GENUS GOPUS

Cowardly Cowbird

A prairie-homed species is spreading across the nation,

a parasitic bird of the GOP family, Genus 

GOPus, species TRUMPus. Lest we ignore the us,

remember it is a bird like each of us.

Most birds lovingly care for their young

sheltering their eggs in protective nests

safe from predators, high winds and the rest.

the genus GOPus preys on other birds’ nests

using TRUMPus to lay its egg in host birds

treasured space, hiding in plain sight

as if its eggs belong as its solemn right.

GOPus/Trump-us uses deception

to use the efforts of hard-working birds

to birth, protect, and feed a parasitic species

bent on the host birds’ destruction.

Whole species of host birds now face extinction

from parasitic GOPus/TRUMPus infection.

When deception does not work to overtake nests

these mafioso birds bully and intimidate

and if all else fails, eliminate

the host birds’ own eggs until all that is left

is a nest abandoned and  birds bewildered,

angry and bereft.

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REMEMBER THE TREES

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Never forget the trees.

Soon all we may have of them

are distant memories.

They seemed so stolid and secure,

able to bow but seldom break

in heavy winds, for centuries before

we all but ignored the earth

below and skies above

which clasped their roots

in iron bonds of love,

and watered them with gentled rains

formed in clouds of warmth 

passing over frozen ice fields again

and again and again.

We have become uprooted as well.

The treasures of nations replaced 

by campaigns of disinformation

to make us not pay attention

to earth’s disposable survival.

Lake Mead dries up

while Kentuckians and Pakistanis

flee to higher ground

and thousands hunger 

for grains of  wheat and barley and rye.

Hunger and thirst are pandemic.

There is no real question why.

Only, why have we waited so long to try

to change our senseless 

and destructive ways.

Remember the trees, and ocean’s waves,

and fields of red poppies and lavender,

and groves of olives and vines of grapes.

Remember the trees

on fire or drowning

as we soon may be.

Remember the trees.

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THOU SHALL NOT COVET

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Your neighbor will  be forgiven

a portion of his student loan.

But, you covet his forgiveness

since you paid yours in full, alone.

His forgiveness costs you nothing

but your ego and your pride.

His release from pressure

cannot change the fact yours did subside,

the day you met your goal

and your own worries died.

Would you wish continued suffering

on one who has done you no harm?

Such callous disregard and loathing

erodes your false and endless charm.

Remember the 10th Commandment

and the one Christ announced the best.

Love others as I have loved you.

Rejoice in student debtors’ blessings

and let your covetousness rest.

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BIDEN COLLEGE LOAN REPAYMENT PLAN

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I began my work-life in the neighborhood. My brother and I collected newspapers, bottles and cans to recycle for pennies at the corner store or at the junkyard across the street along the alley. We were 4 and 6 years old pulling our wagon along behind us. I have been earning a living since then. As I got older I washed woodwork and carted groceries for older ladies who could no longer stoop, bend nor carry. I used a spoon to trim borders as my brother cut their grass. By age 12 I was babysitting. By age 14 I was teaching summer religion class to kids who did not attend our Catholic school. I was assigned the first graders. At 15 I got a work permit to run the Little League snack bar. At 16 I worked after schooI and on week-ends at a local dry cleaner.

My grandparents were Italian immigrants. My parents worked through their childhoods to help support the family, so what they expected of me was part of our family history. We working children never doubted our self-worth. We did not need certificates of achievement or trophies to tell us we could be proud of our accomplishments. Yet, I earned those too in my academic life.

I had a rich academic life taught by Dominican Sisters whose goal was to elevate our intellect and secure our souls. The arch stones above either side of the door to enter our school read, “You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free,” and “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Those words still guide me.

My mother was the only one of her siblings to attain a high school diploma. She skipped two grades to graduate at age 16. Her first job was Society Editor at the local Staten Island, NY newspaper.  Impossible to believe, but true. Two years later she became the Executive Assistant to the CEO of  chemical company, running the plant in his absence during world war two as he focused on raising war bonds. 

My dad and his brothers were high school graduates. No one in Newark, Ohio would hire Italian men at that time so the day after graduation he hitchhiked, with five cents left in his pocket , to enlist at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center. He learned to swim thrown into a tank of deep water and was soon on board a destroyer escorting Lend Lease supplies to Great Britain across the north Atlantic, dodging U-boats.  

Two years later, assigned to the Naval Base at Pearl Harbor, Oahu, Hawaii his ship was one of two out on maneuvers when the base was attacked by Japanese aircraft. He never forgot the screams of the men drowning in the oil fires as his ship returned to the harbor. Within hours his ship was headed to the South Pacific, where he served for the duration of the war. 

After an ambush on a U.S. convoy through the straits between islands his ship was so badly damaged it lay dead in the water. As night fell, his destroyer lay dark and silent, and undetected by the Japanese. They retreated, not realizing the ship was still afloat. It was towed back to the New Jersey naval yard for major repairs. 

Dad met Mom at a Catholic Youth dance and courted her during the time his ship was in dry dock. He also got a job at a factory to supplement the income he was sending home to his mother. After marrying Mom, he also shared his income with her mother. This is what family meant to Mom and Dad; everyone working to help each other, sharing all they had.

I was the first girl in my entire extended family to attend college. On the day I left, Dad gave me $20 of the $50 he earned each week. A huge sacrifice, I knew. My education was to be financed by work-study (I became a resident advisor),a federal loan, and a federal grant. I had little savings since what I had been earning paid for my Catholic high school tuition and books, dental and health care, and once in awhile a vinyl album of classical music. 

I read every assignment in the time before classes started and the three weeks after, returning the assigned textbooks at the last minute in which I was eligible for a complete refund. I relied on the notes I had taken and those taken during the lectures. This practice got me through undergraduate, graduate and law school. I worked a second job as a part-time clerical worker off-campus, and worked full-time wherever I could find work during breaks. During finals week, I used packets of sugar and hot chocolate, pads of butter, and cartons of milk from the cafeteria to make batches of fudge in my soup pot and sold it to fellow students once the snack machines in the dorm ran out of “study aides.” I made the money I needed to buy the books for the next quarter.

My frugality was limitless. Even to me this sounds like an oxymoron. But to anyone who does not have a family able to pave their way with financial assistance, this makes total sense.I still could not afford to pay for the one dinner not covered by the cafeteria food plan I was eligible for as a resident assistant.  When the cook who ran the cafeteria food line every Sunday night realized I never ordered food, and simply walked through with my roommates she questioned me. I explained I was a scholarship student, so came only for company, and the free coffee. She decided I needed to eat and gave me a free hamburger and fries…every Sunday that entire year. The kindness of strangers should never be underestimated. I try to emulate this woman every chance I get. I know the power of such generosity and risk-taking. I always feared she might lose her job. Still, hungry, I ate.

The discussion of the Biden decision to partially forgive student debt is distressing in its ignorance. Wealthy students do not rely on student aid. Even upper middle-class students whose parental assistance is supplemented by student financial aid, do not face the same challenges those who entirely rely on financial aid when it is time to repay those loans. People rely on the connections within their economic class. Guess who benefits. I am happy to pay my taxes. I know they enable the common good and keep my nation strong. We all win when we are all strong. We all have time to raise strong families when we can all earn living wages. When we have a single job we have time to study issues, vote, make wiser decisions about where we should be headed and who shall lead us. Who gains by weakening the economic hopes of our young people?

In 1978 I completed law school and took my first job owing $87,000 despite working full-time my entire academic career. The 5% cap on repayment would have made a world of difference for a student like myself. I finished paying off my loan. But, delayed marriage, child bearing, buying a home. I chose a law career in public service, earning less than if I had found work in the private sector. At that time, women were not easily accepted in the male-dominated practice of law. Graduates with family ties to the profession, personal connections to job offerers had an easier time, but the women still faced more obstacles than the men. They still do. African-American students, even more so. Those struggles continue.  The class-status of those who take out loans matters. We all know this. Will this Biden plan help women and people of color? Yes. Will it help the working poor? Yes. Does this matter? Of course.

I finally bought a home. I will die before it is paid off. 

If the limit on repayment had been in place for me, and others like me, I would have been able to escape the bondage of that loan and contributed even more to the economy of this country. I could have been financially secure enough to purchase a home and build wealth. I could have helped my parents more, to live more prosperous lives, not rely on food programs, buy a new car, replace broken appliances, move to better neighborhood, get better health care. I and my family would have been lifted up, not held down and held back. That is what I hoped for with a college degree. That is what I eventually achieved, after my parents had died, once my loan was paid off. 

Other nations invest in their young people and provide universal education through college. Are their taxes higher? Yes. Their millionaires pay their fair tax share. Ours should, too. We are the richest nation…ever…on the face of the earth. We can do this. What Biden proposes is a moderate effort to at least alleviate the burden enough, on those in greatest need, that they will be able to more fully participate in building full lives and building real wealth. That builds a stronger middle class. That makes the nation stronger for all of us. 

Forgiving student debt, capping repayment levels will encourage more people to attend college. They will no longer fear being crippled by debt. There will be a real pay-off for graduating. It will enable students to attend full-time and graduate sooner. It will encourage students to pursue advanced and professional degrees. It will build a momentum of economic growth for future generations. The economic momentum, undercut by tax cuts for the wealthy and attacks on social support programs since the 1980s, will be resurrected. Parents will no longer wonder if their children will be able to reach the same, or even surpass, their own economic achievements. 

Finally, framing this discussion as one facing off working class against the elites is an old and hateful trope. Technical and vocational training beyond high school also creates student debt. Arguments that helping college students hurts non-college students is inane. Do you really think all those young people working in restaurants would not prefer better paying jobs? Who could afford college on tip money?

 And what makes one job “classy” and another “trashy”? For such a discussion implies that not all work is equal. But, all work is equal. If we learned nothing else about the  value of workers during the pandemic we did learn this one thing: Every single task has value, every worker has value. Hope itself has  value. Biden’s plan gives young people hope. This is the truth. And the truth shall set us free. It should make college free; but, I am happy we at least have this new plan.

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MISSING YOU

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Are the stars truly fixed in the sky?

When you are away the sun

stops in its tracks 

and earth’s orbit slows 

in heartbeats counted

by years, not seconds.

“Time stands still,” others say.

I say time goes on without me

while there is no us to see.

Without you, the universe stills

along the path of its trajectory.

I wait with bated breath and sigh

for your return while I

watch time march on.

I watch the sky for clues

when the universe would return

you to me and me to you.

Side by side we 

can make the sun move.

As we move

among the stars

in ecstasy.

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MEN

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Which man is best ?

The industrious man who

labors and toils unconstrained

by regulation, whose aim is gain?

The religious man who

offers sacrifice and praise

by God’s fiat, whose aim is to save?

The autocratic man who

routs and rules unconfined

by lesser beings, whose aim is control?

The humanist man who

listens and learns, open to all

with relative views, whose aim is love?

The warrior man who

strengthens and fights unconfined

by social rules, whose aim is to win?

Why question each type 

with binary rules?

Is man not ever called upon

to be each and every one?

Would we label and libel all man kind?

Look not on the surface,

but deeper inside, where soul resides.

Honor men and those who love them

warts and all.

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LIFT EVERY VOICE

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Is it the nightingale

whose song we hear

as day turns to night

and weakens us with fright?

Or the lark whose sweet song

drifts upon the rising dawn

announcing a new day has begun?

Together, they make music

and fill our world with song

that we may dance,

in graceful strides forward,

to encourage and make us strong.

Lift every voice and sing.

It is time to sing along.

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SINK OR SWIM

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The lights are low

aligned with thoughts

of swimming free,

a simple fish

swimming toward light,

suddenly caught

now distraught;

facing a tightening thread.

lifted alight and set right

on the trawler’s deck,

only to face slaughter.

Low thoughts, indeed,

in an ocean of democraseas.

“if onlys” abound

as I flutter and flounder 

and flap atop the heap

of fish so like me.

Unsure of success

I push fear aside

propelling my self

over the side,

carried away on the tide

of endless seas of hope.

I am free!

I am free!

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HAIKU

8/22/22

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Dreams are the blueprint

for life’s emerging story.

Each frame a promise.

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WOKE IN 1066

Magna Carta memorial by Graham Horn is licensed under CC-BY-SA 2.0

In my dream I walked the corridors

of God’s chambers, amidst the throng,

where peace reigned over all I explored.

No lies, nor subterfuge in this space.

No glory sought, no fear of votes.

No trammeled hopes. Only grace.

As I woke today I prayed

for leaders with enough courage

to enter the political fray

and accept the challenges

of the world we now face.

We once believed in Sun-Kings,

those who governed by Divine Right,

expected to do right, or at least try.

Our expectations were very high.

Those follies fell at Runnymede.

The Magna Carta decreed

leaders would now rule by right

of the people governed.

No divine right is embedded

in constitutions of free people.

The rights of the people are unfettered.

No sins were excused in those who led

in place of God, nor in place of the people.

The vestigial remnant of Sun-Kings lit

the rule of law to be followed by all.

Now leaders are expected to sin,

and focus on nothing but how to win

the next election.

How far we have fallen from the protection

of expectations for the common good

blessed from those reigning above us;

leaders of conscience who obeyed

an inner voice which spoke

of heaven on earth awoke.

Now I wake, and being woke

am told to be woke is no longer a treasure.

There are those who prefer we remain asleep

while they seek to rule, their power to keep.

There is no freedom for those who sleep,

caught in false dreams and nightmares deep.

Woke seeks not false perfection.

But, provides the best direction

to heaven’s peaceful corridors

and a way to traverse freedom’s door.

Woke is the only way

to start a new era, or a new day.

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