The Max Daddy Of The Concord
Woods-The Bicentennial Of The Birth Of Walden’s Henry David Thoreau
By Fritz Taylor
I came to the mad monk
of the Concord (Ma) woods, the prophet seeker of Walden Pond late, too late
when the deal went down. Too late to help me get through the draft/Army
war-circus that was for my generation called Vietnam, the Vietnam War. The
Vietnam War where we torched, burned, blasted, bombed, belched seven shades of
hell against people, excuse my English, who never did a fucking thing to me or
mine. To anybody else’s “me and mine” in this country as I learned later, later
when I started to connect, started to dig what this mad monk of the Walden had
to say about bothering or not bothering other people just because some, excuse
my English again, fucking jerk decided that he needed to prove who was king of
the hill. Yeah, so you know I was incensed after I did my Vietnam torching, burning,
blasting, bombing and belching seven shades of hell against people I had no
quarrel with. I didn’t get “religion” until later.
Now there are many
things that this mad monk of the woods taught a candid world (candid when that word
had some meaning) about how to preserve the earth, about taking about six steps
back and chilling out in your over-stressed life but what grabbed me about the
guy was that time when he went crazy over that bastard Jimmy Polk running his
ass ragged going to war with the Mexicans. Another people we had no quarrel with
and still don’t just because they want to come north to their homeland when you
thing about the matter. Yeah, Henry David drove them crazy back in the day when
he said he wasn’t pitching in dollar number one for that damn war. Took some jail
time for his act of civil disobedience, for speaking truth to power, for
setting an example that others later when they took a look at history and guys
who did what they had to do did what they had to do.
Yeah left a legacy for
later generations. Left it for guys like me who took a wrong turn-for a while.
The other day thought I think I might have done old Brother Thoreau proud
though. I and a group of Vietnam veterans who I associate were arrested for protesting
and protecting some Mexican immigrants who the bastards were trying to deport
even though they have been in Estados Unidos all their lives almost. That was
my seventeenth arrest for an act of civil disobedience. Henry David your act
back in the day did not go unremarked- Thanks Brother.
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