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DC Walking Tour (WIP)

1.

From my

uneasy bed

at the L’Enfant,

a train's pensive

horn breaks the

sullen lullaby of

an HVAC’s hum;

interrupting the

mechanical

reverie of its

steadfast

night watch,

allowing my ear

to discern

the stampede

of marauding

corporate Visigoths

sacking the city.

 

The cacophony

of sloven gluttony,

the ***** songs of

unrequited privilege

and the unencumbered

clatter of radical

entitlement echoes

off the city’s cold

crumbling stones.

 

The unctuous

bellows of the

victorious pillagers

profanely feasting

pierces the

hanging chill

of the nations

black night.

 

Their hoots

deride the train

transporting

the defeated

ghosts of

Lincoln’s last

doomed regiments

dispatched in vain

to preserve a

peoples republic

in a futile last stand.

 

The rebels have

finally turned the tide,

T Boone Pickett’s

Charge succeeds,

sending the ravaged

Grand Army of the

Republic sliding

back to the Capitol,

in savage servility,

gliding on squeaky

ungreased wheels

ferrying the

Union’s dead

vanquished

defenders to

unmarked graves

on Potters Field.

 

The Rebels

joyous yell

bounces off

the inert granite

stones of the

soulless city.

 

The spittle

of salivating

vandals drips

over the

spoils of war

as they initiate the

disassemblage,

the leveling and

reapportionment

of the grand prize.

 

The clever

oligarchs

have laid claim

to a righteous

reparation

of the peoples

assets for

pennies on the

dollar.

 

Their wholly

bought politicos

move to transfer

distressed assets

into their just

stewardship

through the

holy justice

of privatization

and the sound

rationale of

free market

solutions.

 

In the land of the

pursuit of property,

nimble wolf PACs

of swift 527, LLCs

have fully

metastasized

into personhood;

ascending to

the top of the

food chain in

America’s

voracious

political culture;

bestriding

the nation to

compel the

national will

to genuflect

to the cool facility

of corporate

dominion.

 

As the

inertial ******

of the plaintive

locomotive

fades into

another old

morning of

recalcitrant

Reaganism,

it lugs its

ambivalent

middle class

baggage toward

it’s fast expiring

future.

 

I follow

the dirge

down to

the street

as the ebbing

sound fades

into the gloom

of the

burgeoning

morning,

slowly

replacing the

purple twilight

with a breaking

day of cold gray

clouds framing

silhouettes of

cranes busily

constructing

a new city.

 

The personhood of

corporations need

homes in our new

republic; carving

out new

neighborhoods

suitable for the

monied citizens

of our nation.

 

First amongst

equals, the best

corporate governance

charters form

the foundation of

the republic’s

new constitution.

Civil rights

are secondary

to the freedom

of markets; the

Bill of Rights

are economically

replaced by the

cool manifests

of Bills of Lading.

 

The agents of

laissez faire

capitalism

nibble away

at the city’s

neighborhoods

one block at a time;

while steady winds

blows dust off

the National Mall.

 

Layers of the

peoples plaza are

plained away with

each rising gust.  

 

History repeats

itself as the Joad’s

are routed from their

land once again.

 

A clever

mixed use

plan of

condos and

strip malls

is proposed

to finally help the

National Mall

unlock its true

profit potential.

 

As America’s

affection for

federalism fades

the water in

the reflection pool

is gracefully drained.

 

We the people

can no longer

see ourselves.

 

The profit

potential of

industry is

preferred over

the specious

metaphysical

benefits

of reflection.

 

The grand image,

the rich pastiche,

the quixotic aroma

of the national

melting ***

is reduced to the

sameness of the

black tar that lines

the pool and the

swirling eddies of

brown dust circling

the cracked indenture.

 

From his not so

distant vantage point,

Abe ponders the

empty pool wondering

if the cost of lives

paid was a worthy

endeavor of preserving

the ****** union?  

Has the dear prize

won perished from

this earth?

 

Was the illusive

article of liberty  

worth its weight in

the blood expended?

 

Did the people ever

fully realize the value

of government

by the people,

for the people?

 

Did citizens of

the republic

assume the

responsibilities to

protect and honor

the rights and privileges

of a representative

government?

 

Now our idea

and practice of

civil rights is measured

and promoted as far as

it can be justified by

a corporate ROI, a

shareholder dividend,

an earmark or a political

donation to a senators

unconnected PAC.

 

The divine celestial

ledgers balancing

the rights and

privilege of free people

drips with red ink.  

 

Liberty, equality

fraternity are bankrupt

secular notions

condemned as

expensive

liberal seditions;

hatched by

UnHoly Jacobins,

the atheist skeptics

during the dark times

of the Age of Enlightenment.

 

Abe ponders

the restoration

of Washington’s

obelisk, to

repair the cracks

suffered  from

last summer’s

freak earthquake.

 

I believe I detect

a tear in Abe’s

granite eye

saddened by the

corporate temblors

shaking the

foundations

of the city.

 

2.

 

The WWII Memorial

is America’s Parthenon

for a country's love

affair with the valor

and sacrifice of warfare.

 

WWII forms the

cornerstone of

understanding the

pathos of the

American Century.

 

During WWII

our greatest generation

rose as a nation to

defeat the menace of

global fascism and

indelibly mark the

power and virtue of

American democracy.

 

As Lincoln’s Army

saved federalism, FDR’s

Army kept the world safe

for democracy.

 

Both armies served

a nation that shared

the sacrifice and

burden of war to

preserve the grace of

a republican democracy.

 

Today federalism

crumbles as our

democracy withers.

 

The burden

of war is reserved

for a precious few

individuals while

its benefits

remain confined to

the corporate elite.

 

Our monuments

to war have become

commercial backdrops

for the hollow patriotism

of war profiteers.

 

We have mortgaged

our future to pay

for two criminal wars.

 

The spoils of

war flow into the

pockets of

corporate

shareholders

deeply invested

in the continuation

of pointless,

destructive

hostilities.

 

Our service

members who

selflessly served

their country come

home to a less free,

fear struck nation;

where economic

security and political

liberty erodes

each day while the

monied interests

continue to bless

the abundance

of freedom and riches

purchased with the

blood and sweat

of others.

 

America desperately

needs a new narrative.

 

The spirit of the

Greatest Generation

who sacrificed and met

the challenge of the 20th

Century must become

this generations spiritual

forebears.

 

The war on terror

neatly fits the

the corporate

pathos of

militarism,

surveillance

and the sacrifice

of civil liberties

to purchase

a daily measure

of fear and

economic

enslavement.

 

It must be rejected

by a people committed

to building secular

temples to pursue

peace, democracy,

economic empowerment,

civil liberties and tolerance

for all.

 

Yet this old city

and the democratic

temples it built

exulting a free people

anointed with the

grace of liberty

is being consumed

in a morass of

commercial

polyglot.

 

3.

 

During the

War of 1812

the British Army

burned the

Capitol Building

and the White House

to the ground.

 

Thank goodness

Dolly Madison saved

what she could.

 

The new marauders

are not subject to the

pull of nostalgia.  

 

They value nothing

save their

self enrichment.

 

They will spare nothing.

 

Our besieged Capitol

requires Lincoln’s troops

to be stationed along the

National Mall to defend

the republic.

 

The greatest peril

to our nation

is being directed

by well placed

Fifth Columnists.

 

From the safety

of underground bunkers,

in secure undisclosed

locations within the city’s

parameters, a well financed

confederacy employing  

K Street shenanigans

are busy selling off

the American Dream

one ear mark

at a time, one

huge corporate

welfare allotment

at a time.

 

The biggest prize

is looting the real

property of the people;

selling Utah,

auctioning off

the public schools,

water systems, post offices

and mineral rights

on the cheap

at an Uncle Sam

garage sale.  

 

The capitol is

indeed burning

again.

 

Looters are

running riot.

 

The flailing arms

of a dying empire

fire off cruise

missiles and drone

strikes; hitting the

target of habeas

corpus as it

shakes in its

final death rattle.

I make a pilgrimage

to the MLK Jr.

Monument.

 

Our cultural identity

is outsourced to

foreign contractors

paid to reinterpret

the American Dream

through the eyes

of a lowest bidder.

 

MLK has lost

his humanity.

 

He has been

reduced to a

a Chinese

superhuman

Mao like anime

busting loose from

a granite mountain while

geopolitical irony

compels him to watch

Tommy Jefferson

**** Sally Hemings

from across the tidal

basin for all eternity.  

 

MLK’s eyes fixed in

stern fascination,

forever enthralled

by the contradictions

of liberty and its

democratic excesses

of love in the willows

on golden pond.

 

Circling back to

Father Abraham’s

Monument,  I huddle

with a group of global

citizens listening

to an NPS Ranger

spinning four score

tales with the last full

measure of her devotion.

 

I look up into Abe’s

stone eyes as he

surveys platoons

of gray suited

Chinese Communist

envoys engaged

in Long Marches

through the National Mall;

dutifully encircling cabinet

buildings and recruiting

Tea Party congressmen

into their open party cells.

 

This confederacy

is ready to torch

the White House

again.

 

Congressmen and

the perfect patriots

from K Street slavishly

pull their paymasters

in gilded rickshaws to

golf outings at the Pentagon

and park at the preferred

spots reserved for

the luxury box holders

at Redskin Games.

 

They vow not to rest

until the house of the people

is fully mortgaged to the

People’s Republic of China’s

Sovereign Wealth Fund.

 

4.

 

A great

Son of Liberty like

Alan Greenspan

roundly rings

the bells of

free markets

as he inches

T Bill rates

forward a few

basis points

at a time; while

his dead mentor

Ayn Rand

lifts Paul Ryan

to her

Fountainhead teet.

He takes a long

draw as she

coos songs

from her primer

of Atlas Shrugged

Mother Goose tales

into his silky ears.

 

The construction

cranes swing

to the music

building new private

sector space with

the largess of

US taxpayers

money; or

more rightly

future generations

taxpayer debt.

 

Libertarians,

Tea Baggers, Blue Dogs

and GOP waterboys

eagerly light a

match to the

the crucifixes

bearing federal

social safety

net programs

to the delight

of NASDAQ

listed capitalists

on the come,

licking their chops

to land contracts

to administer

these programs

at a negotiated

cost plus

profit margin.

 

Citizens

dependent

on programs

are leery

shareholders

are ecstatic.

 

To be sure

our free

market rebels

don disguises

of red, white

and blue robes

but their objectives

fail to distinguish

their motives and

methods with

some of the finest

Klansman this

country has

ever produced.

 

5.

 

DC is a city

of joggers

and choppers.

 

Corporate

helicopters

wizz by the

Washington

Monument,

popping erections

for the erectors

inspecting the progress

of the cranes

commanding the

city skyline.

 

USMC drill team

out for a morning

run circles the Mall.

 

The commanding

cadence of the

DI keeps us

mindful of the

deepening

militarization of

our society.

 

A crowd  

rushes

to position

themselves,

genuflecting

to photograph

a platoon on

the move.

 

I try to consider

the defining

characteristics of

Washington DC.

 

DC is all surface.

 

It is full of walls

and mirrors.

 

Its primary hue

is obfuscation.

 

Open

communication

scripted from well

considered talking points

informs all dialog.

 

The city is thoroughly

enraptured in narcissism.

 

Thankfully, one can

always capture the

reflection of oneself in

the ubiquitous presence of

mirrors.  

 

Vanity imprisons

the city inhabitants.

 

Young joggers circle the

Mall and gerrymander

down every pathway

of the city.  

 

They are the clerks,

interns and staffers of

the judicial, executive

and legislative branches.

 

They are the children

of privilege.

 

They will never

alter their path.

 

You must cede the walk

to their entitlement

of a swift comportment

or risk injury of a

violent collision.

 

These young ones

portray a countenance  

of benevolent rulers.  

 

They seem to be learning

their trade craft well from

the senators and judges

whom they serve.

 

They appear confident

they know what's best

for the country and after

their one term of tireless

service to the republic

they look forward to

positions in the private

sector where they will

assist corporations

to extend their reach

into the pant pockets

worn by the body politic.

 

6.

 

Our nations mythic story

lies hidden deep in the

closed rooms of the

museums lining the

Mall.

 

I pause to consider

what a great nation

and its great people

once aspired to.

 

I spy the a

suspended

Space Shuttle

hanging in dry dock

at the air and

space museum.

 

Today America’s

astronauts hitch

rides on Russian

rockets.

 

America rents a

timeshare from

the European

space agency to

lift communication

satellites into orbit.

 

Across the Mall

I photograph

John Smithson’s

ashes in its columbarium.  

 

I fear it has become a

metaphor for America’s

future commitment

to scientific inquiry

and rational secular

thinking.

 

I am relieved to

discover a Smithsonian

exhibit that asks

“what does it mean

to be human?”

 

The Origins of Humans

exhibit carries a disclaimer

to satisfy creationists.

 

The exhibit timidly states

that science can coexist

with religious beliefs and

that the point of the exhibit is

not to inflame inflame religious

passions but to shed light on

scientific inquiry.

 

I imagine these exhibits

will inflame the passion of

the fundamentalist

American Taliban and

provide yet another

reason to dismantle

the Moloch of Federalism.

 

The pursuit of science

remains safe at the

Smithsonian for now.

 

7.

 

Near K Street at

McPherson Park

a posse of

well dressed

lobbyists, the

self anointed

uber patriots

doing the work

of the people

stroll through

the park

boasting a

healthy population

of bedraggled

homeless.

 

The homeless

occupy the benches

that have been

transformed into

pup tents.

 

Perhaps some of

the residents of this

mean estate were

made homeless by a

foreclosed mortgage.  

 

The K Street warriors

can be proud that their

work on behalf of the

banking industry has

forestalled financial market

reform.  

 

Through it exacerbates

the homeless problem it has

allowed these K Street titans to

profit from the distress of others.

 

Earlier in the day

I photographed

a homeless man

planted in front of

the Washington

Monument.

 

I wonder

if my political

voyeurism is

an exploitation of

this man’s condition?

 

I have more in common

then I probably wish to

admit with my K Street

antagonists.  

 

In another section

of the park the

remnants of a

distressed OWS

bivouac remain.

 

The legions of sunshine

patriots have melted away

as the interest of the

blogosphere has waned.

 

As the weather

improves Moveon.org

and democratic

party operatives

pitch tents in an

effort to resuscitate

the moribund

movement.

 

They hope

to coop any

remaining energy

to support their

stale deception,

a neoliberal vision

based solely on the

total capitulation

to the bankrupt

corporatocracy.

 

I heard someone say

a campaign lasts a

season; while a

movement for social

change takes decades.

 

If that metric proves

correct, and if the

powers don’t succeed

in compromising the

people’s movement

I’ll be three quarters

of a century old

before I see

justice flowing like

a river once again.

 

8.

 

I circle back to

the L’Enfant and

find myself

tramping amidst

the lost platoon

of Korean War

soldiers.

 

My feet drag

in the quagmire

of grass covering

the feet of this

ghostly troop.

 

My namesake

uncle was a

decorated

veteran of this

conflict and Im

sure I detect

his likeness

in one of the

statues.

 

The bleak call

of a distant train

sounds a revelry

and I imagine this

patrol springing

to life to answer

the call of their

beloved country

once again.

 

Yet they remain

inert.  

 

Stuck in a

place that the

nation finds

impossible to

leave.

 

The eyes of the

men stare into

an incomprehensible

fate.  

 

They see the swarms

of Red Army infantrymen

crossing the Yellow River

streaming toward

them in massive

human waves,

the tips of

sparkling bayonets

threatening to slash

the outmanned

contingent fighting

to bits.

 

They are the

first detachment

to bravely confront

the rising power

of China many

thousands of

miles away

from their homes.

 

America like

this lone company

is overwhelmed

and lost in the

confusion

that confronts

them.

 

Looking up

I perceive the

bewilderment

of my muddled image

reflected on the

marble walls

surrounding

the memorial.

 

I am a comrade-in-arms,

a fellow wanderer sojourning

with th

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Written by
james-bradley-mccallum
M / American
Published
Apr 22, 2012
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