November 30, 2024

The Past Is Prologue

We don't have to imagine what will happen if Trump detains and/or deports huge numbers of illegal immigrants as he has repeatedly said he plans to do.

Twelve years ago, on the heels of some state-wide restrictions on migrant labor, reported Julie Strupp wrote a great piece in MIC:

"We need to face the facts: our agricultural industry is built on illegal labor, and it needs to be reformed."

Read the full article here (it's not long)!


(HT: Flynn Talwar)

November 28, 2024

a good soaking rain —
on the long row home our boats
fill up with water



November 27, 2024

Thanksgiving prep —
scrubbing root vegetables 'til
the water runs clear



November 26, 2024

colors that remain
call out more insistently —
tiny purple berries




November 25, 2024

now the bees give up
on finding any pollen —
this will have to do



November 24, 2024

withered reeds —
the marsh draws in on itself
its mud crazed with cracks



November 23, 2024

ruby crowned kinglet —
so light that the branches
don't even bend



Weekend Reading from Kelly Hayes

"Defiance must be woven into the fabric of our daily lives, rather than simply proclaimed at marches or on social media."


Collective Survival, Adaption, and Direct Action

(from Kelly Hayes' Organizing My Thoughts)

November 22, 2024

a long soaking rain —
the places that were once soft
begin their comeback



November 21, 2024

rain at long last —
strangers finding common ground
in "we needed this"


November 20, 2024

all this fiddling with
my internal thermostat —
sweaters on the floor



November 19, 2024

my best friend's birthday —
we longingly look for 
a chance to meet up



November 18, 2024

watching for bats
as the sun hurries down
to check on Europe



Protect the Press

Call Senators re: the PRESS Act

(HT Celeste Pewter, Greg Pak, Senator Wyden)

We need the press. We need them to be investigators, not stenographers. And we need to protect them so that they can keep digging.

(Read more on the PRESS Act here.)

Do you have the phone numbers of your Senators in your contacts yet?

Here's a handy link that can tell you who your elected officials are at the local, state, and federal level: https://myreps.datamade.us


Unrelated:






Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the two Georgia poll workers defamed by Rudolph W. Giuliani after the 2020 election, received his watch collection, a ring and his vintage Mercedes-Benz last Friday.


November 17, 2024

before the song starts
the sound of an indrawn breath —
I join the Earth's choir



November 16, 2024

unprecedented —
even just hearing the word
adds to my exhaustion



Weekend Reading from Andrea Pitzer

"Authoritarians aim to destroy the social fabric and to isolate individuals. Anything you do to counter that is good work. We may or may not see heroes in our time, but we can be sure that the most vital work will done on a smaller scale day in and day out by regular people."

Read Andrea Pitzer's excellent full piece, Swept Into The Flood, here:

https://degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/swept-into-the-flood


November 15, 2024

cool evening air
with a full moon presiding —
no crickets left to sing



November 14, 2024

Yet


when the glass has slipped
from your hand but it still
hasn't hit the ground



Don't Roll Over

Sherrilyn Ifill (former President. & Director-Counsel, NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund) says, 

"Don’t throw in the towel. Rest, then call your Senator - Dem & Repub. Tell them you expect them to do their constitutional duty and have real confirmation review & hearings for Gaetz, Hegseth, Gabbard & all cabinet nominees. Don’t let your Senators give their power to Trump w/o a fight." 

Here's a clip: https://bsky.app/profile/sifill.bsky.social/post/3laxiugfhik2j

The Capital Switchboard's number is 202-224-3121. To look up your representatives' contact information, try this handy little tool: https://myreps.datamade.us

Put your Senators' and Representative's DC office numbers in your phone. Then add them to your favorites. Consider moving from a default position of never calling them to a default position of calling them all the time.


Unrelated mic drop:



November 13, 2024

hoarfrost on windows —
for the first time this season
I warm up my drink



Protect Your Peace - So You Can Engage

Dear friends and loved ones,

How are you holding up? It's a lot, right? A highlight of yesterday for me was the somewhat surprising and thoroughly satisfying defeat of H.R. 9495 in the US House of Representatives. This was a bill which could have allowed Trump's Treasury Dept to unilaterally revoke tax-exempt status from non-profits it deems as "supporting terrorism." The bill needed a two-thirds affirmative vote to pass, and it didn't get it, perhaps in part because a slew of folks (myself included) called their elected representatives to weigh in. Trump can and does ignore public opinion, but at some level he'll be a lame duck for his entire second term, whereas our elected representatives still need to be thinking about how they'll stay in power, so...

Another highlight for me yesterday was this excerpt from an interview with award-winning Chicago-based investigative journalist Jamie Kalven:

"With this election, we’ve joined the rest of the world. Think of all the other nations that live under moronic, venal leadership. There are models for honorable political lives in those circumstances, but those models are quite different from our dominant notions of citizenship in which we follow politics as a spectator sport and occasionally vote. All over the world there are people in repressive settings who find ways to live as free human beings, act in solidarity with their neighbors, and fashion strategies to resist state power. We’re going to need to get good at practicing that kind of politics.


One of the dangers is that people will instead become demoralized and retreat into denial, that they will seek refuge amid the pleasures and fulfillments of private life. That would give carte blanche to power. There was a term used in central Europe to describe those who opted to retreat into private life under totalitarianism. They were called “internal emigres.” That is certainly tempting at a time like this: to live one’s life in the wholly private realm, enjoying the company of friends, good food and drink, the pleasures of literature and music, and so on. Privileged sectors of our society are already heavily skewed that way. It’s a real danger at a time like this. If we withdraw from public engagement now, we aid and abet that which we deplore."


I hope you will stay engaged, or prepare to be engaged.

Thanks for listening.

in peace,
Shelley

November 12, 2024

my best friend shows me
how to weave gingko leaves
into my hair


November 11, 2024

mourning doves
trying to remember
how to celebrate



November 10, 2024

rain at last —
I let myself get lost
in the sound of it


November 09, 2024

before the berries,
the sharply pointed leaves —
holly trees in fall



November 08, 2024

I watch the fox
until only its ears show
two points in the grass


November 07, 2024

electrical fence —
no one seems to be reading
my warning sign



November 06, 2024

foreboding


Batsto Lake

on an oddly warm fall day —

not a bird in sight


November 05, 2024

going to sleep
knowing that it will be dread
that awakens me



November 04, 2024

wired and tired —
we all compare notes on
how we'll get through it



November 03, 2024

we carry bath water
out to our ironwood tree —
seven weeks of drought



November 02, 2024

rain for a minute —
around us the sound of trees
getting their hopes up



November 01, 2024

deeper every day —
our Jack-o-Lantern sinks
back into the earth