The year began with baleful auguries:
comets, eclipses, tremors, forest fires,
the waves lethargic under a coat of pitch
the length of the coastline. And a cow spoke,
which happened last year too, although last year
no one believed cows spoke. Worse was to come.
There was a bloody rain of lumps of meat
which flocks of gulls snatched in mid-air
while what they missed fell to the ground
where it lay for days without festering.
Then a wind tore up a forest of holm-oaks
and jackdaws pecked the eyes from sheep.
Officials construing the Sibylline Books
told of helmeted aliens occupying
the cross-roads, and high places of the city.
Blood might be shed. Avoid, they warned,
factions and in-fights. The tribunes claimed
this was the usual con-trick
trumped up to stonewall the new law
about to be passed. Violence was only curbed
by belief in a rumour that the tribes
to the east had joined forces and forged
weapons deadlier than the world has seen
and that even then the hooves of their scouts
had been heard in the southern hills.
The year ended fraught with the fear of war.
Next year began with baleful auguries.
Saturday, 26 November 2016
Sunday, 20 November 2016
from The Utility of Terrorism, Considered with Respect to the Usage Made of It By Gianfranco Sanguinetti
Thanks to terrorism, the State and its political beneficiaries can, as if by
magic, become “good” because – after sacrificing a small portion of the population
– they can bravely, proudly and virtuously set themselves up as the protectors of
the remaining people. Thus terrorism becomes the long-sought-after Philosopher’s
Stone, something capable of sanctifying power, edifying politicians and
whitewashing the Mafioso “protection” of their subjects, which is what all States
hope to obtain.
http://www.notbored.org/utility.pdf
http://www.notbored.org/utility.pdf
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