Category Archives: politics

The Republican’s Lament

Robert Edgar 

I barely see the door I came in
Can’t understand this compromise

My secrets all have just gone viral
All I can do is rub my eyes.

How many ears have heard our stammers
How many nightmares do we dream?
How many throats release their breathing
Into this vacuum in between?

I will forget you
Though I’m desperate to reveal
These fitful shadows that surround us
Christ we all seem so unreal

The kid who spoke to me so quietly
He’ll raise the stakes I heard him say
Though he professes worldly wisdom 
He seems provincial all the way.

I will forget you
Though now this day is cast in rhyme
It’s not your truth that I am after
And all your words just waste our time.

Where is the soldier who carries me to safety?
Which is the mirror that proves that I exist?
Where is the thief who leaches all my pain?
Who is the lover to sanction all my lies?
Where is the patriot to die for me?

Bubbles escaping from a diving bell
My thoughts emerging incomplete…
You feel the trembling of our bodies
I blame our pain upon the weak.

I will forget you
Though we hold our hands today
Breugal’s blind trudge on in spirals
Those who stumble sink away.

 

Old News

This is old news, but worth reviewing I believe. This was published briefly during the Iran-contra scandal. It was striking enough so I cut it out and kept it. After the initial publishing in newspapers, it was barely mentioned again. Interesting phrase “…national opposition to a U.S. military invasion abroad.” I wonder what today’s version looks like.

Knight-Ridder Newspapers

WASHINGTON — Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North helped draft a plan in 1984 to impose martial law in the United States in the event of an emergency, provoking a sharp protest by Attorney General William French Smith, according to government officials.

The secret plan called for suspension of the Constitution, turning control of the government over to the little-known Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), appointment of military commanders to run state and local governments, and the declaration of martial law in the event of such a crisis as nuclear war, violent and widespread internal dissent, or national opposition to a U.S. military invasion abroad.

North’s involvement in a proposal to radically alter the U.S. government by executive order in a time of crisis is evidence that he was involved in a wide range of secret activities, foreign and domestic, far beyond the Iran-contra affair, according to officials.

The chief council of the Senate Iran-contra committee has declared in an unreleased memo that North was at the center of what amounted to a “secret government-within-a- governement.”