Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
This is gonna be a loooooong post. What follows is a freely edited transcription of my notes from the Zukofsky/100 conference at Columbia t...
-
Midway through my life's journey comes a long moment of reflection and redefinition regarding poetics (this comes in place of the conver...
-
Will be blogging more or less permanently now at http://www.joshua-corey.com/blog/ . Or follow me on Twitter: @joshcorey
-
My title is taken from the comments stream of an article recently published by The Chronicle of Higher Education , David Alpaugh's "...
-
Elif Batuman has amplified her criticism of the discipline of creative writing (which I've written about before ) in a review-essay that...
-
Thursday, September 29, 2011 Berlin. Fog of sleep deprivation coloring an otherwise perfect blue autumn day a sort of miasmic yellow i...
-
Trained it down to DePaul's Loop campus this morning to take part in a panel, "Why Writers Should Blog," alongside Tony Trigil...
-
In one week Lake Forest will hold its commencement and I'll take off my professor's hat for the summer. A few weeks later, in June, ...
-
Farewell, Barbara Guest .
-
That's one of my own lines. From an untitled (they're all untitled) severance song: After form fails a furling, reports dying away, ...
3 comments:
'In New York City, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, together with half a million Latino, African and Asian immigrants marched into the heart of Manhattan.'
What about Irish?
Irish indeed.
The Irish don't all agree, except for how it fits their agenda.
Not all poets agree with illegal immigrants protesting in our streets when what they are doing would be illegal in their own country. There, they would be felons.
Many legal immigrants take great offense to the sense of entitlement exhibited by illegal immigrants marching in the streets of a country other than their own.
That is because legal immigrants went through our legal system to gain citizenship, and they believe that it cheapens the processs to open it up to people who simply feel entitled because they gained entry to this country illegally.
I do too.
And their equating their protest with the Civil Rights Movement is a little bit insulting and disingenous.
The whole organizing phenom smells of marxism and of people who are of our country but who hate our country.
Post a Comment