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Friday, June 05, 2026

MASS SHOOTING #14

  

VFW, 5200 block of Airline Road, Muskegon, MI, May 9, 2026 

 

“‘They’re shooting at the VFW!’ 911 calls detail chaotic scene at after-prom party.” —MLive, May 27, 2026

 

 

by Ron Riekki

 

 

 

“If I can reach at least one, then I’m doing my part.”

Ebony Davis (Gemini DaPoet)

 

They that have the power to hurt”

—William Shakespeare, sonnet XCIV

 

 
            i: Prescription

 
We need to cure this
goddamn gun disease.

 
            ii: Script
 
It’s the day after Memorial Day.  I’m so rural
the GPS seems confused, isn’t even sure what its three letters stand for.  I finally find
the mass shooting site—sad, hid, and all x’ed; it’s an old
building that reminds me of a bar in my hometown
 
when I was a boy, a bar my Grandpa buried himself inside, weekly;
it’s a VFW, has an axe-colored roof/awn, and its bin that’s a 
Boy Scout of America Troop 1023 U.S. Flag
Retirement Box
.  Across the street, a bed of
 
thick green, a feel like Eve and Adam, of no one
at all in this world, just a bug, a bee, a fly.  Not a dog, not a cow,
not a doe, not an elk, not a car
all day but mine.  Instead, as far as I can see, an eon of elm, fir, oak, ash.  Views I remember from my youth doing XC (cross-country).  It’s May.  The cry of sky, this place cut
 
by violence, the 911 call, an after-prom party,
police arriving just after midnight, on Mothers’ Day.  4 shot, 2 hit by the car, found by a cop lying in the street, “unresponsive” per police scanner, “multiple people down,” “patient in the road,” “30 to 40 shots” fired per audio, a 17-year-old girl “run over,” now in rehabilitation and “can’t walk” per FOX 17, and—fat chaos like grawlix—
a college football player named “Piggee” hit, now on crutches, “severed tendons” per WOODTV news, hit by the vehicle, tried to hop to the side to get away, but hit mid-air.
The calls of “GSW,” “GSW.”  Gunshot wounds.  “All vehicles” called.  Four shots.  E.R.
 
IV fluid resuscitation, x-ray, keep the patient warm.  Direct pressure.  The only way to stop the bleeding.
Just like politics.  How you have to put on direct pressure.
Sometimes, maybe often, too often, it feels we don’t even try to improve this world.
Crush injuries.  A vacuum effect at the point of entry, where debris
 
like bacteria, clothing, anything can enter the body, along with the bullet.
Bullets.  On parade.
Then the bullet ricocheting around inside the body, off bones, or,
if high-powered,
 
through bones,
if not, going in any direction, hitting lung, bone, vein, pons, nose, foot, guts.  Skin.  Hair.
And exit wounds larger than the entrance, spurting blood, arteries
that can spurt a foot-and-a-half, blood gushing in rhythm with the heartbeat,
 
children’s heartbeat, here, teens’ heartbeats,
there, at the prom after-party.
Red.
Kid.
 
Blood on dresses, on walls, on hands, on the floor, on the parking lot.
This mix of arterial bright red, venous dark red, capillary darker red.
Children’s blood.  We’re talking about children’s goddamn rushing blood.
I remember a paramedic telling me that when you see blood on the ground,
 
you’re seeing oxygen.  A pool of oxygen.  Hemoglobin transports oxygen.
Blood transports oxygen.  That’s oxygen all over the dress, wall, hand, floor, lot.
A lot.  They transport the children to the hospital.  Teens.  Tens.  Hundreds.  Thousands.
More than 17,000 children are shot in the U.S. every year.  Every year.  Every.  000!
 
This is America, guns
Childish Gambino.
go, go away
I stand there.  At the VFW.
 
In the sky, the dot of sun like a fire-
arm pointed at my eye.  I think
of the 1,000 people shot in Michigan in the last year
and where they were shot—in the hip, the ear,
 
the jaw, arm, toe.
R.I.P. posts.  Mom and
Dad sob, not a dry eye.
To die.
 
Thinking I need to eat, get something to drink.  Gin.
You know, I remember this loop I got into when I was
trying to learn the Hamlet to-be-or-not-to-be speech when I was
young:
 
To be, or not to be, that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles
And by opposing end them. To die—to sleep,
No more; and by a sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to: 'tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish'd. To die, to sleep
No more; and by a sleep to say we end
The heart-ache and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to: 'tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wish'd. To die, to sleep
No more; and by a sleep to say we end

 
And it is a loop—violence.  And I didn’t
have the text, wondered what I was doing
wrong, or if those words did, in fact, keep
going for infinity.  Imagine the actor on-
 
stage, trapped in that soliloquy, for hours,
for years, forever, talking about suicide
ideation.  To be or not to be or to be or not to be or to be or not to be or to be or . . .
All of this because of the four-letter word: guns.
 
There’s no one here to talk to.  Too rural.
Even the wind is absent.  I stare at the VFW.
When I go into buildings for the first time,
I honestly look for first-aid kit, the AED,
 
I once asked a stewardess where the AEDs were on the plane
and she treated me like a terrorist, asked why I’d want to know.
I couldn’t get the EMT out of my system.  She told me they’re
located both front and back, but, still, the whole time she acted
 
like I was Isis.  People are suspicious.  I went to a series of offices
at U of M to talk about the ten sexual assaults that happen
per month on campus, and the lack of mental health care
for students.  It was the same treatment, like I was vile,
 
as if the goal is no ally.  I keep asking why there’s so much
gun violence, and the solutions, everywhere I’ve gone, all of
these mass shootings in the last eleven months in Michigan
in order: in Flint, in Detroit, in Saginaw, in Kalamazoo,
 
in Grand Blanc, in Highland Park, in Saginaw again, in
Muskegon, in Flint again, in Detroit again, and in Detroit
again, in Jackson, in Grand Rapids, now in Muskegon again,
innocent children, innocent women, innocent men, talking
 
with me intensely in stores, in tents, in the streets, in early-night
dusk.  But what stands out is walking, then talking in Detroit,
taking my time talking to a group of black men where when
I asked about the root of the problem stunned me by saying
 
it’s childhood sexual trauma.  I couldn’t even believe
the honesty.  I kept that conversation going after leaving.  Searched.
Researched.  Found that one of three men have experienced sexual violence.
Why was this never mentioned once in my life before?
 
And worse, I talked to guy after guy after guy who couldn’t
get into therapy.  Especially veterans.  The wait list.  They’d
call and it would be wait list.  They’d try the V.A.: wait list.
They’ll call out in town: wait list.  How long would the wait
 
list be?  “We don’t know.”  I tried myself.  I called, literally,
more than thirty phone numbers listed online.  Easily more.
The answer: wait list.  Or “we don’t work with vets.”  And
one therapist who said that veterans are “too dangerous,”
 
that she has no problem “calling the police” on them, if she
“has to.”  I asked what she meant.  She said that they can get out
of line.  Except she doesn’t work with them.  ?  I asked if she does.
No, she said, but she’d work with the “level one veterans.”
 
I asked what that was.  She said level two and level three
veterans have too much trauma, so she only works with
level one vets.  The ones who are asymptomatic.
She’s really good, apparently, at working with
 
asymptomatic patients.  If you have absolutely no
mental health problems, she’s a phenomenal therapist.
Others pushed telehealth on me.  The majority did.
The therapists want to do therapy in their slippers.
 
The problem: telehealth is shit for complex PTSD.
It’s wonderful for minimal trauma, or no trauma,
but someone with childhood sexual trauma or
military sexual trauma or any sexual trauma
 
isn’t going to feel the most comfortable talking
on a computer, which can easily be hacked.
A friend of mine told me he can hack into any
email.  “Any.”  I asked how.  He said, “It’s easy.”
 
Easy.  Ease.  When I started to get into the thirties
for the calls, therapist office after therapist office
telling me that they had no availability, I realized
how brutal it is to get mental health care, and
 
that’s even when you have the money.  How
impossible it is to get in.  But how incredibly
easy it is to get cannabis in this town, to get
alcohol, all the people I talked to in Muskegon,
 
Flint, Detroit, telling me how simple it is to get
a gun, but how BRUTAL it is to get mental health
care.  The people on the other end of the phone
would actually laugh when I asked if they had
 
any availability.  One therapist told me she could
get me in, but I had to agree that she could video-
tape record all of my sessions.  Again, wonderful
if you have no trauma, if you want therapy due
 
to getting a D on your last report card, but if you
wanted to talk about the insane trauma that’s
so frequent in this world, especially trauma
that is hard to talk about at all, let alone with
 
a camera pointed at your face . . . When I refused,
therapist told me, “The camera on my laptop
won’t kill you.”  I felt this rage of adrenaline
through my body at how little she could under-
 
stand.  I started to tell her that computers can
be part of the trauma, told her that there are
things like cyberbullying and online human
trafficking and veterans who were forced to do
 
drone strikes, that computers in the military
can kill, that it’s—but she talked over me,
told me it was her rule, that it’s an absolute.
Of course, it’s a rule she’s making up.  Of
 
course, she doesn’t have to videotape us.
Of course not.  She hung up.  I think of the 22
veterans per day that kill themselves, hang
themselves, shoot themselves.  And then I thought
 
of the veterans who shoot others.  I wonder how
many of them were denied care.  I wonder how
many times they tried.  I wonder if people laughed
at them when they called and were told about
 
the wait list.  The wait list is just a wait list.
The wait list doesn’t factor in the level of trauma
of the person.  The wait list doesn’t look for
the factors of having parents with substance abuse
 
or your own history of substance abuse or if
you are a survivor of abuse or anything about
abuse.  It’s just a wait list.  They told me I could
always get emergency crisis help, that you can go
 
to the hospital, check yourself in.  They didn’t mention
what others have mentioned to me, which is that
the E.R. puts you on hold in an empty treatment bay,
a bay meant to drown you in waiting.  I did this once.
 
The wait was like ten hours before the EMTs ever came.
Then, once they came, they tied me to the gurney.
Did they need to?  No.  Was I compliant?  Yes.
I was depressed.  I wanted help.  Tied to the gurney,
 
there was nothing I could do on the ride to the psych ward
with the EMTs on the way making fun of me, complaining
about me, saying to me that the “suicidal” “waste” their “time,”
giving me a sick nickname I won’t repeat here, but one where
 
I wish my hands had been free, the total lack of ethics on their part,
the wish to wash my hands of that memory that got worse: when I arrived
to the ward where they gave me a bed, lying down on mattress in the dark
to find that it was covered in piss.  Piss on my face, chest,
 
arms, legs.  I could smell it, felt it, got up, turned the light on
fast, saw it, went to the front desk worker and told him
and he didn’t believe me, went to the bed, realized it was true,
told me he’d give me another bed.  I said I needed to shower.
 
He said I couldn’t.  It was after hours.  Said I could in the morning.
I was covered in someone’s piss.  I begged him.  He said
there were rules, that he didn’t make the rules.  I’d just been
mocked for the entire ride there, and I remember that smell
 
all over my face, my body, standing in a hallway, begging
this man to let me shower, begging him, pleading.  Please.
I’d went to them for help.
No, I told the woman on the phone, no, I’d rather die
 
than go back there.  I worry there is an underestimation
of the violence done to men.  I remember talking with
some women, fellow writers, at a sports bar after workshop
and the conversation got to violence against women, so I thought
 
I’d shut up, lean back, listen, and when I removed myself,
observed, I realize this passionate conversation, their disgust
at violence directed at women, but, leaning back, I saw
all of these TV sets on the walls, dozens, all over the bar,
 
and on the screen, these two men, two boxers, just beating
the hell out of each other, blood, blood, and the bar exploding
into applause at this, and the absence of recognition of this,
as it was sport, fun, ignored, or, no, not ignored, but explored,
 
applauded, worshiped.  I wonder, sometimes, if the way
we reduce violence against women is to reduce violence
against men.  The link.  I know I’m not allowed to say that.
But I don’t care.  Meaning I care deeply.  I think it’s helpful
 
to say it.  If a woman ever says she was abused, believe her.
A hundred percent.  But the system is set up where men
can’t bring it up.  Men have told me of finally opening up,
talking about their sexual abuse in therapy and the therapist
 
silent, listening, the man bawling, getting the story out,
and as soon as he’s done, being asked, “Did you do that
to anyone?”  Where men can only be seen as abusers.
Never as victims (even when they are).  I’ve heard stories
 
of men bringing up sexual trauma and the therapist ignoring it
or him hinting at it and the therapist missing the hint.
Or of calling the RAINN hotline (the Rape, Abuse, &
Incest National Network) and being hung up on, being
 
told it’s not for men, being told they should call a different
number (then given that number to only find out it doesn’t
exist or there’s no answer).  T. Charles Brantley on
the Men Need Love Too podcast with Kat Anna
 
talks about how “3/4 of all suicides are men, and I think
sexual abuse is the reason.”  I worry that abused men
who can’t get mental health care turn to drugs, alcohol,
cannabis, porn, gambling, turn to trauma repetition where
 
they don’t heal, can’t heal.  Instead they drown.  Where
the incarceration system is thirsty for their bodies.
The estimate is that one million men have been sexually
abused in the prison system in the last decade.
 
And that’s the system where we send people with trauma.
To create more trauma.  And the estimate is that one million
men have been sexually abused in the military in the last
decade.  There’s more than 100,000 veterans in prison.
 
I’m worried we’ve created a silent system of sexual violence
against men and that silent system, because of its silence,
is the catalyst, the center for violence against women.
When I worked with survivors of torture, I found that
 
there are four global torture systems: police brutality,
incarceration, gangs, and the military.  Those are the four
systems that practice torture globally.  And more than 150
countries practice torture.  The wealthier countries, in
 
particular.  Police, prison, gangs, wars—that’s the torture
system.  And more than 90% of police brutality happens
to men.  More than 90% of those incarcerated are men.
More than 90% of gang members are men.  More than 90%
 
of veterans are men.  And I never hear about sexual violence
against men.  It’s silenced in the way that torture silences.
It’s silenced in the way that death silences.  Therapy
offices need to start having more accountability.
 
I know therapists who can’t get referrals, who can’t
survive financially, the therapy offices understaffed,
under-paying, and under-trained for trauma, author Mic
Hunter in Abused Boys stating that 95% of therapists
 
say they do not have enough training in sexual trauma,
and for male clients, it can be no training.  At all.  But, yet,
we have astounding ease of access to porn, to drugs, to alcohol,
to guns.                                                                       #$%&!
 
 
            iii: Postscript: they can’t kill words

 
To repeat: We need to cure this goddamn gun disease.
I’m not holding back, because I have nothing to lose.
I have no kids, no significant other.  I have this body.
I have a voice.  Like Alex Honnold, my amygdala gone
from being in two branches of the U.S. military,
from working on ambulances, working in the prison
system.  It’s impossible to get a creative writing gig.
I’d rather give my life to writing, rather than quit.
I challenge the poets out there: go to the events in
your city and cover them like journalists.  Don’t hide.
Write.  But don’t just observe the news; get deep inside
the news.  Write from that perspective.  Force your way in.
 I respect poets.  I respect you.  Now, Jesus Christ,
 get deep into this madness and give us your voice.
 
 
Ron Riekki co-edited Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureate on Social Justice

Thursday, June 04, 2026

THEY WALK AMONG US

by Zumwalt



The White House's new site about 'aliens' has nothing to do with UFOs. —NPR, June 3, 2026



It's a historical fact:
the indigenous American
during the colonial invasion
couldn't leverage AI to code html,
didn't have an alien tip line,
never created Alien and Sedition Acts,
didn't irresponsibly fabricate statistics,
didn't automate tribal dehumanization.

No, these early Americans
didn't call others "It"
as in "we will take care of 'it'
and return it to 'its' place of origin."

"Origin," a well-chosen word:
like the origin of infection,
the origin of contamination,
the origin of outrage.

The new settlers have the newest tools
to influence a receptive audience:
memes to maximize malice,
maps to marshal marginalization,
media to market malignity.

The means to turn others in—
besides a group to hate,
another group to join,
and providing perpetual propaganda—
there must be a way to inform,
conveniently, anonymously, 
one that instills a sense of pride
for an act of persecution:
the bright red button at the White House website. 
 
 
Zumwalt's poetry feeds on alienation, shifting reality, and forced adaptation. Zumwalt, a proud repeat contributor to The New Verse News, has recently been published in Light.  

THE ZONE OF NO METAPHOR

by Adrienne Pilon


In Gaza, Israeli attacks have killed two Palestinians and injured several others. On Saturday, Dr. Jamal Abu Aboun (pictured above), head of the anesthesia department at Al-Yafa Medical Hospital in central Gaza, was killed in an Israeli drone strike that injured three other civilians, including a 2-year-old girl. Since last October’s U.S.-brokered so-called ceasefire, Israeli attacks have killed at least 922 Palestinians. —Democracy Now, June 1, 2026


Even metaphor is a casualty of war.

     —Mohammed el-Kurd

Perfect Victims and the Politics of Appeal



I keep trying to write a poem

about the sea, or olive trees,

or bombs, but I do not have metaphors

for genocideobliteration, extermination.

Nor a poetic way to counter the euphemisms 

of protection, or self-defense.

Where apartheid becomes separation

and stolen is called contested.

 

If you want imagery, I will write that

this ground was already dark with blood        

this land was already split by wire and broken by wall  

these people already torn apart by muscle and gun   

long before the fires of October.

 

But these are not metaphors. 

Say ceasefire while bombs drop

and there is no longer meaning between us. 

I cannot locate a metaphor for starvation,

no similes for rubble or rape

This is not complicated.

 

If the trees are all uprooted, 

none can eat the fruit.

If the wells are all destroyed,

none can drink the water.

If some people are driven into the sea,

all will drown.

 

These are not 

I am not writing

I refuse to speak

 

in metaphors.



Adrienne Pilon is a teacher, poet, and essayist. Recent and forthcoming works appear in Dark Matter: Women Witnessing; Tendon Magazine; Susurrus and elsewhere.

Wednesday, June 03, 2026

LONG LIVE THE CAGE

by Ron Shapiro
 
 
 
 
On the White House lawn,
the president has erected
a 90 foot tall structure
nicknamed “The Claw”
for a UFC fight on the
night of his birthday.
 
With the People’s House
in the background, a violent
battle with cuts, blood and bruising
will unfold on the front lawn.
 
Cheering on senseless cruelty with
the rage of Orwell’s Two Minute Hate,
movie stars, soldiers and politicians
will celebrate the moral rot of amerika.
 
And then it will be over.
 
But the president wants to the cage
and claw to remain long after as
a symbol of Greatness, a new landmark,
akin to the Eiffel Tower.
 
Not a bad idea especially if the structure
can be used for senators and congress people,
along with billionaires, to enter the octagon
and beat the crap out of each other.
 
Let policy be directed by who has the strongest
arms and legs or the best submission hold not
the biggest mouth and the loudest voice.
No more words dressed as manipulative
rhetoric. Grunts and groans now command
 
Attention. Schumer versus McConnell or
Owens against Allred? Let the people choose
the bouts then let ‘em go at it. Put the show
on Netflix. Encourage betting. Let winners
 
Decide what’s best for the country. With
one punch to the gut, a kick in the groin
or a two-finger eye poke, universal health
care, a tax on the wealthy right around the corner.
 
So keep the cage standing. It may be just what
this country needs to progress towards the future
and bend the moral arc a bit closer to justice.
 
 
Ron Shapiroan award-winning teacher, has published over 20 poems in publications including Nova Bards 24 & 25Virginia Writers ProjectThe New Verse News, Poetry X HungerMinute Musings, Backchannels, Gezer Kibbutz Gallery, All Your Poems, Paper Cranes Literary Magazine, Zest of the Lemon and two chapbooks: Sacred SpacesWonderings and Understory, a collection of nature poetry.  

LAMENT FOR 250

by Jon Wesick




AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News.


Gerald Ford forsook the bicentennial and a putrid wind haunts our hopes.

Abraham Lincoln forsook his top hat and a toxic wind haunts the 14th Amendment.

FDR forsook the Resolute Desk and a loathsome wind haunts the New Deal.

JFK forsook Camelot and a foul wind haunts the Civil Rights Act.

Daniel Webster forsook oration and a scorching wind haunts the Senate.

Sam Rayburn forsook the rostrum and a blistering wind haunts the House.

John Lewis forsook the floor and a stale wind haunts the Black Caucus.

Clarence Darrow forsook the law and a sweltering wind haunts the courtroom.

Earl Warren forsook his gavel and a noxious wind haunts Miranda.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg forsook her robe and an intrusive wind haunts women’s bodies.

Mother Jones forsook picket lines and a desolate wind haunts the union hall.

Jonas Salk forsook his stethoscope and a pestilent wind haunts iron lungs.

Martin Luther King forsook the pulpit and a corrupt wind haunts the ballot box.

Rosa Parks forsook her bus seat and a lethal wind haunts the EEOC.

Edward R. Murrow forsook his microphone and infectious lies haunt the web.

Admiral Halsey forsook the Enterprise and a diseased wind haunts the Persian Gulf.

General Eisenhower forsook Normandy and a virulent wind haunts Afghanistan.

 

One

America, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Liberty Island, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Edmond Pettus Bridge, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Denali, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Grand Canyon, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Golden Gate Bridge, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Mount Rushmore, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Gateway Arch, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Hoover Dam, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Colonial Williamsburg, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Lincoln Memorial, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Liberty Bell, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Freedom Trail, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Yellowstone, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Alamo, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Gettysburg, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Pearl Harbor, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Space Needle, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Crater Lake, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Devil’s Tower, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Everglades, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

National Civil Rights Museum, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Sears Tower, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

Vietnam Memorial, the lament is bitter. The lament is made for you.

 

Two

The Statue of Liberty cried, “The tyranny that came to be; its lamentation hangs heavy on me. The lies that came to be; their lamentation hang heavy on me. The corruption that came to be; its lamentation hangs heavy on me. The theft that came to be; its lamentation hangs heavy on me. The waste that came to be; its lamentation hangs heavy on me. The stupidity that came to be; its lamentation hangs heavy on me. The rancor that came to be; its lamentation hangs heavy on me.

 

“Because of the bitterness in my land, I gave out leaflets that householders ignored. Because of the bitterness in my land, I attended protests that politicians ignored. Because of the bitterness in my land, I posting memes that web surfers ignored.”

 

Three

On that day tyranny gathered, when in the presence of Liberty her nation was doomed, when they pronounced utter defilement of the nation, when they directed its people be enslaved, she did not forsake her land. Truly, she shed tears. Truly, she made supplication.

 

She pled, “Bull Connor, spare our nation,” and Connor said no.

“Lester Maddox, spare our nation,” and Maddox said no.

“George Lincoln Rockwell, spare our nation,” and Rockwell said no.

“Roy Cohn, spare our nation,” and Cohn said no.

“Phyllis Schlalfly, spare our nation,” and Schlafly said no.

“Jerry Falwell, spare our nation,” and Falwell said no.

“George W. Bush, spare our nation,” and Bush said no.

“Steve Bannon, spare our nation,” and Bannon said no.

“Stephen Miller, spare our nation,” and Miller said no.

“Russell Vought, spare our nation,” and Vought said no.

“Speaker Johnson, spare our nation,” and Johnson said no.

“Justice Roberts, spare our nation,” and Roberts said no.

“CBS, spare our nation,” but they capitulated.

“Paul Weiss, spare our nation,” but they capitulated.

A&O Shearman, Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft, Kirkland & Ellis, 

Latham & Watkins, Milbank, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, 

Skadden Arps, and Willkie Farr & Gallagher capitulated.

“DNC, spare our nation.” They asked for donations 

and brought up gun control.

 

because the billionaires had already decided. 

Elon had decided. Peter Thiel had decided. 

Marc Andreeson, Steve Schwarzman, Miriam Adelson, 

Diane Hendricks, Harold Hamm, Bernard Marcus, Bill Ackman, 

Ike Perlmutter, Steve Wynn, the Winklevoss twins,

and Linda McMahon had all decided.

 

Four

The tyrant started a war—the aware groan. He replaced experts with sycophants—the aware groan. He fired government watchdogs—the aware groan. He fired generals—the aware groan. He fired diplomats—the aware groan. He fired doctors—he aware groan. He closed laboratories—the aware groan. He pardoned rioters—the aware groan. He pardoned drug runners and crooks—the aware groan. He praised dictators—the aware groan. He coerced colleges—the aware groan. He deported Afghans to the Taliban—the aware groan. He sued newspapers—the aware groan. His portrait dominates the Justice Department—the aware groan. He launched retribution campaigns against seashells, senators, veterans, astronauts, FBI Directors and National Security Advisors—the aware groan. He arrested reporters—the aware groan. He tore down the East Wing—the aware groan. He took food from the poor and medicine from the AIDS patients to build monuments to himself—the aware groan. He sued his IRS and awarded himself $2 billion—the aware groan.

 

Five

The tyrant stole from the nation, its farms fallow, its lunchboxes shattered. The arsenal of democracy dwindles—the aware groan. Wind power abandoned—the aware groan. Temperatures and tempers soar - the aware groan. Measles, Ebola, and hantavirus lurk—the aware groan. Voting rights cancelled—the aware groan. Election districts gerrymandered—the aware groan. Troops intimidate cities—the aware groan. Masked agents invade courtrooms and hospitals—the aware groan. Protesters murdered—the aware groan. He imposed tariffs—the people groan. Tankers languish in the Persian Gulf—the people groan. Prices skyrocket—the people groan.

 

Six

The Statue of Liberty laments her defiled home while awaiting deportation. “The tyrant has indeed defiled my nation. He took a pickaxe to its reputation. The world no longer looks to America as a beacon, sends its students to China instead. The tyrant turned Canada against us. He turned Greenland against us. He betrayed plucky Ukraine. He turned Mexico against us. He turned Brazil against us. He turned Albania against us. He turned Belgium against us. He turned Bulgaria against us. He turned Croatia against us. He turned the Czech Republic against us. He turned Denmark against us. He turned Estonia against us. He turned Finland against us. He turned France against us. He turned Germany against us. He turned Greece against us. He turned Hungary against us. He turned Iceland against us. He turned Italy against us. He turned Latvia against us. He turned Lithuania against us. He turned Luxembourg against us. He turned Montenegro against us. He turned Netherlands against us. He turned North Macedonia against us. He turned Norway against us. He turned Poland against us. He turned Portugal against us. He turned Romania against us. He turned Slovakia against us. He turned Spain against us. He turned Sweden against us. He turned Turkey against us. He turned the UK against us. He turned Saudi Arabia against us. He turned Kuwait against us. He turned Qatar against us. He turned the UAE against us.

 

Seven

The Statue of Liberty swelters at Alligator Alcatraz. Liberty, how is your heart? Faithful woman, confined to a flooded tent, how is your heart? Righteous woman, whose torch was sold for scrap, how is your heart? Symbol of freedom, denied a lawyer, how is your heart? Bronze goddess, beset by mosquitos, how is your heart? Inspiration, forced to unclog toilets with bare hands, how is your heart? How long will your imprisonment last? How long will you drink tainted water, eat moldy bread? How long will they deny you a doctor?

 

Statue, return to Liberty Island. Doctors, return to your clinics Scientists return to your labs. Professors return to your lecture halls. Stephen Colbert return to Late Night. Anderson Cooper return 60 Minutes. May voters declare an end.

 

Eight

The tyrant, who knows no humility, no empathy, no curiosity, no compassion, with an inflated ego, an incessant craving for praise, a sense of entitlement, a thirst for power, who boasts, who belittles, who wipes his ass on the law, who was ordered by hate, may he swoop down on the nation no more.

 

Those, who know no humility, no empathy, no curiosity, no compassion, with inflated egos, incessant cravings for praise, a sense of entitlement, a thirst for power, who boast, who belittle, who wipe their asses on the law, who were ordered by hate, may they be shunned. 

 

Those, who know no humility, no empathy, no curiosity, no compassion, with inflated egos, incessant cravings for praise, a sense of entitlement, a thirst for power, who boast, who belittle, who wipe their asses on the law, who were ordered by hate, may they never recur.

 

Nine

Liberty, may your restored nation be resplendent. Like a bright heavenly star may it not be destroyed.

 

As supplicant, the poet offers this invocation to you. After absolving the nation of its errors, may your heart relent toward those who labor for freedom and justice.

 

May the hearts of your people who dwell in the nation be pure. Liberty, in your restored nation, may you be praised.



Hundreds of Jon Wesick’s poems and stories have appeared in journals such as the I-70 Review, The New Verse News, Paterson Literary Review, and Unlikely Stories. He is a regional editor of the San Diego Poetry Annual and host of the Gelato East Fiction Open Mic as well as the NAV Arts poetry reading. His latest poetry collection is Rants of a Cranky Old Man. He lives in Manchester, New Hampshire and longs for gene editing to bring giant wombats back from extinction.