AFP photo
By
Alejandro Escudé
Love Between Dictators
Let’s not go there—authoritarianism
and blood, where the sweeping goings on
lag and spill, a dagger that inches into the
forehead of Christ, boulevards converging
on a magenta-colored temple where
the queen keeps a scrapbook no different
than an Oregon housewife. “Lie still,” he says.
Lie. Still. The butterfly of truth flutters
her wings and the effect is felt everywhere,
even where democracy is a printed book
and nothing else—my father, reminiscing
of military dictatorship, recalls walking
arm in arm with my mother over streets
that were finally safe. “Safe streets,” he said.
Let them meet. Let them bless confetti,
let them hang their egos on a coatrack,
their sweaty hands rubbing, their eyelids
trembling. Respect is, after all, sexual.
What kind of deal would they strike?
You can have a missile replete with flowers
and the dead bodies of children, if you
promise not to nuke my movie stars.
You can make a monument to the army
out of drug dealer spleens, if you agree
to open your country for business. How safe
it would be at noontime, with its planetary
mesh of helicopters, their weekends
spent smoking cigars on warships. Glory
at last, without shame. Glory for us all.
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