Sunday, September 20, 2020

Rest in Peace, Justice Ginsberg

Ruth Bader Ginsberg died Friday afternoon. May she rest in peace. 

Whether one agreed or disagreed with Justice Ginsberg's judicial philosophy and activism, one had to admire her physical and mental strength, strength of character, intellect and perseverance. She never wavered from her left-liberal philosophy. There was never any question when it came to social issues how she would rule. Indeed, the political fight for Democrats now that she is gone is how keep a Constitutionalist from "taking" this "Left-liberal" seat. 

Justice Ginsberg defeated cancer more than once before the most fierce of cancers (pancreatic cancer) finally defeated her. But at age 87, no one can say she did not fight a good fight against a most implacable enemy. 

The Justice is at rest now, but the country is not. In addition to riots, looting, peaceful protests and not-so-peaceful protests, the  Democrats' raw-boned, bare-knuckled fight for permanent political power continues apace. Having dealt with a complacent and compliant Republican Party for the past three decades, Democrats are not used to losing even when they lose elections. Witness the effective control Speaker Pelosi exerts over the nation when her party controls just one half of the legislative branch of government. Contrast that with how ineffective Speaker Ryan was  in passing (what they claim is) Republican agenda when his party controlled the House and the Senate with a Republican president in the White House.

Four years ago, in the eighth and final year of President Obama's presidency, Justice Antonin Scalia died unexpectedly, leaving a vacancy on the Supreme Court. The Democrats were adamant that President Obama, though he was term limited out of office and could not stand for reelection, should be allowed to replace Justice Scalia. For once, the Republicans refused to cave to Democrats' demands and Leader McConnell refused to hold a vote. Keep in mind, had the Republicans not had the elected majority, Senator McConnell would not have been the Leader of the Senate and thus would not have been able to refuse to hold the  vote. In that sense, the people had spoken. As they are speaking now, having elected both the president and the Republican Senate.

Four years later, the shoe is on the other foot, and even though, unlike President Obama, President Trump is up for reelection, the Democrats and their foot soldiers in the media now claim the president should not  be allowed to nominate a candidate in an election year. In short, heads they win, tails Republicans lose. And right on cue, the Democrat moles in the Republican party signal their willingness to comply.

Struggles for power are never pretty, and once the Supreme Court ceased adjudicating and began legislating from the bench, controlling the court became supreme (pun intended).  So why not turn to  one of the most reliable legislators on the Supreme Court, the late Justice Ginsberg, for one last ruling.


Rest in peace Justice Ginsberg; Rest in Peace.

Monday, June 1, 2020

Burning Down the Bank of America

The following is a poem by my friend, the late Joy Eaten Loth, the most talented writer I have ever read. Joy died in 2016. 

Joy's poem was written for a writing class we took together in 1974. Then the "student activists" used the pretext of the War in Vietnam to justify their violence, but other than the cost of the tennis shoes ($1 2.00 was relatively expensive then) and her husband's childhood in a Japanese prison camp and service in Korea, it is as relevant today as it was when she read it aloud in class that first time.  




"AND, WHERE IS YOUR BLUE-EYED BABY BOY NOW, DR. SPOCK?"
by 
Joy Eaton Loth

They were burning down the Bank of America the other day,

on the kitchen colour television,
While I spooned fortified cereal into the Future's mouth.
He sat high and handsome in his germ-free plastic chair,
(a whirr of artificial air above).

The scrupulously scurrulous students in their twelve dollar
     tennis shoes,
     self-torn shirts,
     Chloroxed jeans,
           ran ridiculously across the screen,
           reticulating riotousness,
           throwing words,
           and obscene gestures,
          (as clownishly copied as their clothes).

They were burning down the Bank of America

on every channel, all day long,
while the Future went from his neat nylon-webbed play pen,
to his non-toxic baby bed with soft synthetic bumper guards
(a whirl of bogus butterflies above).

The pampered polished baby in his three dollar
     Carter's best boyish
     nightgown and,
     protective plastic pants,
          raised a familiar finger to his mouth, 
                  soft murmurs,
                  shushed by symbiotic gestures
                  (as primal and unpretentious as a loin cloth)

They were burning down the Bank of America,

on the six o'clock news,
while the Future nuzzled against his Mother's breast,
nurtured by nature, at last, after the artificial day,
(a wisp of waning moon above).

Mother and son exchanging a mutual nourishment,
     touching,
     receiving,
     giving,
            responding to each other's need; until,
            with milk stained mouth,
            blue veins on eyelids,
            like the veins on breasts,
           (the Future fell fast and fearlessly asleep).

"They burned down the Bank of America today,"

the Future's Father said,
arriving tired from the office bearing the paper load of his work,
wearing his childhood in the Japanese prison camp on his forehead,
and, the manual labor which put him through college on his hands.

And I, whose depression deprived parents,
left their skimping on my skinniness,
wearing that for knowledge, as well as what I'd learned in school,
turned toward him frightened; surrounded by the splendours of our struggles.

I was careful not to speak of the wings he wore over Korea.

Sitting amid the comfort of all we'd bought and built,
(our time together shining in every corner of the house,
and in our eyes)
we spoke of youth;
      jeans worn thin,
     mended shirts,
     one pair of run-down shoes,
              running ravenously through school,
              devouring everything,
              regurgitating this,'
              retaining that,
             (more nourishing than the meals we missed).

The Bank of America with a few feeble flames flickering

was featured on the next morning's news.
The Future was seated on my lap at the breakfast table,
learning to pick up Cheerios for his new teeth to chomp,
(the voice of the eloquent and elated reporter above).

The glib and garrulous students in their expensive
     Mod tennis shoes,
     fresh-torn shirts,
     and permanently pressed jeans,
            were now ranting residuals
                     pouting "gimme, gimme",
                     flipping the finger
                     to themselves,
                     (caged within their clothes).

I watched them writhing for awhile,
and feeling faintly sad,
pitied their affluent poverty...
(a kind of inverse avarice?)
Their desires from birth delivered,
by a doting Mom or Dad,
packaged in plastic; gratis.
(Unpayable debts are bad).

Though they had grown their hair for years,
to cover their vacuity,
I could no longer bear to see their 
                                                     charred, 
                                                                   ruined, 
                                                                              reeling bodies,
                                                                                                     ANYMORE.

And so,
I turned them off.

                            The Future, I put on the floor
                             and though he found it strange.
                             not cushioned or soft,
                             (not safe, at all)
                             I piled a set of wooden blocks,
                             and, he began to creep,
                             to crawl.

                                                          II

                             Rome fell by such as these,
                             My blue-eyed baby boy,
                            Barbarians not taught to build,
                            Know only to destroy


                                                          III

They have rebuilt the Bank of  America,

Ten years have passed,
and not one charred brick remains,
Those who berserkly burned it are,
            off on a tangled trip somewhere.
                         or walking in every Friday with a deposit....

The war is over.
All have lost.

The wounded are horribly hidden away,
       in V.A. hospitals,
                  or scabbed, pestilent rooms in Haight Ashbury.

The Future is:
        mowing lawns, walking dogs, setting tables, making beds, 
        sweeping floors, emptying waste cans, studying violin,
        and doing homework.

He gets:
        50c a week allowance

He wants to be:
        a magician, a doctor, a famous musician, a circus performer,
        or maybe an engineer "like my Dad".

He feels:
        that he is overworked and under-paid.

I watch him fondly.
I try to share his dreams.

But, I often wish that I'd never seen the Bank of America burning,
      or read one word of Gibbon.



Further reading on the subject of the unrest fifty years ago when radical agitators burned down the Bank of America, set bombs, murdered police. 
https://time.com/4549409/the-weather-underground-bad-moon-rising/

https://chicago.suntimes.com/politics/2020/1/3/21033388/chesa-boudin-bernadine-dohrn-bill-ayers-san-francisco-sds-weather-underground-brinks-robbery

https://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/11/books/no-regrets-for-love-explosives-memoir-sorts-war-protester-talks-life-with.html

 

Rest in Peace, Justice Ginsberg

Ruth Bader Ginsberg died Friday afternoon. May she rest in peace.  Whether one agreed or disagreed with Justice Ginsberg's judicial phil...