Failing To See

This poem later won an honorable mention in a Rehumanize International poetry contest and was published by them here. And my video recitation of the poem is here.

Galileo’s telescope
Caused him conflict with the pope,
While his science-based position
Antagonized the Inquisition.
“My friend,” they said, “We fail to see!
Why ask for trouble? Just agree.”
The earth beneath their feet seemed stable.
Other options were off the table.
“Don’t start this fight. You’re bound to lose.
That’s an offer that you can’t refuse.”

Since then we note this constant theme:
Some truths are deeper than they seem,
Yet some folks there will always be
Who view things superficially.
So if you want to know what’s certain
You have to go behind the curtain.
If you won’t take that bitter pill
You’ll claim the earth is standing still.
So undergo a little pain,
And open up your angry brain.

A single cell, you like to say,
Despite its load of DNA
Is not a glorious thing like you –
Learned in how to tie your shoe,
Full of grievance-study expertise,
And a repertoire of fallacies.

You were a one-celled thingamabob,
But now an overweening snob.
“A speck that I can barely see,
Lacking any advanced degree,
Is not aware. It’s just a sham.
I fail to see why I should give a damn.”
You forgot your days with an umbilical cord
Once you won that Golden Globes award.

But whatever you may call that cell,
It knows some tricks that all your swell
Circle of friends can never do,
Such as how to be one-celled, then be two.
How to be two-celled, then be four,
And soon to pop right through the door.

If the life is ended it was starting to live,
Something is taken that you would never give.
Your future is all that matters to you,
But those victims had a future too.

Yet you clutch your pearls, you drink your tea.
You get offended. You fail to see.

6 April 2020

Christopher Hitchens Wound up Opposing Abortion Choice

 

Secular Pro-Life has published an article of mine on their blog.

 

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Some future posts:

Life Panels

A Trade-Off of a Sensitive Nature

Unborn Child-Protection Legislation, the Moral Health of Society, and the Role of the American Democratic Party

The Motivations of Aborting Parents

Why Remorse Comes Too Late

The Kitchen-Ingredients Week-After Pill

Unwanted Babies and Overpopulation

The Woman as Slave?

Abortion and the Map of the World