Day 05 – US + them + Kyoto

[Late to post but written on the day part 1.]

Today’s poem & factoid are both indirectly about a topic that long has bugged me — the fact that the 5 permanent members of UN Security Council have veto powers, thereby significantly maiming the ability of that body to deal with world issues. The “serious” poem concerns the US behaviour during negotiations for what would become the Kyoto Protocol.

There’s also a bonus Factoid about Kyoto itself.

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The United States Government vs Kyoto

greedy industrialised countries are responsible 
for the bulk of historical emissions —
he protocol attempted to cap theose emissions
then systematically reduce them by taxing carbon
so beginning a shift to renewable energy

instead the US wanted to create
international carbon trading 
modelled on the cap-and-trade system 

these “pollution permits” 
could be used — sold if not needed — 
even purchased to allow more possible pollution

projects that kept CO2 out of the atmosphere
like carbon-sequestering tree-planting programs 
— producing low carbon energy
— upgrading a dirty factory to emit lower emissions 
were carbon credit eligible

the US was so passionate about this strategy
carbon trading’s inclusion was a deal breaker 
in the negotiations


ironically — despite belligerently getting their way
the US then — failed to even ratify the Protocol

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Day 5 – TIWTR about something ludicrous

The P5 Veto

the United Nations’ Security Council 
has five permanent members, 5 big boys
5 bullies — Russia, the US, China, France, & the UK

any one can veto a resolution, scupper it
— even if it’s supported by the rest of the world

since the U.N.’s founding — the USSR/Russia 
has cast 119 vetoes — the United States 82
The People’s / Republic of China has vetoed 16 times 
     (13 since 2000 – & always in conjunction with Russia)
The UK cast 29 vetoes & France 16 
     before both voluntarily ceasing to use it at the end of 89

the US has vetoed resolutions critical of Israel 
45 times out of its 80+ total — Russia’s vetoed 
condemnations of Syria — China : Myanmar, Zimbabwe
& of course — & so sadly on — 

some of the world’s worst atrocities 
get overlooked due to petty politics

               the veto                    needs                                  to go go

*Veto statistics are from the Dag Hammarskjöld library.
These numbers are for vetoes on draft resolutions & do not include vetoes on amendments other proposals.

*Veto numbers may have changed slightly since the research for this poem was undertaken.

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Fun Fact BONUS Day 5 – TIL about the capital of Japan for more than 1,000 years

Capital City

Kyoto’s nickname is City 
of Ten Thousand Shrines

there are over 3, 000 temples 
& shrines in & around the city

so why is its nickname not
City of Three Thousand Shrines?

that to me sounds just as beautiful
& has the benefit of truth too

these are the type of questions
— that keep me awake at 3am

Day 30 — history doing what history does best

Wide NY

Once again, as if to round out the month, the poem I had been planning to finish the event with is not the one I’m publishing tonight. Again, an article I read about 100 year old New York serviceman who died due to complications with COVID19. This led to me playing with voice & POV & trying to put the scant biographical facts I had about him into a poetic first person monologue. Which lead me to research more about him. Thankfully the first article I read was the least evocative & I found some beautiful stories/snippets in other obituaries. 

As much as I liked the other idea, it seems right & fitting to end with this moving personal story that spans the centuries.

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Philip Kahn: a semi-imagined poetic obituary

everyone should understand by now history always
replays versions of itself for its own amusement.

he was born at the end of the war to end all wars
— then fought in the next one that came along.

on the ground, at Iwo Jima, survived snipers — & a booby
trap which blew him 15 feet from where he stood.

from the air, over Japan, flew B29s & dropped
bombs — then carried their weight the rest of his life.

he helped the Twin Towers go up
— then like everyone else, watched them come down.

married in 46 & remained happily wed
— until Rose’s death last summer. 

yet always — he carried a void with him.
i was that void. Samuel. twin. died 1919.

taken by two pandemics — a century apart.
a life lived — & one that only watched.

the irony of our deaths — is my brother
& i are bookends on a shelf that never ends.