Proud to invade
Proud to destroy
Proud to kidnap and murder
The leaders of other sovereign nations
I live in a country
Too brutal
Too lacking in a sense
Of our shared life on the planet
Too impatient and inarticulate
To negotiate its aims
So it vociferates instead
Using bunker-busting bombs.
I live in a country
With an embedded elite
That controls massive amounts of wealth
And leaves millions
Lacking in the wherewithall
Necessary for a decent
Productive and creative existence.
I live in a country without leaders
Only capos
Without a vision of a better world
Only hackneyed slogans
And faded old Batman comics
Without the music of hope
Only the cracked ballads of despair
Played on one-string shoebox guitars.
I live in a country
That fervently worships
Only itself
Mad with the fear
That it is rapidly losing its place
As the hegemon
A country that is
Flailing away hysterically
Demanding that the rest of the world
Keep paying tribute and obeisance
And endlessly fawning
Like a Hollywood lacky
Assuring the fading star
“You are still beautiful.”
I live in a country whose mountains
And prairies and woodlands
Rivers and lakes and streams
Are beautiful
Whose ordinary citizens
Are still mostly good and kind
But whose leaders
Are a pack of craven
Crooks and scammers and parasites
Who use their positions and powers
To bully the populace
And upholster their own pockets.
I live in a country whose leaders
Make it a very difficult land
To love
But let us all keep standing
With our neighbors against
The cruelty and criminality
The self-absorption and toxic greed
That prevails in high places
And raise another banner on the flagpole
The banner of universal humanity.
Buff Whitman-Bradley podcasts his poetry at thirdactpoems.podbean.com





