If political systems weren't, somehow, above the law; there would be a lot of politicians completing their circles in prison yards.
Noam Chomsky explains clearly how the U.S. breaks its own laws openly and repeatedly; and, well, a lot of people die. It's the old story, if you commit crimes on a large enough scale, there's no sanction.
http://www.democracynow.org/2014/10/22/in_un_speech_noam_chomsky_blasts
Poetry by Irish poet Michael O'Dea. (poems © Michael O’Dea, Dedalus Press, Amastra-n-Galar, Lapwing Publications)
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Linda Tirado
So here we are. “The richest one percent of the world’s
population now controls 48.2 percent of global wealth, up from 46 percent last
year, according to the most recent global wealth report issued by Credit
Suisse, the Swiss-based financial services company.” Apparently, if this level
of growth continues the 1% will own all the wealth in 23 years.
So here we are, with our burgeoning knowledge and education,
declarations of human rights, constitutions, our politicians working assiduously,
day and night, for the common good. This, along with walking on the moon and
splitting the atom, is our achievement.
How extraordinary it is that we have underachieved to such a
spectacular extent.
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Listening to an interview on radio today, I was highly
impressed with Linda Tirado’s clear-sighted analysis of
the United States’ treatment of its poor (an analysis that applies universally, I would
say). Having
direct experience of what she’s talking about, she cut quickly through shit to
the reality, and with deft articulateness swept away common perceptions of the
comfortable middle-classes (myself included). There was nothing new in what she
said, but her clarity made me stop; I will have to reassess my own perceptions of
those poorer than myself, and it is well past time for governments to intercede
for the impossible situations the impoverished find themselves in.
The piece that brought Linda Tirado to public attention: http://killermartinis.kinja.com/why-i-make-terrible-decisions-or-poverty-thoughts-1450123558
Today’s interview on ‘The Marian Finucane Show’ on RTE Radio
1: http://www.rte.ie/radio/utils/radioplayer/rteradioweb.html#!rii=9%3A20667519%3A70%3A18%2D10%2D2014%3A
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Final Breath
Final Breath
in memory of Pearse Hutchinson
In that last moment your breath halted in your mouth;
the air teetered on your tongue; on last taste perhaps.
Death flew across the room, your eyes followed it,
leaving us, exiting through then walls.
Vivaldi played on,
emerged from behind your troubled breathing.
For that few moments,
baroque splendour was your breath condensing around us.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
She Leaves
She leaves
a country of mountain tops,
pencil points in nothing
and crosses on current arrows
to where the sun shines on a space.
Angels
look over the rails,
cheering ferries on the sea
of her worries ̶̶̶
for that is where she bobs ̶among all the sparklets
on the sea-top.
And fears
scratch their fingernails
down the glass
she has left;
not left,left,
not left.
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Reading, but not seeing
This Banksy mural was in the news this week after the local council at Clacton-on-Sea in Essex had it removed because of “offensive and racist remarks”.
(Report found on www.theguardian.com ).
If I was Banksy I would be bewildered; obviously any satirical comment not spelled out, (literally), needs accompanying notes.
Sunday, October 5, 2014
Some tips for writing poetry
I have amassed a sizable collection of notes and files from various workshops/creative writing classes I've given. Here are five tips for people new to writing poetry.
1. Be careful of lines you really like in your poems. If they
appear to be outstanding, there’s a real possibility they do stand out too strongly in
the poem.
2. One lazy line/word is enough to ruin a whole poem.
3. Speak your lines out loud to test the rhythm and find
those clumsy-sounding words.
4. Keep all drafts of poems; constant reworking can result in
losing your way, or, on the plus side, you may find you are developing a
different poem altogether
5. Check out lines/phrases from unsuccessful poems. They
can often be recombined in ways that are
fresh and successful.
Saturday, October 4, 2014
Death and the Student
My grandmother and I were the best of friends. However when her final illness dragged on, I, a student at the time, didn't have the time to spend with her. I think it's not unusual for young people at that age to be too self-centred, but that selfishness has rankled ever since.
Before the End
The bedside lamp shone
in the pool of her eye;
it made her teeth translucent,
runnelled her face.
Daylight and I were reluctant visitors;
the room smelling of trapped breath,
sickness and decay made me anxious
that I might inhale her disease;
and all I loved gone,
all dwindled down to duty.
Friday, October 3, 2014
Private Companies Looking After Us?
I clearly remember the politicians stating that speed cameras would be located at accident-prone locations on the roads; their function being to minimise fatalities due to road accidents. I often pass one of these vans parked at a location where there is no obvious purpose other than making money.
How long will it be before Irish Water is putting profit before its raison d'etre of preventing wastage of water?
How long will it be before Irish Water is putting profit before its raison d'etre of preventing wastage of water?
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
The brink
Once the wrong word said, I’m gone crazy ─
my smile snapped;
her ribbons & wheel & steel in my
head whirring,
whirlicue;
a sick spinning,
nauseous flight.
She sets off explosions; no punches spared,
nor tanks nor guns; pulls no punches.
Nor when I stop
is she stopped,
but pistons and steam chunnelling
to distraction.
take it,
but lobbing spanners in,
ignition flaming,
she likes to go to the brink;
like brinking is sex.
Friday, September 26, 2014
Spiritual Growth
Women,
meat, all jaws, Hughie feared;
Church-fed
fear.
Pruned
Hughie rattling inside himself,
no
rattling outside,
but
bloated sensationless, bone-dry tinder.
All
pray: feed the soul; Hughie feeds the soul
‘til his soul is ballooning out of his body,
and he giving thanks for spiritual growth.
Concrete-heavy
Hughie, all aching,
walking
the earth like a space thing.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Old Houses, Children Gone
A Stranger In The Townland.
In Autumn the farmhouse
with the sun-folded field beneath its chin,
traps the daylight in its spectacles,
then flashes it away.
A swing hangs among the orchard's arthritic trees
without stirring;
without remembering
a frantic liveliness now reduced
to the occasional commotion of a falling fruit.
Once songs of apples filled the farmhouse;
but the children became photographs,
the dust settled on their frames
and soon Autumns were flying uncontrollably by.
Today, between its curiosities, a bluebottle drones.
Now that the conversation with the hillside
is ended, the farmhouse
with the sycamore stole
has become an eccentric;
a stranger in the townland.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Pre-digital childhood
Remembering a pre-digital childhood; the, now, quaint pleasures of Autumn: orchards weighed down with ripe apples........ ripe for robbing, berries and damsons ready for picking. This was one of my first poems, I haven't seen it in a long time.
Held Apple High.
There's a place for me
up among the branches
of an ivy-draped lord.
Crab-appled;
golden treasures mixed
with stars of leaves.
There, inside the old elbow,
with Autumn breezes
close by shoulder,
quiet as an owl
I'd love to be.
Tuesday, September 16, 2014
from Above Ground, Below Ground
The series of poems for my collaboration with artist Elaine Leigh, Above Ground Below Ground, is getting its final brush up.
This poem refers to the spookiness of the clusters of trees that often grow around stone circles; even now the old superstitions weigh on those who would trespass after dark.
This poem refers to the spookiness of the clusters of trees that often grow around stone circles; even now the old superstitions weigh on those who would trespass after dark.
Inside the trees
is another place: unlit, uncharted.
At night even braggers refuse to enter
those grotesque tunnels.
At night boulders walk,
boughs flex their biceps;
high up, screeching necks
toss slicks of hair;
even the summer wind
squeals through like a hunted pig.
After dark the trees
stir cauldrons
of brains and guts.
Saturday, September 13, 2014
A Dream Song.....Sort of
A number of years ago, I knew a man who drank too much, aged very rapidly, and died prematurely. It was suggested to me that it all resulted from his coping very poorly with aging, and the loss of his active sexual life.
A Dream Song
A Dream Song
Hughie’s bathroom mirror has informed him
that young women are no longer prospects,
except going the financial route.
that young women are no longer prospects,
except going the financial route.
Cognizant of that barren future, he considers his options:
a. Pubs (without bouncers)
b. Theatre
c. Restaurant
d. Sky Sports
e. Ballroom Dancing
In e, he recognizes suicidal desperation:
a suicide he’ll achieve most painlessly
a. Pubs (without bouncers)
b. Theatre
c. Restaurant
d. Sky Sports
e. Ballroom Dancing
In e, he recognizes suicidal desperation:
a suicide he’ll achieve most painlessly
by spending long hours in a.
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Opening minds
A hugely inspirational talk by Sir Ken Robinson on an form of education that would elicit the very best from our children. Listen for 6 minutes, and allow yourself, (like me), to be utterly convinced.
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