The Bishop and the Butterfly: Murder, Politics, and the End of the Jazz Age
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    They Called Him Geronimo (a poem)

    They watched the Towers shudder and fall

    In disbelief

    Those iconic up-thrust symbols of wealth

    Melting in shivering cascades of dust and flesh

    Keening wails rose up through choking smoke

    As hordes of Banshees took wild flight

    In shock they toiled, in shock they mustered, in shock found brotherhood

    As they rescued all they could

     

    The world stood still and held its breath, even the skies were silent

    Except for the planes that were get-aways, filled with Princes of Saud

    So many knew how it was

    To be bombedvaporizedviolated, both the vanquished and victorious

    But not this land!  It wasn’t done!  A brand new game it seemed

     

    Goodwill poured in from around the world, offers to help in every way

    From nations and people of every faith

    The Muslim world condemned the deeds, though not loudly enough for some

    But the Leader said this is the work of a few, many are our Partners in Peace

    Don’t condemn the Many for the deeds of the Few

     

    So soon it wore away, that unity

    As they were urged to fear and loathe

    The hijab, the shimagh, the burqua, the turban, The Other

    Revenge was required it seemed

    Blood libel sang to them

    Dissenters were shouted down

    Battle cries of “9/11!” shook the land and clutched the nation’s soul

     

    We must show our might! Their leaders screamed

    Nothing else will do

    But that we mow them down for this impunity

    This travesty undeserved

    We’ll chew them up and spit them out

    They’ll not fuck with us again!

     

    They offered cynical carrots to despots unlovable

    And forged some weak accords

    Sent cash and arms and fearsome threats to any

    Who’d play their parts

    To help destroy these dastardly foes

     

    They sought security through might not right

    And abjured the path toward peace

    Asked only one lying question about the cause

    Answered themselves with greater lies

    So often they got writ in stone

     

    So they shocked and awed and shocked some more

    And tied yellow ribbons to help

    Flags and flags and flags again

    As Blue Ribbon moms unfurled

    And shook their fists and called them traitors

    As some walked defiantly

    For Peace

    And Muslims prayed

    No internment camps, please!

     

    They recalled the language of violence too well

    Given what they’d mis-taught Geronimo’s friends

    And still never thought to question

    What fueled the rage that brought the Towers down

     

    They were lied to by their leaders                 

    And didn’t care, didn’t cry, Did.Not.Cry.

    As bombs turned night to day, millions of tons of bombs

    The cradle of civilization, its art and texts

    Gone in a hail of retaliatory rage

    It’s ruined now, but hey

    They promised them purple fingers on the way

    Not quite out the door

     

    Then onward to the place of sand where Empires go to die

    Those deaf, blind students of history

    Fools in search of enemies, any old which ones will do

    Kill and capture who you can, we’ll sort it out  

    Later

    Soldiers were told; a big prison’s over yonder

     

    They called it COIN but what it really was

    Was bales of cash, army uniforms and guns

    The ‘Treats’ of a game of Trick or Treat

    The ‘Tricks’ unspeakable now

    Never mind

     

    No one witnessed the terror of the dustylovelyplaying children

    Or the farmers tending crops

    When the sound of an approaching drone froze them

    In place in fear and trance

    They’d never heard of the 9/11 time change the West now reckoned by

    ‘before or after’

    And did they wonder, “Why DO they hate us so?”

     

    At home they watched Survivor as though it mattered

    And Dancing Stars and Oprah

    They shopped and drove their cars and bought Exxon stock while their very own Rome

    Burned without the sizzle

    The lucre in their treasury grew small, but never fear, Uncle Ben created more out of air

    Through some silent and curious agreement

    That it was worth something more

    Than entries on a balance sheet

     

    Few spoke the name of Geronimo for a time

    Though it was implied within the conjoined letters A and Q

    Evil Personified, a useful tool

    Psy-ops Charismatic Boogey Man in a dress

    Few new tapes to debunk or not

    Was he dead?

    They hounded his brethren across more borders with drones

    Fewer carrots, more sticks, more Tricks, less Treats

    Insanity.  Kapow.  Kablooie.  Oops; sorry

    Where is God?  Where is Allah?  Who misplaced humanity?

     

    At home it all fell apart in one swell foop

    The people lost houses and savings and future

    Hope

    While their leaders abetted the heist

    Exxon and Raytheon grew fat as Wall Street bankers smokin’ stogies

    Gorging on the work of the peasants until even the work was gone

    Millions unemployed, underemployed; “Would you like fries with that?”

    Did the leaders even take note?

     

    The wars would end any day, the people were told

    Just as soon as X, Y and Z and

    Remember Geronimo! 

    As the Generals and spies played musical chairs

    On the deck of the Titanic while few were even aware because

    American Idol.   Hunger.  Homelessness.  Xanax and Viagra.  Austerity.  Video games.

    Amnesia.  Sweet amnesia.

     

    Then one night the people’s Leader came on their teevees to tell them a story

    Of intel and courage and decision

    In the North of a nation with whom they’d formed a crap alliance

    And he soberly announced that Ding, Dong, the Witch was Dead

    Americans can do anything they set out to do, one nation under God

    I forget the rest just now

    Something about justice, I think?

     

    And then the stories changed and changed a little more

    But the people won’t mind, the end’s the same

    Though justice it was not, but instead, Satisfaction

     

    Geronimo was consigned to the Briny Deep

     

    The Leader got a Geronimo bump

    Maybe there would be a Geronimo Peace Dividend

    The people did not hold their breaths

     

    But please, for the sake of the real Geronimo

    Remember

    They code-named Osama bin Laden

    Geronimo

    But they killed him like

    Crazy Horse                                             (Art by Anthony Freda @ www.anthonyfreda.com)

           (

    Comments

    Suzan Harjo and Winona Laduke were on Democracy Now! discussing the use of Geronimo's name, and Laduke expanded the discussion to Native Americans being screwed over by the military over and over, and very cavalierly.  I would love to have had her as a Vice President; she's smart, tough, and has some cool tatts on her right wrist. 

    http://www.democracynow.org/2011/5/6/native_american_activist_winona_laduke_on

    (And here Genghis was worrying about Mr.Stardust commenting on my diaries.  ;o)  I'd forgotten to remind him that Oxy Mora used to tease me about commenting on my own sometimes when they got no comments.  I even sometimes took an adversarial position.   ;o)


    That's nothing - I used to troll my own posts, and one time almost got myself fired in real life.


    'Troll troll troll yourself, gently down the thread...merrily, merrily ,merrily, merrily...life is full of dread.

    And happy mother's day to you and all of us....   ;o)


    Star, you have told a godd story that is a story of so much bad and you have told it well. Thanks.


    Thanks, Lulu.  I won't reply under you just in case you didn't mean it was a Godd story.  :o)  Now I remember asking where was God here, so...

    Since no one's reading this anyway, I'll say I had a bit of an up yesterday.  Now it may just be that Anthony Freda knew I'd been feelin' funky and lower than Lowly Worm's boot draggin' along the sidewalk, but...(parenthesis)( When i use his art, he asks me to send him the piece it would accompany, he can approve, or not) (end parenthesis), and I sent this with clacking knees and a trembling voice.  But in the return email, he asked if I'd contribute something for a highly illustrated compilation of essays he's putting together.  Dunno if it's dead tree or online, but it got my eyes blinking rapidly, I'll say that.  Even if it doesn't work out.

    But yeppers; it's a bad story of ten years of Military Madness, and it seems to me that on this story, IF, as the saying goes, 'Opinions are like assholes, everybody's got one', this time, lotsa people have about eleventthree opinions.  (Sorry for the grisly image, but...)

    Jeez; I just thought: Anthony, if you read this, you knocked me out.  Seriously; and thanks.


    Do all those who died in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars now get their lives back?


    Heart-rending question, Dreamer.  Even the live ones won't really everget their countries back, either.  Finding out even some of what's going on in Iraq leaves you breathless with rage.  And in Afghanistan, what can become of the children? 

                         


    Triggered by your poignant words, notably this part:

    They recalled the language of violence too well

    Given what they’d mis-taught Geronimo’s friends

    And still never thought to question

    What fueled the rage that brought the Towers down

     

    They were lied to by their leaders                 

    And didn’t care, didn’t cry, Did.Not.Cry.


    Funny; that's the same bit Mr. DustyDrapes liked, too. 


    One day Star, we'll see our children in theirs.  We'll stop trading lives for horrors that can't be undone by trading lives.  Any lives.  We'll stop pretending that we can solve even one of our problems by killing each other.  We'll stop avenging our pasts and give hope to the dreams of our futures.  One day, Star, we'll suddenly recognize our shared humanity, lay down our arms and embrace like the long lost friends we are. 


    Tears, too many to talk yet, kyle flynn.  Just for now:


    Blessed are the peacemakers. 


    Kyle, a friend sent me this photo on the second or third day I was writing this.  The child on the right looks so much like my grandson Elijah it's eerie.  I wanted to post it with this poem, but there wasn't a web page included.  I just found it after the sixth search.  It's from a post by Jacobe Freeze; he was always about saving the children.

         

    Asia heart of world, Afghanistan heart of Asia, Hazarajat heart of Afghanistan, Bamyan Heart of All Hazaras in world, these boys are belongs to Bamyan.look at there friendship they don’t think about there Poverty. They need your help.

    Thanks, Jacob.  It's hard to look away from them.


    Happy Mothers Day.


    You too, kyle.  And your far-seeing plea is a keeper; I'm glad it's here for me to look at now and again.

    On a lighter note, I asked Mr. Stardust not to get me anything for Mumsy Day; broke, all that...  so he came home from Cow-tez with tulips that were expressly not for the day.  But behind his back he held something, fighting a goofy grin.  He held his hand out like it held another small bouquet, and there it was:  A Killer Fly-swatter!  Gift of my dreams...the one we had was so cheesey it was like swattin' a fly with a limp banana peel; no, worse than that.  Made the flies chuckle, but never kilt one!

    But now: TAWANDA!  Look out you buzzing beasties; Stardust is on the prowl!   ;o)


    A poignant ballad of sadness and badness. Would dearly love to hear you read it from atop one of the sacred mesas. I especially liked "Psy-ops Charismatic Boogey Man in a dress."

    The last line was hard for me read. I assume you intended it to be so. I'm thinking that few people who have even a smidgen of respect for Native America want to see Osama compared to Crazy Horse. 


    Thanks, Watt.  And I doubt it, too; it created more of a 'thing' that I'd imagined it would.  When I ran into it, I hadn't realized it was soon to become almost common knowledge.

    And we'll pray and hope that we can turn a corner, but it's a tough lift to truly imagine.