Dr. Drew's Infrequent Blog

09 November 2007

Open Letter to the Honolulu Advertiser Editorial Board

Dear Honolulu Advertiser Editorial Board:

I could not believe your headline this morning: “U.S. has the military means to take on Iran if necessary” (A6). One needn’t be a “moonbat” to realize that the current administration has sent us into an un-winnable war next door in Iraq. Yes, Military Writer Robert Burns pointed out that we may have the technology and firepower to attack Iran. The point is that we don’t have the human resources, intelligence, or long-term policies that could create positive change in the region. Any attack would simply fuel a worsening situation. As a former journalism student, I have to point out that the headline was unforgivable, and the article itself was completely unbalanced.

Many other media outlets engaged in serious reflection on how their lack of critical reporting in the days before the Iraq War contributed to that tragedy. I hope that you will be more careful about ensuring greater balance about such important stories. We need an intelligent and balanced fourth estate to help the nation avoid an even more deadly foreign policy mistake.

Thank you for considering my comments.

06 November 2007

Kyoto Poems

Perhaps the best advice you can give most poets is to not quit the day job. Despite the fact that I once wrote a poem called "If Poets Learned Assertive English," the same advice applies in my case. You will be able to judge for yourself shortly.

I was in Japan again late in October. I was there for a seminar at Doshisha University that celebrated the University of Hawaii Centennial, and Doshisha's long relationship with UH. Doshisha also gave UH System President David McClain an Honorary Doctorate.

It was my first time to hear presentations by Professors Yoshida and Okita and Asato in Japanese. I wish that my Japanese was better, so that I could have understood more.

One of my colleagues also gave a paper, so I was a guest of a guest at this HAWAII WEEK celebration. It was good to be in Kyoto. I regret that I did not have time to see many Kyoto friends, but I had some brief quality time with family and Doshisha colleagues before returning.

The trip also revived my poetry muse. My muse is usually hiding after long days of responding to e-mails, bureaucratic memos, and grading papers... but I was happy it made a brief return. I should not be surprised since Japan and Japanese poetry inspired much of my own love of poetry (from Basho to Sakaki Nanao).

Well, I should get back to those e-mails and memos, so here are the two poems I wrote. I promise not to quit the day job.



Hikari 337

I: Conductor

In the uniform
With the Sakura of modernity
On one shoulder
She bows
And punches tickets
As the Hikari
Slices down the coast
As if dividing urban sprawl
Into cities
Called Japan.

II: Counting Stops
I count the stops
To Kyoto
And dream
Of getting off
Somewhere off the tracks
Like a pottery town
Connecting
Tradition and creativity
Shigaraki or Imbe
Wanting to appreciate
Not just the mass passion
That creaked the Shinkansen
But the individual
Who makes a rice bowl

--- Japan. October 2007.




At the College Guest House

Early morning sounds
Of the city
Wake me up
From jetlagged dreams

I was recalling the beauty
Yesterday
Of moss on a trail
Revealed
By raking
(Sounds and smells of autumn)
and my muse suddenly recovers from years of slumber.

And I understand what inspired Snyder and Corman
Kyoto poets

Helping us to transcend modernity

And then
My mind
Interrupts
The waterfall of dreamy words
And realize
The morning sound
Was
A leaf blower.


--- Doshisha-Amherst Guest House, Kyoto, “Hawaii Week,” October 2007.

I have more Kyoto Photos online. It is an amazing city for photographers. It is such an amazing place of beautiful temples that you really can almost shoot anywhere. I took GB of photos, especially at the Jidai Matsuri, which happened to start only a few blocks from the place I was staying at.