About Me

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Gladwin, Michigan, United States
Eugene Fritcher was born in Gladwin, Michigan in 1928. He has been the subject of many articles regarding his views on preservation of lakes, rivers, wildlife and forest land. The author lived an extremely active life in his younger years, and through his many jobs, acquaintances and his own experiences, he has gathered a multitude of writing material.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

PYRAMID SCHEME

Born in nineteen twenty eight
been around a good many years,
may I relay a little history
how a small town disappears.

It was a friendly little village
never the need to lock a door,
most all run a grocery bill
at Mom and Pop's general store.

Was a quiet pleasant little town
what community could ask for more,
then the merchants sought a plan
certain to make their income soar.

If the village had more people
they would purchase at our store,
why! our income would triple
with population three times more.

The gates were thrown wide open
signs and brochures welcomed all,
it's your land of milk and honey
if you answer the beckoned call.

Growth was slow at the beginning
each passing year picked up steam,
soon peaceful life and solitude
was a treasured long past dream.

Soon schools and jails overcrowded
real estate priced out of reach,
demand for roads, sewers, ditching,
debt hangs on the county like a leach.

Heavy traffic, fast food and malls
burst our county at the seams,
crime and dope is on the increase,
long gone, the peaceful scene.

Need for rules and regulation
require paid enforcement staff,
County subsidized permit fee's
justified by modern math.

It's our tax free enticements
that fill our industrial park,
when forced to pay a living wage
most fold up and then depart.

Waste disposal's overflow
more pollution day after day,
a left turn requires traffic lights
or an hours wait you’ll pay.

Who reaped the dollar harvest?
Not those who first rolled the ball,
was the greedy corporations
who grabbed the profits from it all.

There are those who still can’t see
the pyramid scheme is but a sham,
if we only had more people
we could recover from this jam.

The sacrifice of our small village
by far to high of price to pay,
those who can still remember
wish the land turned back to hay.

I saved a piece of earth's heaven
working two jobs for many years,
after I’m gone it won’t take long
to meet the subdivision shears.

The sad truth. . .
Exceptions to every rule, we have two factories
started, run, owned, and operated by home town
families still with us who have operated to the
benefit of the community for many years.


1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Very thoughtful to have remembered and included (or should I say EXcluded) your hometown entrepreneurs!