Thursday, October 29, 2009

Friday, October 23, 2009

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

350 Poems

For the next couple weeks, I'll be over at the 350 Poems site.

Check it out--- and contribute something!



And look for other 350.org-sponsored actions in your area, as we gear up for the 24th...

Friday, October 9, 2009

Obama, the world doesn't have time for you to be wasting time on a war in Afghanistan

New Climate Study reports 100% emissions cut needed in 10 years



It boggles my mind that this administration, facing massive national debt & an economic crisis, would continue to blow billions on an unpopular war started by a previous administration (tho it is quickly earning the title "Obama's War in Afghanistan"). In this perfect moment to start funneling some of our taxpayer money (which has largely gone toward the war) toward job creation in the green sector here at home, our Nobel Peace Prize winning president has just taken troop-reduction off the table.

Where do we live? How will we be looked at?


Robert Greenwald's new documentary, Rethink Afghanistan, makes a lucid & powerful case against the war, one that is worth spreading.


Meanwhile, what are the counter-mainstream mainstream poets doing about any of this?


Eliot Weinberger excoriated us for our complacency & insularity 6 1/2 years ago, in his "Poetry Is News." I was in my freshman year at Brown University back then, baffled by a newly begun war in Iraq-- and I do mean baffled. I didn't know what to think.

It feels like an increasingly untenable route to take--whatever this route I & we are taking-- and yet even now I can't see any good way out of it.

Weinberger provides three alternative models for action: 1) political poetry (of which he says 95% is bad, but, in effect, who cares); 2) Oppen (i.e. quit poetry altogether & organize); or 3) Vallejo (keep writing poetry, but also write vigorous political prose alongside).

And talking to my friend Melanie the other day it seemed clear that laughter was a way, woven into these.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Works in Progress!!

The first annual Works in Progress Festival was a giant success-- many thanks to Richard and Andrew for putting together such a wonderful weekend.

Orlando White read on night one

Lake Erie was read to

a shape note singing workshop took place

Luke Fischbeck / Lucky Dragons closed

& there was a village of poems

(& much much more)

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

This morning's notes toward a new poetry

I imagine much different poems than Andrew Joron’s
being surrounded by a much different essay.

These newborn poems will be filled with a wily imagination, primarily, though they will carry the bagged head of a sadness & lament (of mortality, & for political mistreatment). They will keep moving, & they may even be joyous & pleasurable & strangely accessible, carry non-poetry readers through them even as they make us feel & think

The essay will not be properly philosophical, but will be properly political, as it will expose in clear and critical language something specific that is happening & our place within it & a potential exit

That is, it will be fundamentally critical AND imaginative

But within a very basic language. It will be, perhaps, another absorbing narrative. But it will have a weight & insistence & explicitness that the poetry, perhaps, manages to carry only indirectly.

If it has the insistence & explicitness, then perhaps it does not even need the weight, & can move quickly


*in response to Andrew Joron's Fathom
** & Calvino's Six Memos for the New Millenium

Friday, September 4, 2009

Time to step up & lead, Barack

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/barton-kunstler-phd/time-for-obama-to-fight-a_b_275332.html



President Obama is the boxer who came out with one big swing (the crowd roars-- Guantanomo closing!), settled into his more conservative game plan based on scouting reports, and then, after a couple bloody rounds, finds himself in worse shape than he thought---- but who still has the capacity to fight, and to get the crowd on his side---if he would just show a little life












CUBE SONG

for Eric





You put a cube in the desert.



It starts to melt.

It fills with water.



It makes the desert colder.





Leaves don’t really exist

The animals are drifting



A few still come to drink at the windows





*



I know I said that



I know I don’t remember

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Music Links

der, i have put some sound stuff on myspace music, under Adam


and then here is some crazy drone metal

Saturday, May 23, 2009

"preventive detention"

Well, it's summer again, and maybe I'll try to resurface a bit on the old bloggy-poo. And, after all, it's thing's like Obama's new plan for justifying indefinite, preventive detention of terror suspects that make taking loud public stances on things seem, not obnoxious (as one poet in me may feel), but kinda necessary (as another poet in me is pleading).

Glenn Greenwald makes a clear case here for how unacceptable Obama's speech, and plan, was/is.

I think it's important for all of us to be loudly and articulately opposing Obama's plan in the days/weeks/months to come. And while the whole thing makes me lose plenty of faith in the Obama administration, there's still time to change public perception on this issue----something to which Obama is perhaps more sensitive than his predecessor. The NYtimes (online) headline today reads:

President’s Detention Plan Tests American Legal Tradition

Determining the constitutionality of President Obama’s proposal for “prolonged detention” of terror suspects without trial is likely to require a national look in the mirror
.

If a major media news outlet is framing this as questionable from the outset, then there's at least some hope here. Let's be vocal.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

A New Year...

As Israel continues its offensive/massacre/"retaliation" (the language around this is particularly interesting), major US politicians (Democrat & Republican alike) continue to support, whether explicitly or not, these actions. Another win for ethnocentrism & terror-- as deeply folded into Western democracy and state power as it is more conventionally recognized in the hands of the dispossessed. I thought this article did a good job summing up the political nature and timing of the assault.

In the meanwhile, I return from a three-day New Year's celebration in Atlanta.