There Are Strange Things Done in Washington
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There are strange things done in Washington

By the folks who forge our laws.

The Senate halls and quorum calls

Have always had their flaws.

So now and again our leadership train

Has followed a curious trail.

But today's the day you'd be tempted to say

That the train has jumped the rail.

Now on normal days the political frays of our leaders make the news

'Cause they can't agree down there in D.C. on which of the points of views

That get expressed will help us best restore our fortune. And

Help us regain our world-wide fame as a free and prosperous land.

On one side they say that the only way to bring us out of our slump

Is to spend much more than we have before, to find new ways to pump

Vast new sums of government funds into every corner and niche

Of our fiscal machine — you know what I mean -- that's the way to unleash

The economic might that's been hidden from sight since four or five years ago

When the banks were dethroned for offering loans to every Tom, Harry, and Joe.

In retrospect they perhaps should have checked, before they dolled out these funds,

If there was a way for debtors to pay the interest and principal sums

Back to the banks who have since joined the ranks of the utterly stupefied.

"We couldn't have known when we made that loan," is what they all have cried.

"Just relax. Get off our backs," they say. "And we're still annoyed

"That you bitch and moan about those loans that we made to the unemployed."

But though it's bizarre we are where we are and that's the reason for

The folks in D.C. to search for a key to unlock our riches of yore.

And as I have said there's a mainstream thread in the magical beltway cult

That thinks that more debt is our best bet for a prosperous fiscal result.

But opposing them are a group of men who mightily disagree

Their position is that we've had our at-bat and swung and missed for strike three.

The government can't be the power plant that supplies the fiscal fuel

To help us reclaim our former fame as an economic Jewel.

No, they say. The only way to restore our former wealth

Is to ease the restraints on the patron saints of global fiscal health.

By that they mean the mighty machine of businesses large and small

Whose inherent greed is just what we need to bring prosperity back to all

The American folks who may have lost hope as they saw their fortunes shrink.

Though it might be true that business is who brought us to the very brink

Of financial wreck — Sure! What the heck! — Let's give them another shot

At creating a tide upon which we all rise. That's the other school of thought.

Now it seems to me that these folks in D.C. have spent too long at the farm.

Both theories are flawed, and that's not all, they're both more likely to harm

This great U.S., whose very success has always depended upon

A collective desire to climb ever higher, to forge new paths, to lead on.

But now I digress, so let me just stress that surely there's truth on both sides

Of this mighty debate about our fate. There's more that unites than divides.

We can all admire the way we aspire to freedom that's guaranteed

By the very core of our national lore, by the leaders ensconced in D.C.

This explains our awe for order and law, for the forces that keep us free

To visit great parks, to enjoy the arts, to relax over afternoon tea.

'Tis been said before, but I'll say it once more: Anarchy precedes every fall.

But nonetheless, it's true, I guess, that it beats no government at all.

There are strange things done in Washington

By the folks who forge our laws.

The Senate halls and quorum calls

Have always had their flaws.

So now and again our leadership train

Has followed a curious trail.

But today's the day you'd be tempted to say

That the train has jumped the rail.

J.M. Hoffman authored two non-fiction books and contributed to over a dozen others before writing The Warwick Files, a short-story series featuring a police chief with a secretive past who lives in a quiet New York City suburb where, according to the official count, there are no spies.

He signs his non-fiction work with his full name and title, and his fiction with the shorter "J.M. Hoffman."

Find him on Facebook or at www.JM-Hoffman.com.

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