Friday, November 30, 2007

October Sun

October sun again
Feels like spring this fall day
Promise in the air
A striking breeze
One talked about in high brow low bred circles
Society at large remains a vast, factioned
conglmeration of us all with no visible
connection in a physical world
It's all right here in front of us in a dimension we cannot see
We're all in the twilight zone all the time
High quality hand-me-downs everybody loves
As October winds rise a walnut could kill me
sitting here under the tree
Dead at home in an instant of enjoying the scene
As bad as things are, they could be worse
There's still one thing to be thankful for
Always just take it from here
Choose a plan, a direction, a way
Somewhere in the archives I've got a poem
about the right half I've always liked
Today even more when I see myself in half the context
Now knowing the whole in a passing moment I want to hold onto
yet ever evades me each time I venture near
in my days of survival, sustain
Big steps of the heart always believe in leaps and bounds
pushing off from the turnip point


Labels:

Monday, October 30, 2006

Liars

The way to overcome an angry man is with gentleness, the evil man with goodness, the miser with generosity and the liar with truth.
~ Indian proverb

Liars begin by imposing upon others, but end by deceiving themselves.
~ Who?

False words are not only evil in themselves, but they infect the soul with evil.
~ Socrates

The liar’s punishment is not in the least that he cannot be believed, but that he cannot believe anyone else.
~ George Bernard Shaw

Monday, October 09, 2006

Mexicans

Too many have been here for too long to send them back. Maybe a stint in the military could prove some to be deserving of legal citizenship.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

A Few Questions Arise

A Few Questions Arise

As an American, I know that many people in the world hate me and want to kill me, but I don't know why they hate. I only know that they hate. It seems there are many reasons, dating back to the Inquisition. Far, far from the Middle Ages, today I am aware that Muslim extremists hate me more than all the rest. As I contemplate this, a few questions arise.

What's the difference between a Muslim and a Muslim extremist?
What's the ratio of Muslims to Muslim extremists?
What's the ratio of Muslim extremists to Americans?
Do we have any allies? Do they?
What, then, is the ratio of Us to Them?
What are the odds of Them toppling Us?
What must we do to stand tall?
How can we stop the attacks?

Americans in years gone by have overcome seemingly impossible odds. They fought to improve their lives, and they won. For generations now, Americans have grown up as #1 -- the biggest and the best, every year a new class. Most take our freedoms for granted. Few understand what we could lose. More questions arise. Do we have what it takes to protect our freedom? Exactly what does it take? Will? Passion? Ferocity?

Think of lions in the brush. The strong must always defend acquired stature. Eventually, strength wanes and they succumb. It's a cycle of nature. Look at the Roman Empire. Another question arises. Where is America today within this cycle? It's up to us to determine our place. We, the people, are America. No generation in our country's history has failed to preserve our independence and freedom. This is no less serious than the Revolutionary War. Somebody else wants to plant a flag on our land. There are differences, though. Back then, people knew what it was like to live under somebody else's colors. Back then, soldiers wore uniforms and fought other soldiers.

Nobody wants to hear this, but I am afraid for what's to come. It seems inevitable that another attack on an American city will succeed. Look at our borders. Listen to Democrats and Republicans argue endlessly over blame. Again, a few questions arise. How do we protect ourselves from an invisible, demented enemy? If we're going to stand shoulder to shoulder and try, shouldn't we start now?

"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance."
~Thomas Jefferson