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Dupes

And damnation

By William AlfredPublished 11 months ago 1 min read
Self-directed damnation

Whoever begins by being a dupe ends by becoming a scoundrel. —Voltaire ____________________________________________________

The populist sings a song that allures the selfish,

ear-wormish strains of selfish self-satisfaction.

To a selfish miser he offers unlimited wealth,

to a selfish racist, the dream of mass deportation

and intimations of legal white supremacy.

He sells bastardized bibles to selfish parochials

and hints at special protections for their sect.

Selfish people would have to be lashed to a mast

like Odysseus sailing past the isle of Sirens

to listen to such seductions and not be enthralled.

And masts today are in very short supply:

all of them have been felled by social media.

So the selfish legions swell like festering lesions

on the backside of the body politic,

infectious viral agents lured to the spots

by the blandishments of a snake-oil hawker and fraudster

distilling their selfish desires for his selfish ends.

Dupes at the start, enslaved by selfish urges,

they end as scoundrels, abetting their own damnation.

social commentary

About the Creator

William Alfred

A retired college teacher who has turned to poetry in his old age.

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