Saturday, February 27, 2016

Poetry Open Mic & Launch of Charlotte Lit

A good poetry open mic happened on Wednesday, February 24th, at Waterbean Coffee in Huntersville, NC. Featured poets were Beth Ann Cagle and Anne Kaylor. One nice turn of phrase, from Ms. Kaylor's latest book, Unwilling to Laugh Alone, was "...waiting for life to grow." I enjoyed listening to the poems from both features. Also, I read two of my poems during the open mic section of the night.

Poet Anne Kaylor features at the open mic

In addition to this event, the launch of the Charlotte Center for Literary Arts, or Charlotte Lit, happened on Friday, February 19th, in The Light Factory gallery in Charlotte, NC. Poet Linda Pastan read her work as the feature of the night. She was the only poet to read, and I liked her work.

Good luck Charlotte Lit!

--Nick Patti
Charlotte, NC

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Redraw the 12th Congressional District in NC, but Allow a Delay

            United States Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts did not say, “no.” He did not say, “yes.” Instead, he said, “maybe.”
            “Maybe” is what Roberts told North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory and top state Republican officials when they asked him to sideline a federal court ruling and at least grant a stay on the federal court panel’s order. In that order, the three-judge, federal court panel ruled unconstitutional the boundaries of North Carolina’s 12th and 1st Congressional Districts, and gave the State until Friday, Feb. 19, to draw new districts, according to reports in The Charlotte Observer (2/11/2016, 2/10/2016).
            Specifically, Chief Judge John Roberts offered no decision on the NC Republicans’ request for a stay and hearing. Instead, Roberts ruled that the plaintiffs in the Congressional re-districting case have until Tuesday, Feb. 16, to provide a response to the State’s request. That leaves only three days until the lower federal court’s original deadline for the State to redraw the districts, according to The Charlotte Observer (2/11/2016).
            Therefore, the Chief Justice did not rule, “yes.” He did not rule, “no.” He ruled “maybe,” with an unrealistic time crunch, to boot.
            Yesterday, Friday, Feb. 12th, the NC legislature decided to move ahead with redrawing the two districts to remain in compliance with the original federal court panel’s decision, according to The Charlotte Observer (2/13/2016). That was a wise choice. All of us wait to hear, however, what Chief Justice John Roberts will rule on Tuesday or soon after on the State’s request and appeal.
            I think Justice John Roberts should grant a stay on the enforcement of the federal court panel’s ruling, but should not grant a hearing and appeal with the US Supreme Court. I hear the NC State officials’ complaint that the quick timing of the decision would throw this election into disarray, since it would force the State to move too quickly on the redrawing of the districts. Therefore, I think the Chief Justice should allow the decision to take effect immediately after the primary election: Roberts should give the State one month, until April 15th, 2016, to redraw the districts. That would be substantially more time than the two weeks originally provided by the panel, more than the one week that the State legislature is taking and using, and would not fall in the middle of a primary election. The new districts should be in place, however, by April 15th, I think, which would provide ample time for the general election to be held with the new district boundaries.
            The current Congresswoman for the 12th District, Alma Adams, is running for re-election this year. She offered no opinion on the federal court decision at this time, but instead, she focused her attention on continuing to do her job as a Congresswoman and on running her re-election campaign.
            “We don’t know what the impacts of this decision will be yet, but for now I am concentrating on doing my job as the Congresswoman for the 12th District,” Alma Adams said in a statement, “and running a campaign on the basis of my strong record of doing what is right for North Carolina and my District.” Sam Spencer, campaign manager for Congresswoman Adams, provided the statement.
            Regardless of the outcome of all the current litigation, I support and endorse Congresswoman Alma Adams, a Democrat, for re-election to Congress in the 12th District. I agree with her, and think she is good for the people of North Carolina, serving as our representative in Washington.

Congresswoman Alma Adams

            Which brings us back to the merits of the case before the Chief Justice. I think the reality is obvious, and should not need to be heard by the full Supreme Court. The current party breakdown of NC’s congressional delegation is 10 Republicans and three Democrats, according to Jim Morrill of The Charlotte Observer (2/10/2016). That represents a lopsided number. Part of that must be attributed to the current political climate in North Carolina, definitely trending conservative and Republican, but part of that partisan representation may be due to Congressional maps that favor exactly the breakdown and representation we currently have.
            Both the 12th and the 1st are represented by African-American Democrats, for example, and with the exception of one other seat held by a Democrat, all other seats are held by Republicans. That is precisely the kind of lop-sided representation that the current Congressional district maps in NC encourage.
            The numbers follow race, as well. The Democratic Party vote is weakened across districts, and the African-American vote is concentrated into these two districts, both represented by African-American officials. These results indicate the diluting of the African-American vote out of nearby districts, and into the 12th and the 1st.
            I think these two districts should be redrawn with sensible, obvious geography and politics as top concerns.
We should keep race in mind, however, I think, still, at this time. If it turns out that under the new maps, there are no African-Americans in the NC congressional delegation, then I think we might revisit the issue once again. Although I think we have made substantial progress in guaranteeing the right to vote to the African-American population, and in redressing their absence from political representation in Washington, still I think we are not all-the-way there on the voting rights front, as addressed by the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution.
            For now, though, I think the numbers spell out an obvious case. We need to redraw these maps in a timely fashion with as little disruption to the current election as possible. I think there is no need for the full Supreme Court to explore all of these issues yet again, however, particularly for the 12th District, which, according to Jim Morrill of The Charlotte Observer, has already been heard by our top court at least four times.
            Leave it alone, I would argue. Delay the federal court panel’s ruling to make it more palatable to enforce by the current NC government, and otherwise, leave it alone. Let the ruling stand without further appeal. The merits of the case are obvious. This federal court panel has the right time for North Carolina in this ruling, and its order should stand.

—Nicholas Patti
Charlotte, NC

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

POEM: Ash Wednesday, 2016


Ash Wednesday, 2016


Today
in church

the priest
reminded

us
in his homily

that
in order to

obtain
eternal life,

first,
we must

die.
Death,

he said,
is an inevitable

fact
of

our
lives.

He
anointed

our
foreheads

with
ash,

then
later,

gave
communion.

After
mass,

I
went out

with
my mother and

step-father
to eat

at
an Italian restaurant—

no
meat,

not
for me, not today.

Now,
I am sitting

alone
in my parents’

warm,
grey Honda Accord

in
late afternoon

on
this cold winter day,

sitting
inside

in
the early evening

sun,
with the engine

off,
sitting

and
listening

to
classical piano

by
Johann Sebastian Bach,

playing
over

the
SiriusXM

car
satellite radio,

Channel 76,
Symphony

Hall.
I was

going
into

a
café

for
coffee,

but
now,

I
cannot bring

myself
to

leave
this

music
in the

car—
so

beautiful.
Today

is
the first day

of
Lent,

the
priest

mentioned,
also,

a
season of

self-
sacrifice

and
asceticism,

as
we follow

Christ
with our lives,

and
as we lead up to

the
celebration

of
Easter.

 
—Nicholas Patti
Charlotte, NC
 
 

Friday, January 22, 2016


ARTICLE PUBLISHED:  "Former Starbucks Worker Wins Settlement, Receives Back Pay"

   I published a report in the current issue of the Industrial Worker (Fall, 2015), the quarterly magazine of the union, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), about the back pay settlement awarded to a former Starbucks worker, a barista, in 2015, for his illegal firing in 2005 for labor organizing with the IWW Starbucks Workers Union (SWU), in New York. The payout amount was $50,745., before taxes. The article is on p. 11. Check it out!

   Follow this link for more information about viewing the Industrial Worker, or subscribing on-line:  IWW Starbucks Workers Union article

Photo accompanying article:

Starbucks marquee, Times Square, Manhattan. Photo: FW Nicholas Patti





   As a footnote to this notice of publication, as this blog is being posted in January, 2016, I would like to add the following comments: First, I express my condolences for the seven killed in the suicide bombing attack in Jakarta, Indonesia on Thursday, January 14th, 2016, outside of a Starbucks there, and outside a police substation, luxury hotels, embassies, and offices, near the Sarinah shopping mall, according to the Daily News (New York, USA: 1/14/2016, p. 10) and WNYC, AM 820, National Public Radio (NPR), New York City, 7 am hour.

   Next, I express my condolences for a similar attack in Istanbul, Turkey, around the same time, in which, notably, citizens of Germany were killed. This news according to, also, WNYC, AM 820, National Public Radio (NPR), New York City, 7 am hour.

--FW Nicholas Patti


Sunday, January 4, 2015

TO NOTE THE PASSING OF MARIO CUOMO

   I remember Mario Cuomo, former Governor of New York State and Italian-American son from Queens, with pride. As Governor, he upheld the liberal ideal in New York through the Reagan era, a more conservative time in the greater country. Notably, although he worked with the Republicans in New York State government, Governor Mario Cuomo resisted the death penalty on a repeated basis, often suffering politically for it, as well. At the time, the left in New York criticized him for an increasing prison population, but appreciated the resistance to the death penalty. After Governor Cuomo lost his position after his third term to the Republican, George Pataki, the death penalty was re-instated in New York. The penalty was never used, however, before the New York State Court of Appeals struck it down a few years later. It has never been re-instated since, although the federal death penalty does have jurisdiction over New York, currently.
   Also, I feel proud of Mario Cuomo for his accomplishments in the City of New York as an Italian-American, born in Queens, who became a successful attorney on his way into politics. My own Italian-American grandfather, Rocco Piraino, became an attorney in Brooklyn and the courts of Manhattan some years before Mario Cuomo did in New York City, as well. On my father's side, my grandfather's family, Frank Patti, owned a shop in Little Italy in Manhattan. Then, he married my English and Scottish grandmother, Ruth Hillier, also in Queens, New York. My father, John Patti, grew up in Brooklyn, attended City College in Manhattan of the City University of New York (CUNY), and became a civilian engineer for the United States Air Force at Rome Air Base in Rome, New York, in Oneida County. I became an activist on the left, a poet, an alternative journalist, and a fallen man--homeless and a psychiatric survivor--but never losing hope. For all of the accomplishments in my family, none of us became the Governor of New York who also carried the torch for the Democratic left nationally during the height of the Reagan Era. Mario Cuomo did.
   Thus, it is with pride that I note the passing of Mario Cuomo, former Governor of New York State and New York City local kid made good.
   A good obituary for Mario Cuomo, died Thursday, January 1, 2015, can be found in The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, NC), published in the paper on January 2.

--Nicholas Patti
Charlotte, NC


Monday, July 21, 2014

Letter to Editor Published

I published a letter to the editor in last Friday's Charlotte Observer (7/18/2014, Charlotte, NC). In the letter, I comment on the new, NC state voter laws, and specifically, on the photo ID provision. The link follows:

Letter to Editor


Friday, July 11, 2014

POEM: World Cup


World Cup


I
loved watching
 
the
United States
 
World
Cup team
 
play
soccer.
 
Their
game
 
was
unique:
 
they
usually
 
did
not care
 
about
possession
 
in
the midfield,
 
so
they were

usually
on the
 
defensive.
Then
 
they
would
 
flip
the

tables
and
 
advance
to
 
offense
on the
 
fast
break
 
down
the field
 
to
the
 
net.
They
 
were
the
 
fastest
players
 
in
the
 
world,
and
 
they
had
 
the
best goalkeeper
 
anywhere.
Other
 
teams,
the haughty
 
Europeans,
for
 
example,
would
 
just
sit there
 
and
dominate
 
possession
in
 
the
midfield
 
forever,
feeling
 
superior,
but
 
wholly
unable
 
to
break
 
through
with
 
a
goal.
 
That
is why

it
was
 
so
heartbreaking

to
see
 
the
U.S. team
 
lose
in

extra
time
 
to
Belgium.
 
Just
devastating.
 
Now,
I have
 
to
watch
 
them
all play

not
haughty football,
 
but
what
 
I
would call
 
arrogant
soccer.
 
No
more
 
Team
USA

to
shock
 
the
world
 
with
their
 
goals
and
 
their
wins

as
the
 
great
underdog
 
triumphs.
No
 
more.
Now
 
it’s
just

arrogant
soccer,
 
all
tournament
 
long.


—Nicholas Patti