Sunday, March 8, 2026

Poem: Edge of Freeze

 

Edge of Freeze

 

moths flit to rake

a pillaged moon’s embers.

 

such splintered wings,

threadbare glints in stardust,

 

it’s hard to see

what keeps them aloft,

 

swing-dancing so late,

zealous through the night.

 

some fey alembic, surely,

of trick and tide,

 

seductive yet monstrous,

obscure of chemistry,

 

must stoke their brute vigor,

the delirious squander.




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3/9/26 ... changed some stuff... changed another word later

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Primal Irony

 

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The primal irony.  The freedom of brain plasticity can be wielded to forge a cage of dullness inside our own heads.  - Uuva Viperbless, Petal of the Passionance Covens


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From my novel, a Future of Angels (unpublished)

Friday, March 6, 2026

Quote, Nick Allison, shunning friends and family over Trump

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…  Friends who finally stopped returning calls. Siblings who no longer talk politics, or sometimes don’t talk at all. Parents that people still love but can no longer pretend to understand. A racist uncle who gets blocked on social media. Thanksgiving dinners that get skipped. None of it has been easy. Walking away from people you care about rarely is. But again and again, the conclusion sounds the same: at some point, continuing the relationship required excusing things they could no longer excuse.  And that’s OK. …Doors swing both ways for a reason — sometimes they need to be closed. We don’t have to compromise our ethics or excuse beliefs that cause real harm, no matter how close we once were to someone. Even if they were family.  - Nick Allison


https://ca.yahoo.com/style/asked-libertarian-friend-trump-response-033102704.html


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Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Poem: Stare

 

Stare

 

dawn circles onyx,

 

twin pools brimmed

by ancestors yanked back up

on ladders of lightning.

 

the fallen to rejoice,

cradled rapturous,

darkness now heaven sent:

 

a veil, rampant in its 

relevations of justice,

blithe to uncurtain

 

the fallacy of death.



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Friday, February 27, 2026

Poem: No Clear Path

 

No Clear Path

 

a fracas of leaves tickles the sun

with googols of young green.

 

shadows flicker and sliver

through laced cemeteries of

 

fallen decayed heroes,

coursed by beetles which seem on fire.

 

greyblue puddles of lichen, inedible,

dry and flake on shabby stones.

 

a single arrow of light

hits a pine tree right in the chest,

 

impaling an amber bull’s-eye,

sticky heart turned to gold.

 

who will earn its love?

an ant, a moth, a squirrel,

 

some chickadee?

 

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Jerry Brewer, NYT on US Men's Hockey accepting Trump's Invitation

 

From the NYT article, “The U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team won gold — and then lost the room”:

 

It would be a copout for me to blame only the environment that they must navigate, to rant about how everything is poisonously political now, to lament the impossibility of sustained joy in a culture that incubates outrage. These are all factors, but let’s not infantilize this team. These are men who thrilled a nation and rocked the world, and as adults, they need to be more savvy

That goes for every prominent team in sports. It’s nice, even expected, to be feted as a winner. But who’s celebrating you – and why they’re doing it and how they’re doing it – matters more …

Jerry Brewer, Senior Writer, New York Times


Ethical analysis of the US Men’s Hockey Team accepting Donald Trump’s invitation to the White House 

Monday, February 23, 2026

Poem: Leaves at Sundown

 

Leaves at Sundown

 

branches surrender as tame as

throats under those seductive 

leaves which hum with autumn’s blush,

rich in sauvignon joys, soaring off

never to fall again onto

cushions of mussed forest beds,

more sensitive than lips when

wind strums their withers and  

sparks such fantasticated songs:

such moans and coos and trills

of sighs and delights, higher still,

until the amaranth sky

inhales the flighty lust to churn--

to burst and cascade and whirl with

fugues of mosaics, emotional

tinctures of canopied cloaks and gowns, 

such brave siennas and vermillions and

umbers and butters whose

myths whisper in waltzes of

silhouettes cast from a campfire which doesn’t

dare to exist except in glades of semi-dark,

where the vibrant flames of the

oh-so-never-spent! leaves

sweep away, players now, forever,

precious as jewels in spectral roam.

 

 

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2/27/ .. more

2/26/26 ... mods

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Quote, Ian Buruma, NYT op-ed


Historians Confirm: Tomorrow Won’t Be Better Than Today

One reason for public docility in terrible circumstances is fear. In the last years of the war, a Berliner could be arrested and, often, executed for doubting the final German victory ... But there is something more insidious, something not unfamiliar to many of us today: the hope that things will turn out all right soon, that the political outrages are temporary or at least that they can’t get worse. One way of dealing with bad times is to pretend that they are normal ... 

This is the problem when the destruction of moral norms and the rule of law is incremental ... 

When Donald Trump refused to say whether he would accept the outcome of the election in 2016, people should have sensed the danger. And yet at the time, respected intellectuals told me that everything would be fine ...

Since then, one red line after another has been crossed ...

All this was incremental, too, but compared with 1934, everything goes much faster. And yet life continues as usual. What was unthinkable only yesterday we now take in stride, and we wait for that moment when things really have gone too far this time ...

But that moment probably won’t come. Things have gone too far too many times already. Hoping for better is still the right attitude, but only as long as we prepare for the worst.



Ian Buruma
Historians Confirm:  Tomorrow Won't Be Better Than Today https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/22/opinion/history-hope-delusion.html


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Saturday, February 21, 2026

Poem: Office Party

 

Office Party

 

chuckles and chatter

distort into a circus.

the scene could be far worse

than the ordinary, that is,

the automatic weekday sunny-grey

of the i don’t hear you chin nod.

or maybe it’s the same.

another episode of failure

unwitnessing itself.

actors who prove that exiles

die out there somewhere

in soundproof chambers

far too loud with truth.

far too pushy and nosey

with questions of fair pay

and harassment.

all of us, actually, at the party

sound like those little rotors

in micro-copters which drone wherever

warblers, larks and sparrows once sung. 

it’s that kind of lack.

machines which taffy-pull laughter.

pretzels of tricky remark.

a snazz of phrase lifted from bots,

all shifting and swaying in a

punch-bowl hall of mirrors

and bravado.

 

 

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Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Poem: When Warheads Launch

 

When Warheads Launch

 

our dream perishes

but the stars collect it,

and with care prolong that brave choice--

 

for they have radiated hope

from the very start,

assurance it can be beautiful to breathe.

 

Earth, in their eyes,

is a silverblue minnow,

swimming sweet waters to drink the light.

 

no matter

how fast or far fear chases joy,

jealous through chasms of abyss,

 

the embers of the dance ignite again,

and even more,

the stardust of lovers

 

who are not so small, after all,

never to extinguish

what they were, are, or will be--

 

not so forgotten

to the bosom of the universe,

the praise of the cosmos,

 

not so forsaken, irrelevant, empty

or alone.

 


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