One senior's travels on the knowledge path to Moksha, using poetry, essays, and stories as a means of transportation.
Wednesday, 29 November 2017
The Silence at the End of Time
Note: Leibniz and Kant postulate that time is part of a fundamental intellectual structure (together with space and number) within which humans sequence and compare events. Without humanity there is no time.
No ranting pastors preaching hate,
and exclusion without Jesus.
All quiet from the imams teaching
religious violence frees us.
Black Friday long has passed,
we’ve consumed it all away:
our depleted planet barren
in the light of a sadder day.
The one percenters’ struggle
to have it all has failed,
and society’s poor can no longer see
injustice against which they railed.
There is no birdsong spreading joy,
in this orb so bleak and sere:
and no inuksuk now remains
to say that we were here.
Corporate and military adventurists
crumbled into karmic dust;
as policies of greed, and depletion,
untempered by empathy must.
We refuse to plan for tomorrow;
instead we wallow in our waste and grime:
our arrogance ensures our species shan’t hear
the silence at the end of time.