The world has changed
I fear not for the better
War is our culture
Always looming in shadows
Peace is just wishful thinking
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
The world has changed
I fear not for the better
War is our culture
Always looming in shadows
Peace is just wishful thinking
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Black smoke wafts skyward
Baltimore the latest nail
To be pounded home
How many more before the
Coffin is sealed and buried
Repeated killing
Just a different city
Will we never learn
These–our brothers and sisters
Share the same constitution
But not the same rights
They are treated as lesser
By their skin color
Disgusting as it may be
This is our America
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Pondering things more now than ever
I’m finding out how little I know.
I don’t understand human nature;
Its incessant need for power,
Its unquenchable greed,
Its innate ability to hate,
Its thirst to subjugate others.
Look no farther than the news;
War is spreading at a rapid pace,
Our young men and women are sent to fight,
For what…our freedom?
Only true if freedom flows from a pump.
Their blood is being exchanged for oil,
Sounds criminal unless you are a capitalist.
Poverty is running rampant,
The rich are getting richer
While the middle-class drowns
And the poor are being mowed under.
Our children are sunk into debt
For the privilege of an education.
Education is not a privilege but a right,
Only a fool would think otherwise…
You laugh…
Well then, a fool I must be!
With no where else to turn
We look toward the government,
Corrupt, divisive, they are of no help.
No! Don’t dare pull the party card,
Your blind faith in either cesspool is deplorable.
Don’t think for a second that they care about us,
Most of us don’t have the money to buy that kind of loyalty.
These behemoths only tolerate us because they have to.
Lobbyists and corporations are their real audience
Purchasing the destruction of our environment,
Sending our jobs overseas,
Corralling wealth for the pleasure of the minority
All for the destruction of the majority.
We…are…expendable!
In the end, what do I know?
I know what this country…this world could be,
It wouldn’t take much,
Just a little love,
A little compassion,
A little humanity,
But then…I am a dreamer
Who just realized…
How little I really know.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Extremism lives
In every country on earth
Welcome Tunisia
The fold of victims awaits
When will the violence end
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Tumultuous times
Born of man’s own flawed design
Corrupt purity
Look at what we’ve created
Hatred, violence, killing
Pollution, disease
All in our quest for power
Leading to what end
We are murdering each other
We are killing our planet
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Use of deadly force
Must it be the first response
You can’t take it back
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Coptic Christians killed
No God would sanction murder
In his Holy name
Call them just what they are…thugs
Taking Allah’s Name in vain
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
An eye for an eye
The oldest form of justice
Incubates revenge
~~Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
War rages onward
Violence meets violence
Meets more violence
Do we not see the pattern
Are we blind to the outcome
It is infinite
The result always the same
With flag draped coffins
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Young men and women do volunteer
To fight for their country to the death, showing no fear
Their orders arrive just as they would
Off they go overseas in the hopes of doing good
Then there’s reality, oh the shock
Our core cultural values, by their ways they do rock
Women are property, used for sex
Sold to the highest bidder, the western mind perplexed
Wanting to react, but told they can’t
They turn a blind eye, though to each other they do rant
Lying in their cots, many tears shed
This war was not what they thought, they have all been misled
Romantic ideas, wars of the past
Live only in the movies there’s no way they could last
War is not romantic, kill and maim
Each victim has a mother and each face has a name
Someones left mourning, crying revenge
Seeking to draw blood, to honor loved ones they avenge
How do pray tell, will this cycle end
When it’s all about oil, our interests they pretend
After a decade, I doubt it will
The military industries haven’t had their fill
When this war ends another will come
Reasoned by our government, just watch and see their fun
Be sure and take my word, more will die
No matter how we complain, no matter how we try
As always, our young will volunteer
Believing propaganda from mongers they will hear
Gung-ho with ideals, noble ‘tis true
Witnessed in commercials they’re the brave, the proud, the few
Til God forbid the time ever comes
You gaze into their eyes, pull the trigger of the gun
From that moment on your life will change
You become a killer, a feeling that must be strange
Hoping that the reasons are pure, true
To live with such an action, the rest of your life through
Mourn for those who died and those alive
They will never be the same no matter how they strive
Mourn this generation raised with war
Think about the reasons, they are poisoned to the core
What kind of legacy will we leave
One that’s draped in death, they are constantly left to grieve
Can this end before it is too late
I pray that it can or destruction will be our fate
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
NOTE: Origination Afghanistan – a landay has only a few formal properties. Each has twenty-two syllables: nine in the first line, thirteen in the second. The poem ends with the sound “ma” or “na.” Sometimes they rhyme, but more often not. In Pashto, they lilt internally from word to word in a kind of two-line lullaby that belies the sharpness of their content, which is distinctive not only for its beauty, bawdiness, and wit, but also for the piercing ability to articulate a common truth about war, separation, homeland, grief, or love. Within these five main tropes, the couplets express a collective fury, a lament, an earthy joke, a love of home, a longing for the end of separation, a call to arms, all of which frustrate any facile image of a Pashtun woman as nothing but a mute ghost beneath a blue burqa. The full description and some history of the form can be found at poetryfoundation.org. I took some liberties with this form as it does not translate perfectly into English. I did maintain the 9 and 13 syllables per line format, but eliminated the “ma” or “na” ending sound requirement opting instead to rhyme which can occur with this form.