Monday, December 26, 2022

poem

 (untitled)


Just in case you didn’t know,

or had forgotten—

each human is a universe;

so that when you walk up to them

with a fresh coffee in your hand,

and they have one in theirs,

you can each delve into

something strong and delicate,

bright and dark—

elements of

a vast chiroscuro

of failures, hopes,

dreams and

treasures.


And should you spend more time

with this creature with a mocha—

sharing the moment—

the features of the cosmos become

more apparent,

and constraint or expansion

become the truth

of the morning, or day,

or even decades.


Even the silliest, stupidest,

incubation is still immensely interesting,

every frozen flake of water is a marvel,

no matter how small.

Saturday, December 24, 2022

poem

 (untitled)


Krispy Kreme is about to bring in the robots,

is what the news said,

in the aggregate

of dog and pony

stories.


They’re aiming to cut time in production

through automation, and

within the next eighteen months

we’ll see frosting,

filling, and sprinkles

handled by metal hands;

all part of an effort to maximize

points of access

for fresh doughnuts.


Within the next eighteen months expect savings,

Krispy Kreme is about to bring in the robots.



Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Recent Letter to Sedaris & Recent Dylan quote

I heard David Sedaris on a podcast this fall, and that prompted a letter to him. A week later a Bob Dylan quote goes up on the internet; an interesting serendipity, and something I address in my upcoming novel:

Dear Mr. Sedaris,

Recently you were talking with Alec Baldwin, and said:


“Do you know when you meet someone and they say I want to be a writer? Or I want to be an artist? I ask, is it all you care about? Because if it's not it's going to be pretty hard for you. If you're not on fire…. You meet people like that where it's like opening the door of an oven and it's like—wow—and you take a step back. That doesn't mean they're good but they’re just intense—it’s all they think about, its all they talk about, its all they care about—they don’t have relationships, they’re not good friends for other people, it’s all they’re focused on.”


First, have you gone through another ‘on fire’ period since your twenties? Or have you been on fire to one degree or another ever since? Please consider being ‘on fire’ and what it means as a human, to another human, and humanity in general. Maybe now is not the time to be intense, maybe people on fire ought to be scorned? Or maybe everyone should support those on fire, occasionally buying them a sushi lunch with cold beer.


Sincerely,

John De Herrera

@colorfield_arts



 “Creativity is: a funny thing. When we’re inventing something, we’re more vulnerable than we’ll ever be. Eating and sleeping mean nothing. We’re in ‘Splendid Isolation,’ like in the Warren Zevon song; the world of self, Georgia O’Keeffe alone in the desert. To be creative you’ve got to be unsociable and tight-assed. Not necessarily violent and ugly, just unfriendly and distracted. You’re self-sufficient and you stay focused.”  --Bob Dylan



Sunday, December 18, 2022

poem

 (untitled)

When your life becomes surrounded
with a hundred or more stories
about what you did and how you acted,
that’s when you pull the armor in tight
and remind yourself
of the decades
proving yourself true
as a poet;
digging, speaking the truth;
no matter,
no matter;
don't let go now,
carry on;
carry on.

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Saturday, December 3, 2022

Political Science Essay

 Rebuttal To Anti-Conventionist Rhetoric


Lately there are lots of OpEds going against calls for a constitutional convention (also referred to as a Convention of States or Article V Convention). These Anti-Conventionist OpEds relate how the Constitution is one of the finest legal documents ever conceived by humanity, perhaps even divinely inspired, and how holding a new convention today would be a disaster—we don’t have people today who are intellectually or spiritually equivalent to those who framed the Constitution—Chief Justice Anton Scalia was quoted saying that now is not the time to be writing a new constitution. It would be too divisive. Who knows what monstrosity would come of it the Anti-Conventionists ask.


Well, first of all, we’re not talking about writing a new constitution, we’re talking about gathering delegates together to formally discuss our collective situation and whatever is discussed still has to be reviewed by Congress. There is no way a convention is going to convene and then tell the rest of the USA that they’re calling the shots. A few hundred delegates telling Congress it’s no longer in charge? Members of Congress giving up political power to delegates? Not.Gonna.Happen. Since the convention will be composed of people from across a massive country, and who don’t know each other, means that at some point they'll want to go home. Thus, due to human nature, when the motion to adjourn passes, and delegates are driving or flying home, nothing will have changed—we will still have the same Constitution we have now, still have the same Congress, same President, and same Courts. So please say it again Anti-Conventionists—when the convention adjourns, Nothing.Will.Have.Changed. Meaning, fears of a convention altering the Constitution in any way are utterly baseless, figments of the imagination, a giant brain fart of the complacent and brain dead.


Here’s the good news: of all ideas delegates leave on the table, Congress has to decide how they’re going to be vetted (state legislature or state mini-convention [we used the latter mode to end prohibition])—and because the threshold is 3/4 or 75% approval, means that roughly seven out of ten Americans are going to have to say Yes before an idea has any chance of being adopted. There have been thousands and thousands of ideas proposed over the years, and we’ve only adopted twenty-seven, so whatever delegates today come up with, it’s got to be a no-brainer. Now ask yourself, what could special interests, or the Koch Brothers, or George Soros, or the ACLU or ALEC, or a foreign nation, or whoever your favorite boogeyman is—what could they propose as an amendment that Americans from across the political spectrum and all walks of life would be down for? Next to 0%, which is a long, long way from 75%. Political polls of the past quarter century show that the only things Americans from the right and left agree on are electoral reforms. Everyone agrees there is too much private money driving public policy, and that we need electoral reform, because without it government is for sale. Indeed, with the advent of dark money, our government is up for sale even to foreign governments. So please say it again Anti-Conventionists—without electoral reforms government remains for sale to the highest bidder, even our competitors.


The one and only thing the Article V Convention does is allow us to formally discuss our collective situation—as a society, as a nation, as a culture of freedom. If we come to find there really isn’t anything to agree on, then so be it, Congress will have carried out its constitutional obligation, and we will have had the discussion like mature and responsible adults. Talking about things informally on the internet day-in and day-out isn’t cutting it.


To become educated on this subject and the history behind it, please visit Friends of the Article V Convention @foavc.org


Thursday, December 1, 2022

untitled poem


The reason relationships
are often so brutal
is because humans are half animal,
and to the sinews will buck
or growl or claw
at the object of affection
suddenly scorned,
right or wrong;
sometimes
after having just
been kissing.