We tell
our early
history
like the purity
of Eden,
as though we
began
in the 50s.
Our garden
was victorious,
and thus,
we were born
as us
in the glorious
nation
of Perry Mason.
The wrongly
accused
used
the best
defense
to reveal
the pretense
of the guilty.
Mid Century
Modern
beyond the
aesthetic,
was the
Cold War
ethic,
pure,
and
simple.
The 60s revolt
was jolt
after jolt
to the preceding
calm
and conformity.
The enormity
of change
and a lost
war
tore
us apart.
The politics
of identity
was the new
purity
test,
while testing
nukes
against
or from
Soviets
remained
the most
deadly threats.
After the fall
of the wall,
our Eden
seemed
on the verge
of restoration
until
the devastation
of 2001
took us on
an odyssey
of
and against
hate
and crazy.
We have
an affinity
for purity
despite
reality.
It’s practically
our DNA
to this day,
whether
individually
or societally.
It’s how we
see,
unless
we profess
to look
beyond
or respond
with inquiry.
It’s messy,
and unsatisfying
to have what
you don’t
want
or like.
Evil
exists
just
as gravity
persists,
even though
we can
go to
the moon
or across
the earth
through
the sky.
Our history
of purity
did not
make
America
great.
Like too much
Purell,
we lose
our ability
to quell
super
contagions.
Our actual
history-
factual
and blistery-
is a longing
for purity
while
being
very messy.
Long before
the 50s
and the trials
that we’ve
endured,
we’ve been
lured
by purity
as morality.
Confronting
evil,
pure
and simple,
is maybe
the purest
thing
we can do.
No need
for perfection
or purity
test
to vociferously
and actively
object
to those who
detest
democracy,
diversity,
and the reality
that makes
America
great.
It’s not
a unified
reich.