Beaches

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Beaches – oil and acrylic on cut canvas. Artwork and text copyright Danny Grosso.

One of those wet mornings

more than dew

less than rain

when the first of the sun

moves like slow glistening arms

and the front yard looks ready to leave for a party

wrapped in cellophane.

Summer’s coming.

 

At the water’s edge

the gap between worlds is tiny

or not there at all

the sea mixes with sand and sand with sea

blue and yellow

become green

and sometimes

red.

 

Bathers lay or frolic

stand in footprints made once

by soldiers

landing or repelling.

This place between worlds

where memory ebbs and flows

tides of pain and bliss

history and ignorance to it

or just willful forgetting.

There’s the sun, after all

and the breeze in the sea air

filled with voices

between the worlds

ebbs and flows

remember, forget

remember, forget.

Summer’s coming.

 

Danny Grosso

 

 

 

 

John Kennedy in Washington

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Text and artwork copyright Danny Grosso

The suits now look like they did back then

a little shinier

a little slimmer

on the men rushing around him, past him

through him.

He is reminded that a legacy sometimes

has no physical component

brick and mortar

or fire

or sons.

He likes to go, in times like these

walking past the building they named after his brother

and further out

across the river of history and away from the white stone curtains

that hide what he knew before, and more

what he’s learned since

out to the old General’s land

to the flame still alight

two stones there now.

Light changes so fast now.

No accounting for time,

one instant a nighttime blizzard

the next a sunny cherry blossom flurry.

 

Danny Grosso

 

 

 

 

About that Populist Moment

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From “Haymarket” – Text and artwork copyright Danny Grosso

While seemingly new

and inspired just today

or yesterday

when the pink flesh

turned acid red

or maroon

like a Midway lineman

just into the scrum

This feeling that’s become

a movement, a fire, a vocation

desire

has instead been among  us

about and within

longer than memory

past both elation and chagrin

suviving even the pall.

Ask the Haymarket marchers

before the bomber came to call.

Ask Teddy’s Progressives

Henry Wallace’s too

all those marchers

on the Washington mall

Paul Robeson singing

Woody Guthrie and all

strumming together

on ox carts and boxcars

This Land is Your Land

an old classic now

but it was sung among those

with the Populist vow

long before twenty-somethings

attached to their phones

were dreams of their fathers

were frightened or sour

or just wishing for something

that’s just not allowed.

The massing together

of those who’d disobey

is a natural result

of the American way.

 

Danny Grosso

 

 

Message Discipline

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Prisons of the Mind – oil on canvas. Text and artwork copyright Danny Grosso

They are saying it’s nice

just around the bend

these ladies in suits, and their anchormen

where a trap may await

to capture your mind

closing it to the outside

addressing a line

with fear or hate

or nothing

but rewind

to a simpler time

a construct

a ruse

a lie.

 

If a mind is imprisoned

in a past that’s a lie

as all the past is

when it’s told by one side

you might miss it at first

or even seeing it twice

when they try to make your prison

seem like paradise.

 

Blue skies alone

do not daylight make

if a shadow encroaches

leaving truth in its wake.

 

Danny Grosso

 

 

 

Alternative History – Ep. 1

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Text and artwork copyright Danny Grosso

Things that might have been…

2000 – Presented with a virtual tie and numerous voting irregularities on Election Day,  Democratic Presidential Candidate Al Gore overrules some of his advisors and requests a recount of votes cast within the entire State of Florida. The request is for a larger endeavor than the targeted, Broward and Palm Beach County-only recount pushed by members of the Gore team. When the votes are counted, Gore’s strategy is vindicated as he emerges with a narrow victory in Florida, giving him a clear majority in the electoral college, and the presidency.

1/20/01 – Al Gore sworn in as 43rd President of the United States.

9/11/01 – Terrorists attack the United States, flying airplanes into the World Trade Center in New York City, and the Pentagon in Washington D.C. Another plane, believed headed toward the White House, crashes in a Pennsylvania field after passengers disable the hijackers.

2002-2004 – President Gore initiates and executes military operations in Afganistan aimed at finding and bringing to justice those behind the 9/11 attacks. Gore declares that the military operations will be limited in time and destruction, but the human targets prove elusive and the undeclared war drags on much longer than initially expected.

2004 – With the war in Afghanistan dragging on, and accusations of military incompetence beginning to surface in the mainstream media, Republicans nominate war hero and maverick Senator John McCain for President. In a bid for party unity and a nod to the nation’s 41st President, McCain picks Jeb Bush to be his Vice President, saying that the Bush family’s experience in quickly prosecuting, and exiting, the 1991 Gulf War, will inform his presidency.  In another extremely close election, McCain wins the State of Florida by a clear majority with the help of his running mate, that State’s sitting Governor, and defeats Gore in the electoral college to become the 44th President. President Gore wins the popular vote, but loses in the electoral college to become the only candidate of the modern era to fail to win the presidency while winning the popular vote.

2005-2007 – President McCain expands military operations in Afganistan and surrounding areas but resists cries from within his own party to expand the war into Iraq and Iran. Still, McCain has more than he bargained for. The hoped-for Gulf alliance proves fleeting and ineffectual. Initial surges in activity by American forces produce desired results, but clear operational victories become harder to define and pursue as opposition networks become more sophisticated and diverse. Surprise operations by the enemy and growing civilian discontent in occupied areas begin to raise the death toll of American soldiers. After 5 years, the American Military effort seems bogged down.

2008 – Democrats nominate Illinois Senator Barack Obama to run against President McCain. Obama, an African-American who spoke consistently and eloquently against the once-popular war, attracts many new voters to the electoral process and thus forges a victory in November.

2009-2011 – President Obama slowly decreases the American military presence in Afganistan. Horrified Republican legislators, who wish to expand the war in accordance with McCain’s initial troop surges, attempt to block Obama’s domestic legislative agenda in protest.

2012 – Republicans nominate former Vice President Jeb Bush to challenge Obama. Bush promises to expand then end the war, a popular sentiment, though by nature, a hedge. Bush leads in many polls through October. However, Obama’s coalition expands due to continuing efforts aimed at registering young voters. That coalition holds and Obama is re-elected.

2013-2015 – Elected Republicans enjoy growing popularity as President Obama continues to have difficulty enacting his domestic agenda. However, grass-roots frustration within the GOP, stemming from losing two seemingly winnable elections, produces much speculation about the party’s next choice of nominee.

2016 – GOP front-runner and former Vice President Jeb Bush faces a tough fight for the nomination against surprise opposition of outsiders trying to change the party…

-Danny Grosso

 

How Jeb Lost

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Gimmitted Dookie aw Dewrup – mixed media on cut canvas – copyright Danny Grosso

At the beginning of the presidential campaign, many pols and pundits in the know exuded a confident posture in the face of a large field of Republican candidates. They had a candidate with a resume that was tough to beat. Some said the man was modern history’s best prepared presidential candidate. His experience was relevant and varied, he came from a successful political family, and he appealed to a wide spectrum of primary and general election voters. He was a resume’ candidate.  But as the race began, this candidate found his constituency usurped by someone with a gift of gab and a power to stir the apathetic into a political movement that he would captain.  He was a personality candidate. Almost before the primary season was underway, the personality candidate seized the news cycle and kept it. The resume’ candidate lost early and often, and was incredulously out of the race soon thereafter.

These were the events of the first few months of 1980. The same story might now be written of the current campaign, and written without changing the surname of one of the candidates.

Prior to the 1980 New Hampshire primary, the flagging campaign of Ronald Reagan helped stage a candidates’ forum, from which Reagan and all candidates not named George H.W. Bush were later disinvited.  Reagan showed up anyway, having assisted in funding the forum, and was greeted with knowing grins from the moderator and from Bush and his team. Bush was an insider’s favorite, a former congressman, CIA Director, Ambassador to China, and RNC Chairman. His father had been a well-respected moderate senator from Connecticut. His international business and political connections meant that the line of establishment support for his candidacy stretched around the globe. He was seated at the speakers table, seemingly lying in wait. Perhaps he knew what the moderators had in store. Reagan entered the event, pale and stark looking, all dark suit and slick hair on a New England winter evening. When he took the microphone to speak, the moderators asked him to stop. Bush did nothing. When Regan began speaking, the moderators asked that the candidate’s microphone be turned off. Bush did nothing. Other disinvited candidates gathered behind Reagan. Something changed in the room. Now, loudly and with fury, Reagan grabbed the mic, turned to the moderators and said “I am paying for this microphone!” The crowd cheered. Bush sank in his chair, but otherwise did… nothing. The race was effectively over shortly thereafter.

Reagan, the old movie actor, had stolen the scene, and with it any passion that voters had for Bush, and done it so quickly that the rest of the Bush campaign was spent wondering how it all happened.

Fast forward to 2016, and the parallels astound. Prior to the election season, Jeb Bush was the darling of the establishment and favorite to win the GOP nomination.  Nice resume’.  Donald Trump was best known as a wealthy businessman and reality TV star. Famous personality. Trump announced his candidacy the day after Jeb Bush did and immediately seized the news cycle with provocative comments. Jeb dismissed him entirely. Couple that with Trump’s immediate and unanswered onslaught of rhetoric meant to diminish Bush’s standing, popularity, and even manhood  (he called him “low energy” and “weak” from the get go) and you can merge the images of Jeb and his father, George H.W.,  stooped shoulders and palms to heaven, without being able to tell the difference between them.  Both Bushes made late attempts to argue policy, (Jeb was caught on video pleading with an audience to applaud his wonkish  campaign speech), but were soon drowned out by popular chanting – remember: “U.S.A. –  U.S.A.!”  from the “Miracle on Ice” U.S. Olympic hockey team,  a chant that was also heard at Regan rallies and is now a set piece at Trump events. Adding to the dissonance was popular sloganeering – Reagan: “America is Reagan Country”,  and “America is a Shining City”.  Trump: “Let’s make America Great Again”.

In the end, both Bushes found it impossible to heard on policy issues, and to defeat the soon accepted notions about the superiority of their opponents’ personalities – that these men, both outsiders to the establishment, were genuine American originals, destined to head movements away from established  norms, away from established candidates.  Get on board, folks, we’re the newest, biggest thing in politics.

It didn’t matter that both personality candidates lacked the tried and true pedigrees of GOP nominees and were themselves constructs of political opportunity. The Bushes lost the races in 1980 and 2016 before most of the country knew how the victors would govern. Jeb and his father were victims of their own passivity, conservative deportment, and of the changing times, though the Bushes, well liked as they both are and still stinging over being rebuked by their own in favor of outsiders, might call it separate instances of personality crime.

-Danny Grosso