Collected Poems of
Christopher B. Garvey
Libertarian Candidate for Governor of New York
$5.00
|
I Lost My Bags At San Juan Airport *Frogs Ears *Conflict Of Interest *Kemba Smith *Hands *It's Time To Change The Rules *Corporate Welfare *Campaign Finance Reform *On the Nature of Poets *Relics of 1970 *Camaro *You *Philosophy of Govrnment *Greater Fool Theory *Insider Trading *Truism * |
On The Virtue of Classical Music *A Fleet or B Fleet? *Declaration of Independence *Aspiring Associate *Halloween Haiku *Bifurcation *January Effect Haiku *South Street Seaport *Toward A Safer Society *Hypocrites *Gun Control *My Parents 50th Wedding Anniversary *Global Warming * |
ã
1998 Chris Garvey
I Lost My Bags
To the tune of I Left My Heart
In San Francisco
The carousel at gate four,
I waited half a day.
The bags that I did wait for
Had somehow gone astray.
They'd been properly checked and tagged.
How I wish I had hand carried.
No, don't dare check through your bags
When you change at San Juan Bay.....
I lost my bags
At San Juan Airport.
Now from St. Croix
They call to me
To be where little DC-Three's
Are tossed across the breeze.
My toothbrush flies
On old PRIN AIR.
I don't care.
My bags wait there
At San Juan Airport,
In some locked room
Warehoused away.
When I go home through you,
San Juan Airport,
You'll send my bags off to L.A.
Copr. 1976, 1994 C. Garvey
FROGS’ EARS
copyright 1998 Chris Garvey
’Twas a widely held old theory, that was never proved as fact,
That bullfrogs amplified their croaking through their vocal sacs.
And to test that, Dudley tried to make them sound like Mickey Mouses,
By filling up with helium, their little froggie houses.
But when, compelled by mating urges, said gassed frogs, they spoke,
A mighty bass profundo resonated as their croak.
And since that disproved theory, way back in ’ninety-three,
The mighty croaking of bullfrogs remained a mystery.
’Till now: when an important thing, acoustically, on frogs;
A startling revelation has come out of L.A.’s smog:
The North American bullfrog, when he wants a mate to hear,
Resonates his mighty croaking, through, of all places, his ears.
Now, you may say, you’re skeptical; this can’t be how frogs bray;
But I cite as authority: Alejando P. Purgue
Who took several froggie species and bombarded them with sound;
And observed each little body part, to see which ones resound.
The famous Western Chorus Frogs; Frogs from California’s trees;
Some did indeed use vocal sacs, and other cavities;
Boomed croaking from their vocal chords, through other body parts.
But the North American Bullfrog
Used his ears to sing his heart.
To confirm his findings, Purgue used, some quite unlikely things,
Tiny froggie earmuffs, made of foam and little springs.
And when these Kermit earmuffs, their ears he had en-snagged;
Their "RIBBET’s", became "mimmetts";
As though they had been gagged.
Confirm yourself, ‘ere you believe, these fabulous events:
Put fingers on your bullfrog’s ears --
He quiets by nine tenths.
It’s a wonder they do not go deaf; a wonder they still hear;
After amplifying such a din, throughout their membrane ears.
There’s a lesson in these frog love songs:
For men: to draw girls near;
When you would woo a female, use:
Your vocal chords, and
ears.
Conflict Of Interest
© 1998 Chris Garvey
Pataki and D’Amato run
With lots of Wall Street money,
From men for whom government bonds
Comprise their milk and honey,
Who made a bad investment
In a LILCO plant at Shoreham
And now want rate and taxpayers
To pick the tab up for ‘em.
Half-hearted grunts of protest came
From Sheldon Democrat,
‘Till Wall Street made it clear
His war-chest also would get fat.
ã
1997 CBGShe was, they say, a model child,
And always conscientious.
Her efforts to do right were real,
And not merely pretentious.
To all acquainted with her goodness,
Shocked surprise was given,
To hear her sentenced to two-dozen
Years in Federal prison.
Her crime: to yield to love, then fear;
A love for the wrong man,
Who hid his work,
Until she’d helped
His nefarious plans;
And linked her to "conspiracy"
(The prosecutor’s friend),
Where blameless acts become a crime,
And prison’s where you’ll end.
Her crimes: to buy a car for him,
To rent a small apartment,
Drop off an opaque package, on
An errand long forgotten.
And by the time she learned what
His life really was about,
He knew where all her loved ones lived;
There was no safe way out.
He chilled her with the knowledge
They could meet untimely ends,
For, after all, she learned, he’d even
Killed his own best friend.
And so, when she, in fear, with him,
And from the law, she fled,
The ruthless wrath of prosecutors,
Fell upon her head.
Their prize, the man, was snatched from them,
Found somewhere shot to death,
And so their anger fell instead
On hapless Kemba Smith.
The grand jury’s a rubber stamp,
And after all, she’s black,
And sentencing has minimums,
For crimes involving crack.
And if the judge thought this poor girl
Deserved an easier fate,
His hands were tied, his judgment nulled,
By those who legislate.
You cannot mollify these laws,
By asking how she’s wrong.
These laws define her help as "crimes"
And sentence will be long.
So think:
the next time you sell gas,
Does that car’s trunk have drugs?
Your customers at table six,
Are they crack-dealing thugs?
And if you do a favor,
Cause you’re helpful and you’re nice,
Are you helping conspirators?
Will you be put on ice?
Don’t think her plight’s an error, a…
Consequence, unintended.
Drug laws were meant
to jail young blacks,
No matter what’s pretended;
And opium smoking Chinese coolies,
Who took the railroad jobs;
And marijuana Mexicans;
And coked-up jazz-playing slobs.
Don’t tell me how you’ll save our children
From the drug born scourge.
Prohibition made the problems;
Criminals just feed the urge.
Doctors and druggists once supplied,
Bayer HEROIN
â , as needed;And sold cocaine to ten-year-olds,
For siblings who were teething.
No one died from dealers,
Who with strychnine, cut their drugs;
Who gunned down their competitors;
Who’s clients killed and mugged.
But, as long as tyrants tell us what
We can’t put in our bodies:
Joe Kennedy’s can make their fortunes,
Smuggling stuff to parties;
The CIA can fund its projects,
Off its dark black budget; and…
Young Kemba Smith will rot in jail,
And no one can adjudge it.
HANDS
Copyright 1978 Christopher B. Garvey
To the tune of Offenbach's ORPHEUS IN THE UNDERWORLD [CANCAN MUSIC]
Pressed 'tween fingers and a thumb,
An object lifted, up will come;
And, to scratch, unlike a whale,
You have some handy fingernails; and
Lassie may have been a star,
But she could never play guitar;
Nor the trumpet in a band,
Without prehensile hands.
Chorus
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Fingers are such devious things;
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Tying knots or wearing rings;
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Flies are stuck with sticky feet;
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Hands can be so clean and neat.
I -- think it is essential,
That my hand's prehensile,
Not just filled with toes;
'Cause with--out a hand prehensile,
You can't use utensils,
Nor tweak somebody's nose.
Claws are fine for tearing meat; and
Hoofs make swift and rugged feet.
Webs are fine for pad-dle-ing and
Flying creatures use the wing; and
I'm not meaning to debunk
The elephant's prehensile trunk;
But, I think, it's really grand
To have prehensile hands.
[second chorus optional]
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Fingers are such devious things;
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Tying knots or wearing rings;
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Flies are stuck with sticky feet;
Hands, Hands, Hands, Hands,
Hands can be so clean and neat.
IT'S TIME TO CHANGE THE RULES
It's time to change the rules.
They're even known by fools,
We have no edge
If all can hedge
And fiddle with our tools,
So
It's time to change the rules.
They think they know the song.
We'll make things go real wrong,
Then we'll mis-tell
Why trouble fell;
Place blame where not belonged
And then we'll change the song.
The scape goats are displayed.
Popular wisdom's made.
Just hear the row
"Do something now"
Our program's on parade,
To change the rules we're bade.
So now we'll change the rules.
That should slow down the fools.
We have an edge.
They cannot hedge.
We've new exclusive tools.
They made us change the rules.
Copr. 1993 C. Garvey
Corporate Welfare
There's sixty-five billion each year,
To corp'rations Congress holds dear,
And to nurture this hay,
There’s campaign funds to pay,
To make friends who will lend corp’s an ear.
They've got taxpayer money to steer,
Rob from poor, give to rich folks, each year,
Don't waste cash on the poor,
When the rich thank you more,
But, just don’t let the taxpayers hear.
© 1997 C. Garvey
CAMPAIGN REFORM
Keep up those campaign finance laws;
Long have they waved on high;
And many multi-millionaires,
Are congressmen thereby.
The poor can't win elections now,
At just one grand per donor;
Or meet arcane reporting codes;
Designed to spoil their honor.
The power to make candidates,
Has shifted to the press,
Conglomerated media,
Who's words are un-suppressed.
Establishment-ed parties;
Soft money for the fray;
Dictate who wins;
And to be sure;
It won't be renegades.
"Public financing" they all cry;
Will solve these thorny problems;
Let taxpayers support these birds;
Who're lining up to rob 'em.
But, do you think incumbents,
When they're allocating money,
Won't somehow advantage themselves,
With rules arcane and funny?
And is it fair, to make us pay,
For those whose views we hate?
While making it a crime to pay
To help our candidate?
Perhaps it's wise to regulate,
Those who are now in power,
Lest they help all their donors,
Our taxes, to devour.
But what about the challengers?
As yet, they have no clout.
They take no public salary,
Nor public funds give out.
Only ideas, only their deeds,
Only the words they shout;
Why can't I buy a megaphone
To help their words get out?
Because of campaign finance laws,
Which so far have, and will,
Served to keep those incumbents
As the kings upon the hill.
ON THE NATURE OF POETS
If all the creatures of the world
Were gathered in a host,
Among the very useless,
Would a poet be the most.
So if, in writing poems,
I am condemned to waste some time,
I'd like to have it said of me,
"At least his poems did rhyme."
© 1996 Chris Garvey
Relics of 1970
Speeding towards my mid-Manhattan law office,
I climb to the elevated Bruckner Expressway,
And merge my 16 year old Camaro into formation with a Puerto Rican
From General Sheridan’s Expressway.
He drives a Firebird;
A comparable, contemporary, Pontiac counterpart to my Camaro;
We glance at each other’s dents and rust;
Nodding at the "350" badges on our fenders;
Relics from the glory days;
Our crank-cases are positively ventilated;
Our engines are ninety-percent cleaner than their forebearers;
But we predate the ridiculous power-robbing smog pumps and plumbing.
We are buckled to our bucket seats by manually adjusted belts,
Without shoulder straps or boa-constrictor retractor contraptions.
Our ends are not weighted by giant expensive government-mandated bumpers.
Five-hundred dollar ultimate driving machines.
Our exhausts are in their loud phases of a biennial decay cycle,
And our identical V-8’s thunder back at our open windows,
Off the concrete barriers that define our pathway through the sky;
At 87 miles-per-hour.
There is no place for a police car to hide;
No one in front of us;
The horizon is blue and cloudless.
High above the Bronx,
We look at each other;
Sharing the common bond of our Bondo’d GM F-bodies;
And, grinning ear-to-ear,
We accelerate towards Manhattan.
Ó
1997 Chris GarveyCamaro
To the tune of Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
© 1995 C.Garvey
Sometimes I feel like I want rear wheel drive.
Sometimes I feel like I need rear wheel drive.
Sometimes I wish I still had rear wheel drive.
My old Camaro--O
My old Camaro.
Posi-Traction; An axle that's live;
My old Camaro--O,
My old Camaro.
Sometimes it seemed like the body was gone,
Sometimes it seemed like the chassis was gone,
Sometimes it seemed like the floorboards were gone,
All rusted to the bone -- O,
All rusted to the bone.
Hurst and four-speed; Three-fifty V-Eight;
But rusted to the bone -- O,
But rusted to the bone.
A composer asked me to write some lyrics in the voice of a woman who’s attitude he admired:
YOU
You who meets me,
You who greets me,
You, persistent, who entreats me,
You so pleasant,
Eating pheasant,
Try'ng to show me you're no peasant;
Flaunting power,
In your tower,
Bark to make the servants cower.
Richly dressed,
And daily pressed,
With sparkling Lambourghini blessed;
So impressive,
Your successive
Ex's, who you made depressive.
Hint enhancement - -
My advancement - -
Subtly - - to avoid harassment.
Sweets and flowers,
Gifts you shower,
Reluctance, to overpower.
Why do I think something's missing?
Why do I resist your kissing?
With your wordly assets proved,
Why do I remain unmoved?
How can I be unimpressed?
Why should I not get undressed?
Love,
it's not there,
You don't cause care,
I shall not be moved.
Copr. 1994 Chris Garvey 1-24-94
It may be that things go awry because of the random forces of nature. But if our world were the intended product of a successful ruling class conspiracy, which benefits from general misfortune, here would be a likely philosophy of such a conspiracy:
Philosophy of Government
There is no percentage
In letting cash stay,
In the pockets of earners,
To spend as they may.
What if they invest?
What if they are wrong?
Or worse if they're right?
Won't that make them too strong?
With millions of decisions,
Some are bound to be right.
If they're better than ours
Can we still sleep at night?
Take away those decisions!
Let them do as they're told!
Keep the big bucks and fortunes
Where they were in times old.
There is no percentage,
In letting you do,
What is best for yourself,
As determined by you.
You should need our permission,
And apply for your needs;
To maintain your condition:
Overlook our misdeeds.
And a little donation,
At election time can
Bring the wealth of a nation
To assist in your plan.
Take away your volition;
You will do as we say
Which can be what you ask for,
If you know who to pay.
There is no percentage
In laws you can obey.
How could we find you guilty,
If you stand in our way?
We will grow regulation,
With the speed of a press,
That can send you to prison
For what e're you confess;
And take all that you own
If suspected of crime.
(Try to mount a defense;
When we have your last dime.)
No, there is no percentage
In intelligent man,
Who has learned how to think,
Who can see through our plans.
Let's control education;
Run the schools by the state;
Set the rules of the discourse;
And the terms of debate.
And by all means don't teach
Them poor kids how to read.
Restrict their information,
To a media feed.
There sure is no percentage
In a fixed cash supply.
How would we induce price waves?
...Know when to catch the ride?
Or create buying power
By the Federal Reserve,
That inures to the privileged,
And the banks that it serves.
No, there is no percentage
In letting cash stay,
In the pockets of you folks,
To spend as you may.
Copyright 1997 Chris Garvey
Tulip Bulbs In 17th Century Holland
or
The Greater Fool Theory
Copr. 1993 C. Garvey
There is always a still greater fool, wit-
ness the high prices of tulips.
They look very nice,
And their increasing price
Makes them better investments than blue chips.
Oh, the more of the throng learns what's there,
The more speculators will dare.
For tomorrow, crowds may,
Think the goods, bought today,
Are increasingly valued and rare.
You may think that the price is too tall
For something so worthless and small,
But, it's not what we need,
It is what we perceive
As desired and valued by all,
That's what makes rising prices a trend.
'Cause we know, round the very next bend,
There'll be buyers galore,
Who'll pay still even more,
And the price will just rise without end.
But, when all-who-will are interested,
And, their spare cash they've fully invested,
Then to sell, if you try,
You'll find no one to buy,
Your peak price can't now still be digested.
Yes, there's always one more greater fool,
But take care if you live by that rule,
When the smoke clears away,
Let the mirror not say,
"You're the last and the greatest of fools."
4-19-93
4-22-93 revision
INSIDER TRADING
Dear old grand dad could delight in
What was perfectly all right in
The good old days
that came before
The Securities Act
of Thirty-four.
He could grow so rich.
He could feel so smart,
As he practiced his
Manipulative art.
And if outsiders got a little burned,
'Twas a tiny harm,
Of which they'd never learn.
Though the news might still be pending,
Yet unpublished, it caused trending;
'Cause the insiders
knew which way to sell,
And (just as they should)
Caused the price to fell.
And the shock of big surprises
Could be cushioned by
little rises.
Great big market perturbations
Often came from combinations.
But the industry
Wants us all to feel
Like we're on a level
playing field.
So the S.E.C.
Comes down hard on those
who
trade with-reference-to
What they-only knows.
But of course, what all these regulations miss
Is that price-setter: the market specialist.
His secret order book knows who wants to buy
As he sets the prices low or high.
And while insiders
Go to prison,
His great assets have
only riisen;
Yes, he buys
when he has the price real low,
Once he sets it high,
Then he lets stock go.
He's behind all the debating
On the ills of program trading,
Cause if any turkey, on or off the floor,
Can trade fast as him,
Then what's he there for?
Hailed for making
orderly markets,
Glad that insiders are a target,
For if market forces got the jump on him,
There would be less cream
For himself to skim.
Copyright 1993 Christopher B. Garvey
Truism
1-31-95 Ó 1995 C. Garvey
I'd been asked to run for office,
Though I hardly stood a chance,
So I went out where the crowds were
Where the people came to dance.
Mid the deaf'ning din of music,
At that bar across the bay,
She said, "When you get where your going..."
I said, "If per chance I may."
She said, "Be you not uncertain,
Though you travel near or far,
There is one thing that's for certain:
You are always where you are.
"So you will get where your going,
Though we don't know where that be,
To the seats of highest power,
Or where hounds surround your tree."
So treat your fellow humans right,
As you travel on your way,
In case you need some help some night,
For to keep those hounds at bay."
1-26-95
© 1995 C.Garvey
On The Virtue of Classical Music
© 1997 Christopher B. Garvey
Sing we the praises of music that's classical.
It may be quite old, but it's not quite jurrassical.
It is so convenient: no live author hassicle;
Copyright expired, play it free 'cause it's classical.
Expired copyright; no royalty one pays,
A composer so long dead,
He is quite safe to praise.
One can well afford to credit, his turn of a phrase,
He will never one debit, for whatever one plays.
A
Fleet or B Fleet?In the Mamaroneck Frostbite Association the winners of the B Fleet’s previous day’s races are promoted to A Fleet, while A’s losers are demoted to B Fleet. Those who transit most frequently are called yo-yo’s, and this song is dedicated to one such yo-yo.
O' come, O' come Roy Israel,
And leave behind your software manuals.
We're all of us quite anxious to see
If you will sail in A this week or B.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Roy Israel,
Shall be in A until he don't do well.
DECLARATION
© 1994 C. Garvey
When in the course of human events
A people, once free, are pressed to relent
Inestimable rights to a distant tyrant
Then the bands that connect them they need to have rent:
As we take up our station,
with nature's consent,
That is sep'rate and equal,
respect that's decent,
For Opinions of Mankind,
requires we present,
And declare all that caused
and impelled this event.
We hold, now, these truths
to be self-evident,
That all men, by God, here,
with some rights, have been sent,
To secure these rights, men institute Governments,
Which derive their just Powers from Governed's consent.
When these ends, any Government tends to demolish,
It's the Right of the People
to change or abolish.
We would not do so lightly;
prudence would admonish.
But follow our inj'ries,
by King George, despotish:
On his sole will, our judges
he has made dependent.
Made multitudes of offices
(which we resent),
And swarms of new officers,
hither he's sent;
To harrass our People,
and eat out their Substance.
World trade he's cut off,
though demand, up is pent.
He's imposed on us taxes,
without our consent.
Altering fundamentally our government.
Burning towns, killing people, who's thoughts are diff'rent.
At each stage, for our redress,
petitions we've sent,
We have warned British brethren,
against their attempts,
And explained the conditions
of our Settlement,
They've been deaf to it all.
So, Dear God, our intent's,
To declare that these STATES
are now INDEPENDENT!
And to be sure,
That the Tyrant's a gonner,
We pledge our lives, Fortunes, and our sacred honor.
Aspiring Associate
copyright 1982 C. Garvey
to the tune of Modern Major General
I am a stark example of a semi-sane law student;
And I never hoist my hand unless I'm sure the answer's prudent
Though professors may be boring and class interest seems to taper,
I'll endeavor to catch every word in books of white note paper.
I've a photographic mem'ry, and no concept can evade me;
And if my professor says it, that's sufficient to persuade me,
When confronted with a blue book I'll dump reams of information,
At high speed in writing reasonable and rife with ripe quotation.
Chorus
At high speed in writing reasonable and rife with ripe quotation.
At high speed in writing reasonable and rife with ripe quotation.
At high speed in writing reasonable and rife with ripe quotation-ation-un.
With my yellow underliner I'll extract the case's kernel,
Wading through judicial verbiage, convoluted and infernal,
But before I hoist my hand I must be sure the answer's prudent,
For, I am a stark example of a semi-sane law student.
I am about the apex of aspiring associate.
I always dress in garments that the partners think appropriate.
I'm usually found lost in the firms vast legal library,
Preparing to defend some client's foreign office bribery.
I'm very good at obfuscation, legalese and subterfuge.
The world may seek to clarify, but my objective's to confuse.
And, if you seek discov'ry of some relevant reality,
It's my job to obscure it in a mass of triviality.
Chorus
It's his job to obscure it in a mass of triviality.
It's his job to obscure it in a mass of triviality.
It's his job to obscure it in a mass of trivial-i-lal-i-ty.
Then the assets of estates I can so subtle-ly expropriate
With billings that the devisees could only deem extortionate,
But still befrocked in garments that the partners think appropriate,
I am about the apex of aspiring associate.
I am that perfect pinnacle, the practicing law partner.
Years of living with the law has turned me into an old fart, there.
Though I live to oil the mechanism of a great democracy,
Within my firm I'm happily ensconced in an autocracy.
I've a battery of recent grads who keep their meters ticking,
While preparing me to give my client's foes a legal licking,
And for every hour I contemplate said client's legal pickle,
He receives a bill that's in excess of twenty-thousand nickels.
chorus
He receives a bill that's in excess of twenty-thousand nickels.
He receives a bill that's in excess of twenty-thousand nickels.
He receives a bill that's in excess of twenty-thousand nic-kel-ic-kel-els.
Though my billing's so preposterous the clients thing they're bleeding,
It's a question, not of wanting me but absolutely needing,
So, if money is the thing that warms the cockles of your heart, there,
Think how warm can be the cockles of the practicing law partner.
chorus
So, if money is the thing that warms the cockles of your heart, there,
Think how warm can be the cockles of the practicing law partner.
I am a geriatric, jowled jaded japing judge,
And my decisions flow forth from my pen, with all the speed of sludge,
All though to get to my exalted post, I've done my share of bowing
It's forgotten now, for all in court, to me do their kowtowing.
I'm the only one in court who can afford a sense of humor,
And to be the target of my wit, is more fun than a tumor.
And if o'er the years my oratory's lost some of its sizzle,
It's still brighter than a counselor's, whose case begins to fizzle.
chorus
It's still brighter than a counselor's, whose case begins to fizzle.
It's still brighter than a counselor's, whose case begins to fizzle.
It's still brighter than a counselor's, whose case begins to fizzle-izzle-el.
For although in each decision, with me, one side's disagreeing,
It has no effect upon my post, within which, I'm still being.
O' there's no one who is so immune to other people's grudges,
As a genuinely geriatric jaded japing judge is.
chorus
O' there's no one who is so immune to other people's grudges,
As a genuinely geriatric jaded japing judge is!
5-27-93
Halloween Haiku
Copr.. 1998 CBG
Time of Halloween;
Scary creatures abound. Some
Will be elected.
Bifurcation
To the tune of Fascination
Bifurcation
Is funny
It separates blame from the money
If your claim should prove to be spurious
No need to figure, just how injurious.
Judicially
It’s economical;
If the factfinder thinks your case comical
O’ why take evidence about the amount
When your silly claim
Just doesn’t count.
Oh bifurcation,
Can hurt you,
It’s a way for the court to desert you.
If that defendant
Does not get the blame,
The court avoids
The damage game.
Copr. C.Garvey 1984, 1998
January Effect Haiku
copr. 1998 CBG
Sold last month for loss;
Stocks are re-bought -- prices rise;
Tax-caused artifacts.
South Street Seaport
copr. 1998 CBG
I try to sleep
In the unscreened hold of a wooden schooner.
The tires over the Brooklyn Bridge
Are indistinguishable
From the mosquito around my head.
TOWARD A SAFER SOCIETY
Ó
1997 Chris GarveyA million times a year, a victim’s handgun is displayed,
And thwarts a villain’s ill intent, by making him afraid.
Without a shot: rape, robbery, and mayhem thus are thwarted,
And oft’ as not, the incident, will pass by unreported.
Floridians, by change of law, with handguns were provided;
Rape, violent crime, and murder all immediately subsided.
And tourists found protection from car-jacking and from road kills;
When plain rental-car plates let them
pass for
maybe-armed locals.
In Israel, would-be massacres are thwarted without cops;
When crowds of armed civilians return fire, killers stop.
Contrast that to our Capital, where good men were disarmed,
When D.C.’s new gun-ban laws increased victims’ chance of harm.
Without a gun, when evil looms, you’ve less chance to survive.
If poor Vince Foster had a gun, he might still be alive.
© 1997 Christopher B. Garvey
Hypocrites
Ó
1998 Chris GarveyDianne Feinstein shouts loudly, in the anti-gun debate;
But Dianne F is known to carry her own thirty-eight.
Though banning guns, the New York Times advocates with great fervor,
A rare New York full-carry permits its own Punch Sulzburger.
So if I may, their words re-say,
In light of what they do:
"Guns are OK, for nobles - they;
But not for serfs like you."
Gun Control
Copr. 1998 CBG
When Adolph Hitler was elected
by the German nation,
He subjected his people to
broad weapons registration.
After he’d used that registry
for weapons confiscation,
His victims were quite helpless
to resist annihilation.
Non-governmental entities,
In this twentieth century,
Have killed approximately eighteen-million.
While governmental entities,
In this same very century,
Have killed at least a hapless quarter billion.
And one-hundred-eighty-million,
Were governments’ own civilians,
Whose rulers thought, would be improved, if dead;
Whose low race or foul opinions,
To who exercised dominion,
Justified a bloody bludgeon to the head.
Before each bloody genocide,
So "peace" would rule the countryside,
The victims’ guns, by force of law, were taken,
Conveniently, it’s not denied,
For those with arms did most abide,
Right where it said upon gun registrations.
Tyrants have favored arms control,
From Nero to Pol-Pot;
They figured out their programs would
Make people want them not;
They know they cannot have their way,
In a home of the brave;
They know an unarmed populace
Is simpler to enslave;
They wish to have the people’s views
all rendered less than moot;
They count on people being not
historically astute;
They’ve ordered: " Raise your right hand,
in assent and in salute;"
They set the stage for East Timor,
Tibet, Tienamine Square;
Before they knock upon your door,
Gun control will be there.
On The Occasion of the Fiftieth Wedding
Anniversary of
William and Marie Garvey
© 1997 Christopher B. Garvey
A short time ago,
In nineteen forty-seven,
They were married in June,
With a joy quite unleavened.
Many years after that,
Or, well... only a few,
Came the first Garvey brat,
Who recites this to you.
No dysfunctional unit,
Was I welcomed aboard,
But a happy young family,
In a cream '50 Ford.
Three more infants arrived,
In ten subsequent years,
Pretty well insulated,
From the worst of life's fears.
And yet always encouraged,
If things got at all rough,
To avoid sad self pity,
To be mentally tough.
There was always black humor,
We learned that disasters,
Death, trouble, or rumors,
Are best dealt with by laughter.
And if in our brains
Dark thoughts did accrue,
It probably meant,
We'd come down with the flu.
As children of the Depression,
They taught us to be cheap,
In fact,
Paying for this party
Goes against training deep.
Truth, justice, and honor,
We were taught to strive for,
Which I've found,
As a lawyer,
Has helped keep me poor.
We were taught to avoid
Stupid conflicts of life,
By the way that they managed
Our small sibling strife.
We were taught, how to, safely,
Carefully, handle guns,
And, so far, so good,
We ain't shot anyone.
We were taught
what a rip-off,
All taxes were made for,
And to thank God
We don't get
All the government
We've paid for.
In our earliest years,
We got lots of attention,
Which made us all smart,
And encouraged invention.
Every question we asked,
Got a thoughtful response,
So the way the world works,
In our minds, was ensconced.
We learned that,
If stuff breaks,
There's no reason to panic,
And now even their daughters
Are decent mechanics.
We learned skidding
in snow;
We learned how to
use power;
We learned how to
back-up, at
fifty miles-an-hour.
We learned to
Set our sights
On the earth
Or the stars,
And we've helped
split the atom,
And built brand new cars.
We've taught many hundreds
To sail in small boats.
We've pumped, over wires,
Mil-li-ons of volts.
We've defended the names
Of the skillful and able;
And secured to inventors
The fruits of their labor.
We've fixed people's cars;
And built homes for their spouses;
And given them loans;
And inspected their houses;
And helped keep them safe,
As they flew through the air;
And helped folks relax,
On the yacht Laissez Faire.
We've fixed people's phones;
And tested their blood;
And rescued their boats,
From hurricanes and floods.
And in between all,
Of the stuff
we were buildin',
We even produced
Two fantastic grandchildren.
I'd say they equipped us
to live a good life,
And I'd say,
all-in-all,
That its been pretty nice.
Global Warming
© 1997 Chris Garvey
To tax, to rule, to take their cut,
And other deeds infernal,
The rulers of a people must,
Point to a threat external.
For eons war has been their spook,
Sacrifice justifying,
OK, while they were killing gooks,
And poor folks did the dying.
But thermonuclear armed foes,
Are less attractive bad guys.
If only war they could dispose,
They wouldn’t seem such mad guys.
Their arrogance, to justify,
Some threat needs to be forming.
"I know! C O Two -- in the sky!
Blame that for global warming!"
The theory goes:
Surrounding Earth,
Just like a hothouse glass is
Carbon Dioxide, holding heat,
And dubbed now:
"Greenhouse Gasses".
As C O two escapes from flues,
Increasing concentration,
It holds more of the planet’s warmth,
Like better insulation.
The warmth will melt
Antarctic’s cap
Of ice into the oceans,
To flood all coastal cities
Causing horrible commotion.
Each match you burn,
Each step you take,
Each time you fire a neuron,
May cause the very oceans’ rising
Up to meet Lake Huron.
O’ what a theory this will be!
O’ what a tyrant’s treasure!
Just think and plan
What can be banned;
What Draconian measures!
The scared cities,
they will demand
To ban unneeded burning;
Then scarcity will bring to hand
Authoritarian yearnings.
For why should yokels drive in giant
V-8 powered pickups?
Just ban their ass,
and premium gas,
And cows, that breathe and hiccup.
So scientists were mustered to,
To prove:
a heat wave’s forming;
And CO2 -- the bugaboo,
That’s causing global warming.
They threw vast governmental sums
To make supporting data.
But when the studies had been done,
There was no correlator.
But some inventor showed them how,
The tropics’ desert oceans,
Could bloom and suck up C O two
If given iron potion.
The scientists rose to condemn
His simplistic solution:
"How dare he find an easy way
To obviate pollution!?!"
Then satellites took surface scans
Across all Mother Earth there;
But no clear path
‘tween heat and gas
Could satellites unearth there.
"The satellites, they must be wrong!
Yes! That must be the trouble!"
But all the data else-wise gleaned,
Did burst that wishful bubble.
Then Doctor Sally, up she spoke:
"Look here, right in these tree rings.
There’s fourteen-hundred years of data,
Correlating three things:
"When solar output increases,
The Earth responds by heating;
And when the Sun goes cooling off
Earth’s temperature’s decreasing.
"And C O Two, that bugaboo,
As cause you would be passing,
Earth’s thermal state,
Won’t correlate –
There is no greenhouse gassing.
"In fact, in twenty-fifty-one
We’ll end this warm and nice age;
When solar cooling has begun
To start a brand new ice age."
Just feel, yourselves, when sun goes down,
How you get cooler quickly,
And when the sun, comes with the dawn,
How you get hot and stickly.
But Doctor Sally, on the toes,
Of her employ’rs was stepping
Her forthright chants
Endangered grants,
They found that most distressing.
"Now Sally dear, let us not hear
you blame the warming star-ward;
And if you must, our theory bust,
Don’t use the name of Harvard."
"For academic freedom’s fine
And you can be our honey,
But we cannot allow your speech
To cost us federal money."
"Yes, we get paid to seek the grail
Of greenhouse correlation;
Your facts, the train,
they would derail,
toward global legislation."
"And though it might be tempting to
Rise up, for to deplore you,
It’s probably a better bet
For us to just ignore you."
From Rio still there echo cries
for global legislation,
Which wouldn’t pass if folks knew:
Warmth
just comes from insolation.
And still the press promotes as fact
The hoax of global warming,
In hope to justify the new
world order that is forming.