THE DAY DEMOCRACY DIEDWe will never give up!”
#45 fires up the mob at his Save America Rally.
The election was stolen from us…We will never concede.”
He stokes fear. “If you don’t fight like hell,you’re not going to have a country any more.”
This coup was planned and advertised on social media.
#45 tweeted, “Big protest in D.C. Be there, will be wild!”
They came from all directions, ready to hit the streets.
Armed Proud Boys. Q-Anon T-shirts. MAGA diehards.
Gullible pawns and street thugs, shoulder to shoulder,
eager for trial by combat. Eager for revolution.
“Stop the steal!” thunders #45. “Keep up the fight!”“Take back the country.” The mob eats up the lies,
and the lies feed their appetite for vengeance,
accelerate their frenzy to smash, crush, extinguish,
vanquish those evildoers gathered inside,
gathered to count the votes of state Electors:
to declare Biden president-elect, 306 to 232.
“I know that everyone here will soon be marchingto the Capitol building,” says #45, egging them on.
“I will be with you.” (He got in his limo and left.)
As rioters near the Capitol, the dam breaks.
An American flag is ripped off its pole
and replaced with a TRUMP flag.
Someone erects a gallows. White fists pump the air
Protestors pepper-spray police, bash them with poles.
Vandals batter down the doors of the Capitol Building,
leaving a trail of wreckage: glass everywhere,
cracked plaster, overturned desks, trashed offices.
Security is overwhelmed. Emergency lockdown!
Congressmen and women flee, hide under furniture.
The looting begins. Out go lamps, chairs, laptops.
A rioter in body paint and horns carries off a podium.
Clouds of tear gas fill the Rotunda.
In the melee, one woman is shot, dead.
A young cop is bludgeoned to death.
So—on January 6, 2021, over 150 years after the Civil War,
Confederate flags wave in Senate chambers for the first time.
This brand marks a new brother-against-brother conflict:
a war of law vs. power,
a war of service vs. greed,
a war of democracy vs. dictatorship.
From the White House, #45 Twitters: “We love you. You’re very special… Remember this day forever.”
World leaders watch the farewell riot, appalled.
#45 watches, too. Watches his TV screen, smiling.
He has groomed his militia carefully with lies and false hope.
He lit the fuse and watched it explode.
Sent a message to henchmen, like Pence, about loyalty-- or else.
When the dust settles, 6 Senators and 121 Representatives
still vote to accept his conspiracy line, call the election “rigged.”
Tomorrow, some outrage and finger pointing. So what?
No one can touch him.
He won.
GOING VIRAL
A virus isn’t interested
in storming the perimeter;
a virus attacks the control tower,
the nucleus of DNA patterns,
seat of future growth.
A virus seizes the reins,
takes command,
changes direction,
riding roughshod over objections.
We’ve seen it happen.
In nursing homes.
In families.
In the nation's control tower:
the White House.
How did a failed realtor and TV star
breeze through the winnowing process
and land smack-dab in the oval office?
Why do the Come-to-Jesus people
think he’s the new Messiah?
Is it possible that his racism
is an attraction?
His misogyny? His lying?
Or are these new directions
enabled by frightened Republicans
suffering through an abusive relationship?
Masks can’t ward off this virus.
Too many supporters have masks over their eyes,
refusing to see.
Hand-washing is irrelevant.
After the insurrection at the Capitol,
too many Congressmen
are doing the Pontius Pilate hand-washing in public
while backing presidential conspiracies
when it comes to a vote.
This virus, like all viruses,
can be blunted by stronger
immune systems.
Perhaps this brush with demagoguery
will make us stronger.
But, like all viruses, it can mutate.
When all Hell breaks loose,
and it won’t be long--
we shouldn’t be surprised.
A Buttered Scone
I had never seen so much snow in my entire life.
I stepped out of the taxi to sink in knee-high.
The driver ferried my luggage to the front door.
I wondered what I was doing again in Glasgow.
I went up three flights of stairs,
dragging suitcases with gloveless hands.
My landlady was very elated to have me back.
I went to the showerless bathroom to regain some warmth.
He was more eager to meet me despite the treacherous frost.
There was a lockdown and all roads were blocked.
We walked to an inn for some tea and a buttered scone.
A man in love was what I had to confront
in a moment of passion that seemed to defy gods
and prepared was he for all battles ahead.
I simply wanted friendship, the peace I felt in that inn,
a harmless chat over endless affinities that bonded us,
the drives to the countryside and feeding Knightswood’s swans.
I still wonder whether selfishness is genetic or nurtured in households.
The valor and chivalry had melted with Scottish snows.
Within a year, I lost the friend I valued most.
Cracks
I see the cracks of a well-painted wall,
the cracks of words whose insincerity is heavily cloaked,
and those of a psyche whose childhood was fissured with gall.
I hear the cracks of a disintegrating soul,
the cracks of a conscience that had been frozen by the lure of gold,
and those of a backbone whose owner prefers to crawl.
I feel the cracks that corrugate our globe,
the cracks of a nation that has been overburdened with wars,
and those of a mind that totters beneath its load.
Roundness
The substance of my life has been abounding with stocks,
a disconcerting surplus of flatness
that has left me without a single companion.
Myriads of characters are reminiscent of medieval types.
The gullible are set against scoundrels
whose goodness has been bled to death.
Black and white have forbidden any other colors to trespass.
On the streets, the crowd is a mass of callousness,
whose multitudes are wearing the very same mask,
a cloak of nonchalance.
The roundness I yearn for is only to be had in films and books.
No wonder I fall for the heroes I view and peruse,
for Hardy’s Gabriel Oak whose love endures,
for Dickens’s Sydney Carton who readily quits the world,
for Edward Scissorhands chiseling ice to grace Kim’s Christmas with snow,
for Clive Owen as the Last Knight in chivalrous throes,
for every personage who possesses a full-fledged soul.
Winter
When trees are denuded,
we put on layers and layers of clothing,
for winter spells out its might,
not in furs,
but in strata of old and new underwear.
I walk the streets like a bloated bear.
My feet absorb the dampness of the earth.
Like pine needles, my stiff, frost-bitten hair
protrudes from beneath my flimsy hat
to receive snowflakes.
Our fireplace is logless and bare.
We do not believe in cutting friends.
And since fuel is embargoed and hard to obtain,
we heap blankets upon our frames.
The essence of warmth I cannot ascertain
by word or image,
by hand or face.
The only memory I have of a flame
is a candle that burns on his grave.
A Requiem
I entrusted him with my mouth,
its knots of nerves.
He anaesthetized with an errant needle
that swerved,
hitting a nerve that sent shudders
through lips and nose.
He drilled a hole
as deep as an abyss,
perforated with a hand
that went amiss,
then embalmed the whole with a Pharaonic substance.
But pain soon shrieked with renewed force.
The unsealing of the tooth began to unfold
the remnants of a nerve that had been left to rot.
Like chimney sweepers in Victorian times,
he thrust his fingers through my gaping mouth
to unplug the sewage of a tooth’ canals.
Months of endurance saved not its life.
A nerve now twitches beneath my eye,
resonating to the requiem of an early demise.
Joan Beebe, left, with fellow contributor Michael Robinson
A Time of Stillness
Neat nice homes standing side by side.
Where there used to be neighbors mowing the lawn,
Resting quietly in the shade of an old maple tree,
Waving to neighbors who are also in their yard and
some taking walks through the neighborhood.
The area now seems like a ghost town. A few cars
sit idle in driveways and no one visible through
windows of the homes. Arising in the middle of the
night and looking through your window is sad and
disturbing. The quiet of the night seems like you
are alone in a field of grass with the light from
a shadowy moon enveloping you in a time of yesteryear.
It is taking you back to a time of youth, laughter and
living a family life of love.
The present is now when we hope and pray that the
dangerous and fearful virus of COVID19 will be erased
from every part of this world.
I’ve heard that a nurse will sing Amazing Grace on inauguration day for Biden and Harris. I understand Donald Trump may sing his own version for his departure: “Amazing Base” (with apologies to the composer/lyricist of Amazing Grace)
Amazing base, how sweet their sound To praise a kvetch like me Dems claim I lost, (fake votes they found) They’re blind – just wait – they’ll see!
‘Twas Race I used to stoke such fear And Race the nation cleaved How sharp my ugly tweets appeared My smitten base believed
Through Mueller, and impeachments’ tar We have already come The base has stuck with me so far My base will lead us home
My reign should last ten thousand years Bright, shining as the sun With all those days to sing Trump’s praise We’ve only just begun
Amazing base, how sweet their sound That loves a kvetch like me I’ve never lost: Fake votes were found! Stand strong, just wait – THEY’LL SEE!
Tropical Doubts is part of the Pancho McMartin series. The series is a legal thriller. Pancho McMartin is a criminal defense attorney, one of the best in the Hawaiian Islands. Until, that is, he loses three trials in a row.
His very good friend, Manny, comes to him after his wife, Giselle, dies after surgery. Then with a twist, Pancho is then defending his friend Manny when the lead surgeon is murdered and Manny is accused of his murder. Tropical Doubts is a fast paced novel with an abundance of suspense that will keep you intrigued until the very end.