

The Stopping Rule

Try the Truth

The Dance of Billions

Roar, Ocean, Roar! 

The Three Blind Mice

Stoned Soup

A Profound and Utter Failure

Absolute is not just a Vodka

Author Page on Amazon

A Bearded Frog

25 Wednesday Sep 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, poetry, satire

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Democracy, poem, poetry, politics, truth, USA

Photo by Salih Altuntas on Pexels.com

It’s Jay and Dee and Gree-Viance,

He lies and spies; an ugly dance.

(Yet, only men are granted pants).

He leers and leans and haps to chance:

A Couch he sees and makes advance. 

Alas, the Couch rejects his lance.

He’s horrified! A furtive glance.

As someone groks his deviance. 

Around him, wafts weird, an ambiance— 

As though he cannot stand his stance.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

 

It’s not surprising, don’t you see?

He always backs His Trumpery.

The Mellon Felon—Treachery

Depends on JD’s flattery,

He never claims a strategy;

He cannot think coherently. 

In one born rich, some fluency

In English seems a certainty.

His speech rewards raw cruelty. 

His lies have trained credulity. 

Photo by Jose Lorenzo on Pexels.com

The pair now head for failing big. 

And one, at least, we’ll throw in brig.

The other branded as a prig. 

The judges bought by Donnie zig

And zag a willy-nilly jig. 

They’ll claim election fraud and shrig

Exploding blood beneath a wig.

A movie squib’s not hard to rig.

Yet nought can hide the vicious pig. 

A jail will host his final gig.

At end of day, his act is old.

A story sad & too much told. 

The bluster huckster plays at bold. 

Yet all our people can’t be sold

A plan of hate and blame and scold. 

The crooks will all scatter; the tents will all fold.

The joy guides our future instead of dead gold. 

Economy grows and when kindness takes hold.

The caring and comfort will now start to mold

Society working where no-one’s left cold. 

——————-

Tools of Thought

A Pattern Language for Collaboration and Cooperation

The Story of Story

The Walkabout Diaries

Donnie wants a hamster 

The Myths of the Veritas

Fifteen Properties

Author Page on Amazon

They’re eating our dogs–NOT!

24 Tuesday Sep 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, poetry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Democracy, life, poem, poetry, politics, USA

And, they’re eating our dogs!

And they’re eating our cats!

And they’re marrying hogs!

And they’re wearing their fleece!

And they’re eating our geese!

And they’re eating our rats!

My, oh, my, such a terrible shame!

They shouldn’t be able to cast their vote!

If their ancestors arrived by using a boat! 

If their ancestors came from some other place!

Not if they’re folks of some darker race! 

Or if they’re called by some novel new name! 

Only the people who look just like me!

Only the people who think just like me!

Only the people who eat what I eat!

Only the people who cheat as I cheat! 

Only the people who like what I like!

Only those folks who never will strike! 

Only the people who do what I do!

Only the people who dress as I do!

Only the people who love as I love!

Only the people who like a big shove! 

Only the people who throw and bat righty! 

Only the folks afraid of God Almighty! 

A country of one is all that I ask.

If we all hate together it’s a doable task. 

If we hide our eyes and derail our brain.

We won’t feel the witches terrible pain.

The world I want is so simple indeed. 

Described by the felon’s hate-filled screed. 

Dance of Billions

Life is a Dance

Math Class: Who are you?

My Cousin Bobby

The Three Blind Mice

Tools of Thought

The Orange Man

Stoned Soup

The Ailing King of Agitate

Author Page on Amazon

Travels with Sadie 3: Gates, Doors, & Walls

07 Saturday Sep 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, pets, politics

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Democracy, life, politics, truth, USA

“Something there is that doesn’t love a wall.” 

So begins Robert Frost’s poem, The Mending Wall. 

I was thinking about gates, doors, and walls as I went walking with Sadie on a sunny Thursday morning. We typically walk along the sides of streets. I let her wander onto the edges, but not onto other people’s yards or very far down their driveways. Often there are gates, much like our own gate. If the gate is closed and isn’t too far from the road, I often let her walk up to the gate. The gates are there both to prevent us from entering someone else’s property and to signal us not enter the property. I could, if my life depending on it, scale many of the gates, but that’s clearly asking for trouble. The gate is meant to keep people out, not as a challenge to overcome. Sadie generally couldn’t get through the bars of the gates. Of course, a gate is no barrier at all to birds, rabbits, mice, rats, lizards, snakes, raccoons, butterflies, or bees.

 

A door seems to me to offer more security than does a gate. While a gate may prevent me from entering, it’s quite easy to see through or around most gates, to hear the noise from the other side and to smell what’s on the other side. It’s true that one may listen through a door but the sound is typically muffled. Loud music or yelling creeps through to the outside but a conversation normally stays private. 

A door also helps the inside stay warmer or cooler than the outside air. A gate has no such function. 

Among places dogs leave olfactory messages for each other, boundaries are high on the list. This includes hedges, curbs, and gates. Sadie “controls herself” well now, but when she was younger, she would often pee at the boundary of a social event. Specifically, when someone—especially someone new or someone she already liked but hadn’t seen for awhile, she’d pee. She also seems to understand what I mean when I say, “Sadie, we’re going for a ride in the car. You should go pee first and then we can get in the car.” I don’t think she “parses” the sentence and accesses the meanings of all the individual words. Nonetheless, she quickly pees and then goes over to get in the car. 

A wall is a kind of transition as well. A gate is much more permeable than a wall and a door may be opened or closed or ajar. Often walls, such as castle walls have one or more gates or doors. People on one side of a wall almost always want to get to the other side, at least occasionally. At the very least, they want to be able to move information and goods from inside to outside and vice versa. 

Why walls? The walls of a house keep you in a more easily controlled environment. A wall can provide a level of protection. That’s mainly what castle walls are for. Of course, they often fail as well. Invaders climb the walls or tear down the walls or burrow under the walls until the wall collapses. Of course, castles were also subject to sieges. Eventually, the defenders inside would run out of food. Primitive machines were constructed to hurl firebrands and large rocks in to wreak havoc and kill defenders. 

The Greeks were unable to defeat the Trojans by destroying their castle. Instead, they famously made a large wooden horse as a “tribute” to the courage and tenacity of the Trojans. Overjoyed that the long siege was over, they opened the gates and led in the giant wooden horse and began to celebrate. Once everyone was drunk or sleeping, the soldiers hidden inside the horse snuck out and opened the gates to the much larger Greek army waiting outside. 

Photo by Salih Altuntas on Pexels.com

Today’s technology is much more sophisticated of course, but walls, gates, and doors still exist. The defensive capabilities now include guided missiles, aircraft, submarines, and aircraft carriers as well as the threat of nuclear retaliation. During the so-called “Cold War” America and the USSR engaged in an “arms race” to develop the best weapons and more of them. Looking back on all the wasted energy and time on both sides, I think, “Imagine what could have been done if we had instead spent all that resource on preventing climate change, curing disease, and sponsoring science and education. 

Of course, it’s not an easy problem. One side in a standoff can only stand down unilaterally if they trust the other side. Meanwhile, none of the amazing and exorbitantly expensive weapons, walls, doors, and gates we’ve developed are worth anything at all if we accept the modern Trojan Horse.



Social media, the press, the television, and nearly half of the political candidates spew misinformation on a daily, even hourly basis. We’re locked in a political race and one of the two candidates for President is himself a Trojan Horse. Like the ancient Trojans, all our walls and armaments will be useless. 

The threat to America is, in many ways, worse than the threat to ancient Troy. The Trojan Horse that endangers us? It’s a steady steam of lies designed to induce Americans to kill each other. 

No number of fighter jets; no cache of assault rifles; no armada of submarines; no hordes of fighters will save us from the Trojan Horse. The Trojan Horse is armored with something far more powerful than iron, steel, or depleted uranium. The Trojan Horse’s armor is your own mind. 

Only courage will work to save you. It is not the courage to face an army. It is the courage to admit that you’ve been conned; that you were wrong; that you have been led down a garden path that leads nowhere near where you ever wanted to go. 

Find that courage. 

———————————-

The Mending Wall 

My Cousin Bobby

Where does your loyalty lie?

The Stopping Rule

The Update Problem

Guernica

What About the Butter Dish?

Dick-Taters

The Game

A Profound and Utter Failure

Roar, Ocean, Roar

Plans for US; some GRUesome

They Lost the Word for War

Author Page on Amazon

The Loyalty Test

14 Sunday Apr 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, politics, story

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

fiction, life, politics, story, truth, USA

Photo by ShonEjai on Pexels.com

“I never took a test. There’s been a mistake. I’m a supporter.”

“Shut up or I’ll break every finger. Capiche?”

The guard grinned a moon of bloody teeth and pushed his nightstick against Bob’s lips. Hard.



Bob grunted but said nothing; decided he’d bide his time for now. This will all get sorted later. 

It didn’t get sorted. Why would it? Along with tens of thousands of other “supporters” the only thing Bob got for his support? A free one-way ticked to the burn pits. He’d been beaten enough that when his time came, he jumped of his own accord.  

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

—————

Dick-Taters

Stoned Soup

The Orange Man

Such a teeny, tiny loser man

D4: Dictator’s Delusion Disease

Three Blind Mice

Guernica

A Civil War there Never Was

Essays on America: The Game

Absolute is not just a Vodka

The Ailing King of Agitate

Meeting with Da Da

Author Page on Amazon

A Civil War there Never Was

12 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by petersironwood in America, poetry, politics

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

life, poem, poetry, politics, truth, USA

Photo by THIS IS ZUN on Pexels.com

She might have checked.

He might have sighed. 

They might have thought

Before they fought.

A civil war there never was. 

But you know how they are. 

They’re really all the same!

Or so it seems in dreams

On social media streams.

A civil war there never was.

A civil war there never was.

The first rules of society: 

Do not destroy what you cannot make;

Pretend to do; then, only fake.

And if in some bromance, 

You somehow came to think

That war will fix your life,

Strife begets more strife.

A civil war there never was. 

Guernica

Dick-Taters

Stoned Soup

Three Blind Mice

Who Won the War

Author Page on Amazon

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