Tonight, gathering winds dancing tops of the firs, And the rain briefly stopped, but still A squall of clouds scuttle across the valley From the mountains, from the coast,
So I grab a mug of red to the balcony, Look west to the lights out on the highway, Same as always, and in the neighborhoods down the hill, lights Of the season grimly twinkling,
We’re well into the declining days of our broken democracy, A few more weeks of sanity, I’d hoped. But already the stench of the change of regime Becomes apparent, the threat of our enemies
Circling, emboldened by the scent of our weakness and ignorance, The collapse of our allies begun; and that Inherent racism and misogyny that runs through so much of our nation, The shock that we’d rather throw away our democracy Than elevate a qualified, competent Black Woman to lead it.
The days dwindle away, I refuse to dwell on the news, But the whiff of change hangs heavy in the air, I hold my nose, avert my eyes, Remembering the tsunami of chaos and lies
That was the demagogue’s first term, And we, we chose this return, and I tell myself, That this is what they voted for, This is what they want,
And this is the worst of us come forth, Determining a bleak and damning future, Gaming away what little time we have To create a future, habitable earth, just a few weeks left.
Steady rain pelts down, as it has For some weeks now, swelling The creeks and rivers in the valley, water Cascading from mountain washes, Fears of floods, warnings of landslides. And then hard, hard rain Begins to fall.
So odd tonight, the rain abates, And a steady wind Howls through the rustling Crown of fir and cedar. Across the sodden landscape, Bedazzling lights Herald the coming season,
That I watch from my ruins, Looking westward, always, to the mountains, To the Pacific, to the sunset, Face chill, slapping, winds Blowing down through the valley Like the future, like dread,
And the future looms Like an ending. And the coming holiday season A cold slap of mockery, Given what’s to come,
But we persevere for those we love, And tomorrow string lights along the shrubbery, And hang grandma’s glass ornaments On our plasticine, pre-lit, alwaysgreen tree, For the grandkids, just as if It wasn’t the last Christmas That we will know like this one, Like all the ones that came before,
And we’ll pass around presents And best wishes as always, Delight in the children As they open their gifts, listen to Handel, Lift a glass, And wish our loved ones, And all under threat, That they find safe harbor From whatever will come, Safe harbor.
America was a hero when I was a kid, Fresh out the gates of the second world war, Envy of all other nations, In our strength and creativity, We built this modern country, Reveling in freedom, Confident of the future.
We were the good guys, leaders of the free world, Defenders of liberty, and truth, and democracy, And our streets were lined with gold, And our doors were open to all. I took great pride in it, this majestic land. Throughout my life, Even with our troubles, our warring points of view, Even when I knew we didn’t get it right, I thought democracy would hold, That our common goals would move us forward, Like the promise of a moon shot in a decade, A thousand points of light, Like the great society it took generations of Americans to build.
No, there's no shining city of the top of the hill, not anymore, No beacon of light, You can put your white hats away, pardners, Won’t be wearin' em, We’re riding with Black Bart now, We’re switching teams. We’re on the dark side. If there’s a glow at the top of the hill It’s a bonfire. America burning its once-proud past, And all that’s left Is smoke, ash.
Basket Slough overlook east, toward the Cascades 11/23/24
When It’s Gone
My political life began early on, when Kennedy ran, Democratic Headquarters was just off Water Street, Now the Phillips Academy Bookstore, I festooned my red Schwinn with bumper stickers, (One-speed, chrome fenders, fat tires) Kennedy For President! Ask not what you can do for your country, A man on the moon in this decade, Youth, vibrancy, and hope, And America was challenged, and responded, And then Dallas.
My political life Was shot in a pantry At the Ambassador Hotel, head cradled in the arms of a busboy, And the future bled out on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, RIP sixty-eight, When history changed again. All the rest, ennui.
In the first election I voted, Nineteen, seventy-two, drove to the polls In my sixty-four Beetle, (British racing green, bad brakes, no heat) Cast my vote, drove home, and got high, Because I knew what was to come,
Watched the results on a plastic black and white portable tv, (Rabbit ears, bad reception, tiny screen) Channel 27, a tiny UHF station out of Worcester, Mass., Which carefully tallied the Bay State vote, The only state Nixon lost,
A landslide victory for another crook, and I learned, without doubt, That many Americans have different ideas About the direction to steer our country, Who will lead, what is right, What shade to color our history,
And I saw, brightly illuminated, How so many of us can be wrong.
See, I thought it was obvious, That Nixon was crooked. (Divisive, silent majority, nattering nabobs) Dragging Viet Nam through years of warfare To insure his chances for a second White House turn, (Dead soldiers, dead students, illegal bombings) Don’t change horses midstream, His evil cabinet… Won in a landslide.
A half-century has passed since that election, And presidents have come and gone, some good, some bad, And some of the candidates I supported won, and some lost, And I’m an old man now, watching our steep decline Into a corrupt, malignant, constricted country ready to elect A degenerate thug, pompous ass, pathological offal, Ignoring that his policies will not only doom the country, But the planet as well. Drill, baby, drill.
And I’m left with only the faintest hope That enough of my fellow citizens will find it possible To retract their craniums from their posterior and see This louse for what he is, degenerate clown, Preposterous liar, rich, lazy scum, breeder of lies and hate, Vile, vile, vile,
But it all comes now, so late that we’ve already lost, In a country where so many support this “populism” that is not populism at all, But denialism, So comforting to be told that climate Armageddon is a hoax, That we don’t have to give up V-8 engines, That feed the oil oligarchs and idiots still building Enormous gas-hog road-hog machines, still, As if the resource was infinite and not killing the planet, That we might still have our coal mines, and factory emissions, plastic, That we might still sequester safely in our houses, which are now arsenals, That we might still cradle our arms and stand our ground, That we might go back to the delusional whitebread country you always Wanted but never had, That we don’t have to learn Spanish, or pay attention to what’s happening To the rest of the world, So comforting to be assured of American exceptionalism, That the rules don’t apply, That you believe the big lie, The biggest liar.
Have we already lost? That there are so many Yearning for the lies, and the liar; that we’d disavow not only The threat of the future, but the promise of our history.
My father, my uncles, my grandfather went to war, volunteered To battle tyranny, the fascists, the nazis, And so many died, Returned damaged, wounded, proud, defending liberty, Freedom, even after years of deprivation, stood tall, What would they think of where we are now? Who we are now?
Sorry, dad, this feels like the end of the United States, We didn’t do a particularly good job of nurturing the experiment along, Patriotism redefined as neo-Nazis and skinheads with automatic weapons, Proud boys, oath keepers, kicking down the doors Of Congress, threatening to hang the Speaker, The vice president, urged on by a sleazy conman Who somebody elected president.
Imagine that clown sitting in Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s office? Abraham Lincoln’s?
Sorry, Dad. Mom. Uncle Bob. Mr. Walker. Sorry, Sorry we’ve done such a terrible job Watching the home front, disappearing freedoms, Disappearing future, and so deeply sorry too, For the future generations Who may, or may not, find a way To progress through the wreckage, That we leave behind as we Drift toward dissolution.
Donald Trump does not love you; If you think so you’re horribly wrong. Donald Trump does not love you. Really, hear me out. Donald Trump does not love you, Unless- maybe you’re super-rich, that will work. Or an oil man, we’re gonna drill, drill, drill. Or a despot, (he has a thing for the strongmen, the tyrants), Or Russian, North Korean, An enemy of the State. You know- Partners. Our new allies.
Donald Trump does not love you. He won’t be dropping over, ever, -Would you want him to? He won’t park it on the sectional for a cold one, Talk of your concerns, worries, struggles. Talk about you. Yours. Not gonna happen. -Would he sneer, Mock your little house, your kids, your failures. -Would you see the disdain in his shifty glare, Up so close, if you pay attention. If you pay attention, you know. Donald Trump does not love you.
Donald Trump does not love you, Donald Trump will never tell you the truth, -How important is the truth? Donald Trump will never give you facts, -Doesn’t care much for facts; too much like truth. He’ll tell you to drink bleach, He’ll tell you that there are beautiful neo-nazis, He’ll tell you what you want to hear, Or what he thinks you want to hear. If you want to hate minorities, he’ll tell you that’s okay, If you want to smash your way into Congress, Wrapped in the Confederate flag, Screaming threats to members of government While defiling their offices, And killing Capitol police, He’ll call you a patriot. If you choose to ignore that the planet is on fire And the sea is full of plastic And the coastlines are sinking, He’ll tell you to ignore it, not a problem. A hoax. Donald Trump will lie to you, will lie to everyone. Donald Trump does not love you. . In the news the other day I saw that Elon Musk is going to build A habitat for humans on Mars, a twenty-year plan. You won’t be invited, I’m afraid. Not nearly wealthy enough, I’m afraid. Unless you’re an oil man, or an oligarch, or a despot.
Donald Trump does not love you. He will leave you here on this dying sphere, And your children and their children, After they’ve plundered the planet for all they can take, (We’re gonna drill, drill, drill) And they’ll tell you it’s sustainable, This exceptional way we American’s live, That it’s all a hoax, And the controls hobbling industry, Like that pesky clean air act, All those environmental regulations Need to be torn asunder, Removed entirely, in the name of profit, And he’ll tell you the killing heat and mammoth storms, And millions of acres succumbing to wildfire, Are natural occurrences, routine cycles of weather, And keep your monster trucks and dreadnought utility vehicles, Because we’re Americas, exceptional, but make no mistake, Donald Trump does not love you.
Donald Trump does not love you. He will say that he loves you, But you know way down he does not.
Donald Trump will do whatever it takes, As the beard for a cabal of greed, to become our new King, A despot himself, to freely accumulate wealth and power, And weasel himself from his legal imbroglios, Scot free, Scotus free, free to dismantle This fragile democracy. He’s already promised To take away your vote, your voice, Our forebear’s pride, The foundation established To end tyranny, Because Donald Trump does not love you, But Donald Trump yearns to be your tyrant,
And if he takes office Will he let you keep your guns, In case you disagree, (been shot at once, He won’t risk it again),
In the indeterminable future, With the seas rising And the air burning On a lost planet.
Donald Trump does not love you, Donald Trump will not love you, Just ask Melania.