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Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
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Sunday, January 12, 2025
TRUMPED UP
Saturday, January 11, 2025
A REQUEST TO THE STATE
Aaron Gunches is not going to get his wish to be executed on Valentine’s Day. In an order Jan. 8, the Arizona Supreme Court rejected a Gunches pleading to forgo any more legal maneuvering and finally put him to death after he pleaded guilty to the 2002 murder and kidnapping charges of Ted Price, his girlfriend’s ex-husband. Instead, the justices said they want to hear arguments from all sides, including Attorney General Kris Mayes, who wants Gunches executed, but not on his schedule. —Arizona Capitol Times, January 8, 2025 |
were kinder when it climbs the sky
and looks down on
the latest shooting incidents, fires
gone wild
and a prisoner deciding
his time is due to die. The forecast here
is for deportations but
no rain. It’s playoff time, every touchdown
seems like another shot
and the elements are favorites to win
against all opposition. No sign
just wind in California
and Arizona waiting for an execution.
Department of Corrections, chemicals
imported, nostalgia for
old West public hangings with the law
as violent as the criminals.
language does not cover peace
or love. A man condemned
can do no more than ask
that he become the state’s revenge
on Valentine’s Day.
David Chorlton is a longtime resident of Phoenix who finds comfort in keeping track of local birds and creatures on the fringe of the urban world. Having spent his early years in Europe, he still observes his surroundings with the pleasure of being in a foreign place.
Friday, January 10, 2025
COVER IT
“Everyone keeps saying 'apocalyptic,' but that doesn’t begin to cover it.” —CNN’s Karina Tsui from Pacific Palisades, January 8, 2025
My sister texts me saying she is sorry
to hear about my long disease [sic] and I
think of the long history of fire, how often
our world wants to be held instead of this,
now, how it’s helled. And in the military
they put me in the burn pits, not to help,
but for punishment, no mask given, and
forced to stand there with the ash now
that owns me, apical scarring, and this
is the world now, scaring me, the news
where I see fire in the Ukraine and fire
in Gaza and fire in Sudan and fire in
Myanmar and fire in Haiti and I look
online at a “current large wildfire map”
and it looks as if all of California is on
fire and I worked in California during
COVID, a disaster healthcare volunteer,
going to all the worst-hit cities, raged
by COVID and, always, driving in, I’d
see countless TRUMP signs [sick],
almost as if COVID went wherever his
supporters were, a nurse yelling one
time that the OR needed to have at
least two sets of negative pressure
respirators, and I remember a shift
where all of the staff was sick, how
nobody showed up but me, and, out-
side, the horizon was ablaze, rooms
packed with COVID patients, one
dying every other shift, and I could
go outside for my break, but couldn’t
take my mask off outside either, not
with the planes dropping fire retardant,
and a medic telling me that the UV
in L.A. was deadly, is deadly, and this
doctor screaming something about
a CT scan, and a COVID patient who
came in with no ID (we took him),
and an MP from a nearby military
base who died in his 20s, drowned
in the water of his own lungs, and
how someone came in and a nurse
was asking if the patient couldn’t
breathe because of COVID or be-
cause of the fires and the fires were
COVID and COVID was a fire, is
a fire, and my father is in bed and
he’s flicking through the news and
it’s orange-red on the screen and
red-yellow on the screen and it’s
yellow-orange, all these different
hells we create—bombings and
wildfire and a Republican’s pool
in his mansion backyard drowning
in flames and the fires in Burkina
Faso don’t make our news and
the fires in Cameroon don’t make
our news and the fires in Mali
don’t make our news, but fires
of the wealthy are all over our
screens and the mansions are so
quickly eaten by Hell. My son
googles the words Who invented
fire? and the A.I. answers, Homo
sapiens and we invented all of
this, all of this ash and smoke
and I remember when I was
standing in the middle of my
lungs being destroyed for
the rest of my life and there
was fence all around me and
I thought of incarceration,
how we are getting so good
at war that we are turning our
whole entire world into a prison
and the only way out of this hole
is to stop everything we’re doing.
Ron Riekki co-edited Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureate on Social Justice (Michigan State University Press).
Thursday, January 09, 2025
KRONOS EATS HIS CHILDREN
by Susan McLean
Kronos rules a golden age.
A.I. fulfills his every whim.
He fracks to fuel his leverage.
He won't let regulations trim
his profits or his privilege.
Kronos drives an SUV:
it's comfortable; he needs his room.
When there's a place he wants to be,
his private jet can save him time,
and time is money, naturally.
You can't eat money, though, so when
the ice caps melt, the oceans warm,
droughts, floods, and hurricanes pile on,
and all the crops dry up or drown,
his kids will find he's eaten them.
Susan McLean, a retired English professor from Southwest Minnesota State University, taught a course in Greek myth and literature for thirty years, and finds that those myths continue to resonate with what's happening now.
Wednesday, January 08, 2025
A HAUNTING AND A CURSE
Came a land with no children but many flowers.
Weeded out by ground thieves, God-given, they thought
and said. Their right, being most moral to themselves.
In mothers’ wombs slaughtered sons and daughters.
In incubators denied power. Refused milk, starved, no matter
their wails, no rescue or slightest mercy even water.
Survived to toddle, shot in their heads. Walk or run,
in knees hobbling for life. Life? Called lawn to be mowed.
At mid-youth, still alive, picked off,
thought of as rats on forbidden dumps. And grass
to be cut. Bombed and drone-shot day and night til nothing
but chunks rolled in dirt like fish in flour
from nets also forbidden. Came a land with no
children, a foot, arm, patch of flesh while rubble baked and
blew away in the sun, then the absolute misery of winter
without shelter not a dry or safe space to be had not a meal
and the people who wanted it that way, staked and
claimed, liking it with no children or only childrens’ bones,
congratulating themselves. No humanitarian aid allowed!
No humanity for Christ’s sake!
Came a time their stolen olive trees turned blood red
fruiting with the colors of newborn eyes watching them.
Their soiled window boxes boasted the lushest
greens ever seen, breaking out with poison petals
startlingly splendid but quick to rot.
Their gardens made them sick. Trees never
stopped boiling over with tears. Yet still, they praised
themselves, thanking their gods.
The map to the land with no children can be found
by the cries the wind is made of. World ‘round, it is named
Tuesday, January 07, 2025
BEAUTY AND THE WOOLY BEAST
Left: Archaeologist Kathleen Martinez believes a marble statue discovered at a temple site portrays the face of Cleopatra. (Image courtesy Egypt Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities via Hyperallergic. Right: |
A female wooly mammoth was found
In the frozen reaches of the “mouth of hell”
Nestled in a crater underground
50,000 years since she made a sound
Did she leave with a tale to tell
Nestled in her crater underground?
She was named Yana, a gentle sound
We don’t know if she let out a yell
Stumbled down by chance or forced underground
Cleopatra’s stone head was found uncrowned
Along with coins and other bagatelles
Scattered near her tomb recovered underground
Burial sites are a scientist’s playground
Clues in bones, a grown-up show and tell
Treasures from an ancient lost and found
Might the wooly beast and the Egyptian Queen
prefer their secrets to remain unseen?
Safe-keeping their private lives
Locked away from prying eyes
Monday, January 06, 2025
PANTOUM: THE TALIBAN TALI-BANS WINDOWS
Sunday, January 05, 2025
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WORD IN THE DICTIONARY
“Tariff,” Donald Trump has said many times, “is the most beautiful word in the dictionary.” —The Guardian |
More beautiful than cerulean?
Than mother? Than home?
Something Arabian
about tariff: a perfume.
Something elaborate: a fringe.
Certainly more beautiful
than beautiful, bee-yoo-tiffle.
Related to giraffe? To sheriff?
A herd of tariffs, say, gathers
high-hanging fruit. A tariff
with a posse protects.
And yes, Arabian: Wikipedia:
The English term tariff
derives from the French: tarif…
a descendant of the Italian: tariffa,
from Medieval Latin: tariffe…
from the Ottoman Turkish…
borrowed from the Persian…
The Persian term derives from Arabic:
تعريف, ta rif.
To riff on tariff: What if
the English, the French, the Italians,
the Turks, the Persians
had taxed foreign tongues,
policed the borders of language,
put up walls?
We’d have no tariff, no beautiful tariff.