This is the new blog...CONFESSION ZERO

MOURNING PUNISHMENT



Death Penalty Tests Church as It Mourns
By
ALISON LEIGH COWAN
The United Methodist Church here is the kind of politically active place where parishioners take to the pulpit to discuss poverty in El Salvador and refugees living in Meriden. But few issues engage its passions as much as the death penalty.

The last three pastors were opponents of capital punishment. Church-sponsored adult education classes promote the idea of “restorative justice,” advocating rehabilitation over punishment. Two years ago, congregants attended midnight vigils outside the prison where Connecticut executed a prisoner for the first time in 45 years.

So it might have been expected that United Methodist congregants would speak out forcefully when a brutal triple murder here in July led to tough new policies against violent criminals across the state and a pledge from prosecutors to seek capital punishment against the defendants.

But the congregation has been largely quiet, not out of indifference, but anguish: the victims were popular and active members of the church — Jennifer Hawke-Petit, 48, and her two daughters, Hayley, 17, and Michaela, 11. On July 23, two men broke into the family’s home. Mrs. Hawke-Petit was strangled and her daughters died in a fire that the police say was set by the intruders. …At a memorial service in September for his family, Dr. Petit read from the Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi, which included the passage, “Where there is injury, pardon.”

Some members took that as a sign that he was grappling with his feelings about capital punishment.

“What really took my breath away when he cited the Prayer of St. Francis and either lingered on the word ‘pardon’ or got stuck on the word ‘pardon,’ ” Dr. Brewer said. “There was a long pause after he spoke the word, and to me, that signaled that this was on his mind.”

Dr. Brewer’s wife, Dr. Karen Brown, said, “I think it’s what he wants to feel, but it’s hard to get there.”

The killings have prompted the church to slow down in other ways. Because of sensitivities about Dr. Petit’s feelings, church members called off plans to invite a prominent death penalty opponent to address the congregation. The killings have even caused some congregants to reconsider their personal views.

“I think we’ve all rethought it because it’s pretty easy to believe something when it’s far away and then when something happens and it’s a real situation you have to examine what you believe,” said Dr. Brown. (More...)
MOURNING PUNISHMENT

Shouldn’t the belief be richer than the murder?

They are honored more in keeping than
trampled `neath death’s frenzy
or buried within an injured and throbbing soil;
vengeance does not love... nor live.

Thou cannot enter with spirit only to leave with sword
when death crowds in front of memory.
This would not be faith grasping at conscience,
but jagged misery gnawing `way at martyrdom.

This too is murder whose blade cleaves fresh
its boiling target, to be butchered... yet again.

Administer death’s injection into the feeble vein of thy god.



© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman


FAILURE



Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, Ben Harper and Bonnie Raitt on a petition to Congress to prevent a costly bailout of the nuclear power industry.


Only this remained of the
Stone
The thunder slapped greedily
Over the obstinate sky grown low
Striking over collapsed
Spear
Remember this is not make-believe
But new, bright and breathing
Of the eagle and the lioness
Seeking mere
Food and water
Writing history with bloody awe
We should have saved the young
And not left idle the spring of man
Charity subdued in loathing
Sword
They may now read of this slaughter
Papers insured
Gun's possession
But failed in man’s ache for murder
We shouldn’t recommence our fixation
Wielding science’s crush of matter and atom
Difficult, slow and deliberate is this
Bomb
dropping overhead, called homeward
To its use;
Radiation
bathing nations
With the stench of man’s undoing
Something as seemingly negligible
As affirming life in
Petri-dish.

© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman

Take Action! Urge congress to fund renewable and efficiency technologies not an unknown number of new power plants.



DO NOT WEEP



At night when we do not sleep
And the faces outstay their welcome,
When horrors touch our dreams
And we tremble their language…

The occupation of our hearts in sleep-
O! The assassination of souls!

And this; our death stained dreams
Carried by gloom nearer to us
Will ever be in attendance
If we nourish them in our days.



© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



DREARY BROOCH





Pin a heart on us, the living;
We, the unmoving.
The deceased have more breath
Than our breathing.

Emblems of our emptiness
And weakness
Puncturing hunger’s sleeve with
Dreary brooch.

Cackling our minute’s final gasp
With warring,
Weak idols pinned to proud chests,
Unfilled, all.

Pin sweet thoughts upon the dull,
Not pennants
Of gluttony, empire, warfare
And oil.

Whilst our children die for those
Already dead
Let us begin anew with this; the worlds
Flagless living.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



PALE FINGER









This short memo to President Lyndon Johnson records U.S. efforts to track Guevara's movements, and keep the President informed of his whereabouts. Written by presidential advisor, Walt Rostow, the memo reports that Guevara may be "operational" and not dead as the CIA apparently believed after his disappearance from Cuba.









Next year the executioner will steady his rifle,
Calmly move his pale finger over the metal
Prepared to extinguish the light of revolution-
Yet he will pause at his mission,
Blink and ponder a truth-
And as injustice begins to pull back upon history,
Govern its course with an executioner’s pillory,
A figure will drift into the crosshairs and say
“Shoot, you coward. You may kill a man,
But you shall never kill his thirst.”

Hasta la victoria siempre!
(Forever, until victory!)

© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



DISCOVERY



Native American Way
Why Autonomous AIM Opposes Columbus Day
and Columbus Day Parades ©
by Glenn Morris and Russell Means

When Taino Indians saved Christopher Columbus from certain death on the fateful morning of Oct. 12, 1492, a glorious opportunity presented itself. The cultures Europe of and the Americas could have merged and the beauty of both races could have flourished. Unfortunately, what occurred was neither beautiful nor heroic. Just as Columbus could not, and did not, "discover" a hemisphere that was already inhabited by nearly 100 million people, his arrival cannot, and will not, be recognized as a heroic and celebratory event by indigenous peoples. Unlike the Western tradition, which presumes some absolute concept of objective truth, and consequently, one "factual" depiction of history, the indigenous view recognizes that there exist many truths in the world and many legitimate recollections of any given historical event, depending on one's perspective and experiences. From an indigenous vantage point, Columbus' arrival was a disaster from the beginning. Although his own diaries indicated that he was greeted by the Taino Indians with the most generous hospitality he had ever known, he immediately began the enslavement and slaughter of the Indian peoples of the Caribbean islands. As the eminent Columbus biographer Samuel Eliot Morison admits in his book, Admiral of the Ocean Sea, Columbus was personally responsible for enslavement and murder of indigenous peoples. He was personally responsible for the design and operation of the encomienda system that tied Indians as slaves to the lands stolen from them by the European invaders. (More...)



DISCOVERY

For whose worship do the lips of flowers
Find their ashen prayer
And whose truth does the mouth of history open
Whose song do they warble
The captor or the conquered
For whose favor do they tremble



© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman


To read the full post and see the videos click below...



Columbus clip from the movie "Spin"...

Columbus clip from the movie "Canary"...




Morris: How Columbus Day harms American Indians
Posted: October 04, 2007
by:
Glenn Morris

This column explains why Native people should resist Columbus Day, and why the rejection of the racist philosophy behind Columbus Day may be the most important issue facing Indian country today.

In Colorado, we know something about Columbus Day. We have been working for the past 18 years to dismantle this anti-Indian celebration. Columbus Day was born in Colorado in 1907, the first state to designate the holiday. Over the past 18 years, we have learned a lot about Columbus Day - its origins, its true meanings and its importance to U.S. identity and persistent anti-Indian racism. As a national holiday, Columbus Day has virtually nothing to do with honoring Italian heritage or culture, and it is not about celebrating mutually held values of decency, respect or justice. Columbus Day celebrates two critical developments integral to the establishment and advancement of the United States. First, it celebrates invasion and domination, especially of indigenous peoples' territories; second, and much more importantly, it celebrates the invention and the legal institutionalization of the ''doctrine of discovery.'' (More...)

During the 1970s Bush Sr. masterminded a covert program that sterilized over 40% of Native American women against their will and without their consent...


native people pro vol 1 & 2


Big thanks to Brasscheck TV for the videos.

~

Seventeen States Have Dropped Columbus Day Holiday - State school officials are on record saying it would be harmful to teach young school children about atrocities Columbus committed against Indian men, women and children.

Native American Ways

American Indian Movement



WEAPON





They didn't warn us of this growing up.
How could they?
They too had been sold deceit painted to look like gold.

We shall continue to wander off into the dark,
Lumbering through the sludge,
Leaving the whole thing as it was;
We’ll not be the last to ingest it.

We’ll stay kneeled behind the world,
Behind authorities stench,
Our noses filling with it-
For we are an obedient creature
Watching everything we’re here for disappear
And everything we should fear being painted gold!

We’re too busy warring-
We’re too busy dreaming-
We’re too busy scheming-
We’re too busy competing-
We’re too goddamned busy!

O never have we seen such indifference!
Never have we stared so eyeless,
Breathing in the stink of depravity,
Howling that our things are being confiscated,
Agape at the murder and rape of mankind,
Screeching of powers rush forward,
Of our being strapped to the slab of want,
Our freedoms turning nose skyward
As they plunge from the precipice we made,
Screaming of deadly chemicals and mushroom cloud!

Christ!
Can we not make our existence fit for love,
Not submissive to these spineless, lousy rogues
Hell-bent on ruin?
Not the way we’ve existed-
Not the way we’re now living
And will go on living until they say we’re not.
We’ve known all this time who's had the weapons
But we’ve no sense that we’re the filthy trigger…

copyright 2007 tpm



To watch the video(s)- AMERICA: FREEDOM TO FASCISM- expand the post.




It is Coming



WORDLESS (A tale of Myanmar)

She moved rapidly over the ground
Alongside the Salween trench where hell dogs
Slathered their steel lips in conquest; beasts
Collecting the night’s wordless skies.

She fell hard upon the scorched ground,
Her slender legs slapping the stony loam.
I cradled her wet face against my chest
To gentle her howling heart. She smiled
And stroked my face, then her mouth leapt
Upon mine and our hands curved into flames
As we pushed deep into the brush.

Wordless, we spoke of our hopes and fears;
The beasts hard upon our backs,
The children and their mother’s shriek,
The lifeless weeping stirred by the heartless.

The sick and the dying were with us,
Between our moving lips and fingers,
Upon our union of sweat and flesh
Underneath the forlorn heavens.
And within our merger of silence we knew,
At long last, there was no more need to run.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman

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