Monthly Archives: August 2023

Poderoso Caballero Es Don Besuquero — ¿O Ya No?

*”A sturdy caballero is Master Hotlips — Or no longer?” (pace Quevedo). Mr. Rubiales was shown on video after the World Cup final in Sydney on Aug. 20 kissing one of the team’s star players, Jennifer Hermoso. Although he apologized … Continue reading

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Forecast: Brainstorms With a Chance of Conniptions

“Cubism seeks to destroy by designed disorder… Dadaism aims to destroy by ridicule… Abstractionism aims to destroy by the creation of brainstorms.”(Republican Congressman George Dondero in speech to the House of Representatives, August 16, 1949) Three years later, Dondero told … Continue reading

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Paint the Buttons!

“How do you expect me to paint a portrait of Stalin?” he asked, irritated. “First of all, I’ve never seen him, and I don’t remember what he looks like, other than the fact that he wears a uniform with lots … Continue reading

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The Hyper-Groomed Gnomechuck Is Back

I’m keeping an eye on the confected pixel pixie spawned by a whoring AI chatbot that we met not long ago here in EthicalDative. The entity has morphed from this nugatory skidmark… … into this spavined dreamboat: This particular ad … Continue reading

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The Bull in ‘Minotaur’

Consider this opening of “Minotaur” by Douglas Kearney: MINOTAUR The best part,how we make topart the beastfrom its self. The illusion fostered by the abrupt entrée en matière is that of a conversation suddenly caught on a hot mic. The … Continue reading

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Where Has All the Rhyming Gone?

By all accounts poetry was the first literature of the sundry peoples. It predated writing, so rhyme, rhythm and alliteration helped rhapsodes and minstrels hold it in their heads. In contemporary lyric rhyme is absent (thank goodness), alliteration rare; rhythm … Continue reading

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‘The Round Jubilance of Peach’

Can a person swear for joy? It’s what I do. My reflex on encountering a poem that triggers a rush of involvement on first reading is to let fly a putatively disobliging epithet. It’s a reverb from the salutary shock … Continue reading

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When History Fails the Test of History

“No one ever draws a lesson from history that they didn’t want to draw in the first place.” (Alistair Campbell) “Those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat the exam.” (A Professor) (c) 2023 JMN — EthicalDative. … Continue reading

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OCCD

Some persons, of whom I may be one, are beset by the brevity demon. Obsessive-Compulsive Concision Disorder is an aggressive form of self-effacement, a weaponized modesty that clamors furtively for slivers of bandwidth under cover of a solicitous compunction over … Continue reading

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The Poem of al-Khansā’

Al-Khansā’, born near the end of the 6th century A.D., is renowned for elegies she composed for her slain brothers Mu^āwiya and Saẖr. Line 5, midway through the poem, is notable for the brusque transition to aggrieved resignation leading into … Continue reading

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