Friday, July 27, 2012




I draw your attention to two documents.  

The U. S. Constitution states that “We*” created the constitution for purposes; the third purpose is to “insure domestic tranquility*.”  If we fear to go to public places, where is the assured domestic tranquility?

The Declaration of Independence states that we have “unalienable rights**” and among these are “Life**” and “the pursuit of Happiness.**”  What is more important?  The right to live that has been taken from many; the right to pursue happiness that has been diminished for many others; or the right of one crazed fanatic to have guns to take the rights of life and the pursuit of happiness from many others?

Let the crazed ones have knives, but for the sake of the lives and happiness and domestic tranquility of the rest of us, don’t let them have automatic weapons.

*We the people of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice,* insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.--United States Constitution

**We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed--The Declaration of Independence

The above is a letter to the editor that I sent to the New York Times in reply to an article by David Brooks about gun control subsequent to the Aurora, CO, shootings.  The letter was evidently not chosen to be published, so I am publishing it on my blog.  It is time to eliminate automatic weapons as an available option for people to buy.

Friday, July 6, 2012




Tiki-Taka-Zoom!
(For La Roja in the Euro finals)

I gasp once
The slicing starts, for
I had never seen
The cuts and seams
Of such a team.
I could only begin
Questions because
The answer’s given:
Silver streak passes,
Diamond touches,
Ruby red marks,
Golden goalie—
And the orb
In elliptic ballistics
Pearls into the bejeweled
Box.  I gasp again—
At the end—for
My senses are
Sated with gems.

7/3-8/2012


If you are a soccer fan, this poem needs no explanation.  If you are not, you might not understand the almost magical quality of the Spanish team's play:  It was astoundingly good, better than I had seen any other team play against such worthy competition.  Those Spanish players will become legends of the sport.

I have edited this poem several times.  I did it again on July 8, changing lines 12, 14, and 15.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012




BUSINESS WRITING


The case of the mixed-up mogul.

You have just started your own music business as artist, editor, and publisher with your parents’ backing because you needed your parents’ credit (their house is collateral) and acquiescence in order to set up a studio in their garage.  You know you will have to pay for whatever you buy because you don’t want your parents to lose their home through your defaulting on the loans for your studio equipment.  You use the $10,000 loan to buy a cheap startup mixer and recorders with microphones, soundproofing for the garage, and chairs and stools enough for bands and entourage.  You also buy a box full of sheet music at a close-out sale of a local music store (the elderly proprietor had passed away) because it is cheap.

While looking through the box, you find handwritten lyrics without any music. As you read the lyrics, a tune enters your head and you think you have the beat and melody for a good song based on the lyrics.  You’ve never heard this song before and wonder who wrote it.  When you turn over the paper, you find this handwritten notation:2Pac 9/11/86.”  You are positive the song could be a hit, but now you have a dilemma: should you credit Tupac Shakur—the notation is not necessarily proof that he wrote the song.

After your equipment is delivered the next week, you take it out of the boxes and set it up, but as you are doing so, you realize something is wrong.  You check the invoice that you have signed for receiving the equipment and the invoice lists exactly what you ordered.  However, what you see before you is the most expensive Bose mixer and recorder, luxury stools and chairs, plus stands and microphones.  Somehow your order got mixed up with someone else’s.  You could keep it and start a very classy studio, but the invoice that you ordered was for $2,120.  The equipment you received is worth at least $7,000, maybe $10,000.

You are a believer in divine command theory, and it seems as if God wants you to succeed.  You ponder whether these events are a sign from God that you should move forward to success.  You remember a proverb: “God helps those who help themselves.”

What should you do?

  • 1.       Report the mix-up to the music company, so they can pick up the top-quality stuff and replace it with what you really ordered.
  • 2.       Use the equipment until the company sends you what you ordered.
  • 3.       Don’t tell anyone, including your parents, about the delivery mix-up.  Your parents don’t know anything about music and won’t notice the error.
  • 4.       Consult an attorney about what to do with the equipment and the song you found.
  • 5.       Ask your parents for more credit because now that you have the better equipment, you want to keep it.
  • 6.       Consult a music expert to see if the handwritten note is Tupac’s handwriting.
  • 7.       Put the page of handwritten song for sale on EBay to see if it could fetch enough money to cover the high-end equipment.
  • 8.       Ignore all the complications:  start your studio, write the music for the found lyrics, practice the song and record it and claim it as yours.  It’s all finders, keepers; losers, weepers.
  • 9.       One of the “Ten Commandments” is “Thou shalt not steal.”  But you wonder whether taking advantage of others’ carelessness is really stealing.  This seems more like finding a sack full of money.
  • 10.   Find Tupac’s heirs and offer to sell the lyrics to them.


In a brief essay, explain your choices and why you made them.