===
Life is only a blip in a vast void. But that blip is full and the void is empty.
--Naconda Who Dreamt
===
From my unpublished novel, A Future of Angels
Poetry. Philosophy. Politics.
===
Life is only a blip in a vast void. But that blip is full and the void is empty.
--Naconda Who Dreamt
===
From my unpublished novel, A Future of Angels
====
Nearly every dissident we interviewed — whether a student in the Democratic Republic of Congo who helped pressure an aspiring authoritarian leader into stepping down or a Venezuelan mother working to validate a true ballot count in a rigged election — told us that the key to fighting authoritarianism isn’t a single political strategy or protest march. It’s the willingness of individuals to engage in what the political scientist Maria J. Stephan calls “collective stubbornness”: people working together to increase the costs of authoritarian behavior, throwing enough sand in the gears of the state that its operations sputter and eventually fail.
Julia Angwin and Ami Fields-Meyer
====
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/16/opinion/resistance-activist-protest-trump.html
Moonless
patient as the ribs
of Pluto,
birches crowd a dirt road,
the last sight
tired eyes can seek
unless
angels swoops down,
tearful as prophets
in the belly of blindness.
i sit cross-legged
in a snarl of dew,
whittling tinder
with a knife
which cannot be seen
in this forest of dim bones
and i peer
into the pitch dark
as if it were a sad mirror
i had swallowed.
=======================
In the Flow
dust feasts on the heat,
revels in a way which the bodies
that it came from could not.
it gloms fetal laurels
incused on a penny baked with corrosion
in the flow.
it rides gale-stoked carousels,
arcs of torn phantoms
vast as Ezekiel’s Wheel.
a dead ocean’s shark tooth
bites into an extinct spine
fractured in stone the same color as
beige pink red chocolate drama
has always been because no ice age
ever came here,
no glacial scour to mute
the howls of the dead
who rear in serpentine orgy,
lording over slithers
of dust and the snakes and
the lines of shifting ants
every once in a while.
====================================
6/13 .. worked title in better
6/12/26 mods all day ... depression making value judgements ... difficult
'in the flow' <--> 'in the ravine'
broken on the floor.
what are all these dots
in the parquetry, impossible
to see when standing tall
and pretending to be
something
able to have a conscience
which doesn’t rot from misuse
or drive me to lose
everything.
so i fall, down in a mess,
and suddenly now see
all the little cracks and cuts
which have glared for so long
from the underbelly
of the shine.
they lurk somewhere
in the alphabet of my heart,
these symbols
which never found shape,
desperate still, on the brink of
nothing, yet ripe with hope,
gazing up from the gone.
=====
“I don’t think anybody who is supporting the USA’s blatantly racist agenda believes in God or heaven. If they did, they would be terrified of going to hell.”-- Angelica Fixtrous
Random fiction-character stuff from when I am dreaming or
half-asleep. ... It sounds pretty familiar, so if I have stolen someone's quote, I apologize.
Sucked
the gully had lost its tongue of water,
could not sing from broken staves
with clefs of torn bark.
long gone hooves of whipped horses
sweated the bed in haunted cacophony;
stabbed it with their dead stampedes.
even now a few tail-eating shoes
fretted like rusty knives.
the only liquid was a mousy dram
snagged in the night by a cloaking owl,
or fanged from a faceless rabbit.
heatwaves chewed
on what could not be sucked,
and the jumping cholla reached high,
sihouetted kin of a crucifix,
praising their golgotha.
shadows outflanked a coyote,
unrolled a slow sarcophagus
over a sprinkle of paralyzed lizards.
the one cloud looked down,
bulbous gavel of an absent judge;
or the rudder of a helmsman
absconded to the pub, unable to score,
a carouse more wisp than teat.
6/10 ... took out a word
6/5/26 ... eds all day ...
“Cylindropuntia fulgida … possesses many common names, though the most common one is "jumping cholla", which comes from the ease with which the stems detach from the main plant when brushed, "jumping" onto passing animals.”
"tail-eating" = ouroboros = visual symbol for a horseshoe, symbol for desert, etc.
House Cat
the pet on the couch
wears no clothes.
it walks under beds and could
through dark woods.
it never seeks money,
purrs in content and often
gets touched (compared
to my lack of hugs).
it doesn’t grasp war
or addictions or obsessions
or adulteries.
no ghosts seem to haunt it,
now anyways.
long ago, it was neutered,
its siblings perhaps discarded.
it fled the feral, meowed and
meowed at a random door
and stayed.
===============
Long ago, a cat showed up at our house (me and my wife, now ex-wife), meowed till we let it in. It was young, already neutered. Like so, Bello joined the household. But, like most of my poems, this one isn't 'about' the literal subject so much as it is philosophical.
Marketplace
never but today,
a crossroads of tomb-shaped stalls
with poppies all over them,
floating in a shiny, colorful sky of
packages shaped like crazed genitals.
and the carts and drays which clop and
bubble with gourds and greens
and cascades of apples and ginger and
onions and bananas and sassafras and
all manner of basted snake-oil sheens of
pricetags shimmery.
and the dulcimers blooming.
and the barkers extolling.
and the children as shrill and frantic
as oversized parakeets.
and the razzle-dazzle of the
fortunetellers and jesters,
show bears and prancers,
casuists and priests.
and the burros horselaughing.
and the long wet dog tongues
whiny near the knees of fishmongers
and butchers. so many
barely hidden, spicy needs
under the saunter of chaps and
straps and juts of dresses and chests and
so much sexualized confidence
riding piggyback on a finagle of finances--
squadrons of flag-tongues aflutter,
battling it out with gusto amid a fray of
happenstance and haggle.
and the ripe underworld
of envy and secrets and hate so red in
eyeballs yet often coaxed forth by the alehouses.
and the smear of pig guts on aprons.
and the procession of fops and tramps and
wenches and lasses and urchins and middle classers
bolstered by a pale of police.
and the savory and yet also sewer scents.
and the gilt wheels relentless to roll and
crush the stiff rats of yesterday’s poison.
and the loud calling from the street corners
of prophets and gigsters and
criers and hawkers and officials
who decry and declare.
and
the lack of thought and sanity and
the insatiable greed whipping it all,
the merciless gait.
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6/13/26 ... changed a word
6/3/26 removed a word
6/2/26 ... fixed typos .. changed a word
====
Hungary’s economy is a mess, but post-election polling by
Median, an organization that had predicted election results with uncanny
accuracy, shows that voters saw corruption as the most important issue by far.
Asked why they thought Orban had lost, 49 percent cited corruption, and only 18
percent thought it was the “worsening economic situation, rising cost of
living.” The next three reasons cited were “lies” (15 percent); “fearmongering,
war rhetoric” (11 percent); and “people got fed up” (10 percent). In other
words, Hungarians seemed to see the damage that Orbanism had done to the nation
as more important than any harm they felt they had suffered as individuals.
They were united by a sense of moral outrage — “value choices,” as one person
close to the incoming government described it to me.
--M. Gessen, This Is How to Defeat an Autocrat, https://www.nytimes.com/by/m-gessen