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Monday, July 13, 2026

RE-FRUITING

by Regina YC Garcia 





Nolan Wells' tragic death joins a long list of Black youth whose untimely demises have raised urgent questions about justice and accountability. —MadameNoire, July 10, 2026



This tree smells oddly familiar

as worms peer up

from disturbed ground


This water sighs in sadness

as sealife swims unabated

and dark-bodies sink


This land heaves up old hurts

as mouths protest 

“All is well!”


(the lies they tell)



Regina YC Garcia is an award winning poet, language artist, and professor from Greenville, NC. Her published work appears in NCLR, Fiyah Black Speculative Lit, Soflopojo, Amistad, Elevation Review, Charlotte Lit, and others. Her first chapbook The Firetalker's Daughter published by Finishing Line Press was released in March 2023, and her full-length book Whispers from the Multiverse published by Aquarius Press/ Willow Books was released in February 2025.

POLITICAL THEATER

by Jim Kelly


Cartoon by Gary. A Huck


When death darkens
the occupied space
of the political theater,

and the curtains,
somber and heavy,
are stitched with memories
of acid speech,

the audience pauses.

Not because the performance
was noble.

Not because every act
deserves applause.

Not because every wound
has healed.

The record remains.

The speeches remain.

The injuries,
the divisions,
the grievances,
remain.

Yet death changes
the lighting.

For a moment,

The spotlight shifts
from ideology
to mortality.

From victory
to loss.

From power
to the frailty
shared by every human being.

There will be time
for historians
to sort through the record.

There will be time
for critics
to weigh the consequences.

There will be time
for citizens
to debate the legacy.

But in the first shadow
cast by death,

when kindness is impossible,

Silence may be
the most humane response.

Not surrender.

Not agreement.

Not absolution.

Only the recognition
that death
has already spoken
the final line.


Jim Kelly is a California poet whose work explores democracy, race, caregiving, and social justice. His poetry has appeared in Litro Magazine, Urban Pen Magazine, Urban Poems, and other literary publications. He is the author of the chapbooks The Quiet Witness: Civic Poems of Power, Memory, and Conscience and Caregiving Through Poetry.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

TAKING ONE FOR THE TEAM

by Laurie Kuntz 



As Air Force Maj. Jason Watson ascended the Capitol steps last week wearing his military uniform and armed with one protest sign, he knew the risks and was prepared for the consequences, no matter how severe. —Military Times, July 9, 2026



Under July's brazen sun,

independently standing on Capitol steps

one would expect this uniformed man to be waving a flag

instead of 3 words etched on cardboard -- 


The truths that weave a country's fabric

stipulate the deeper cut of accusation

and the absence of a moral center.


A country watches a man in medaled attire

being cuffed and  led away 

surrounded by the silence of the timid 

too afraid to speak:


Impeach

Convict

Remove.



Laurie Kuntz is a four-time Pushcart Prize nominee and two-time Best of the Net Nominee. In 2024, she won a Pushcart Prize. Her 8th poetry book Shelter In Place is published by Shanti Arts Press. She holds an MFA in poetry from Vermont College. Her work has been published in Gyroscope Review, Roanoke Review, Third Wednesday, One Art, Sheila Na Gig, SWWIM, and other journals and anthologies. Her themes stem from working with Southeast Asian refugees, living as an expatriate in Japan, the Philippines, Thailand, Brazil, and raising a husband and son.

WE’RE A BUNCH OF WEIRDOS

by Ron Riekki



Protest #1, base of Pentacrest, Iowa City, IO, July 10, 2026 (approximate number of protestors: 1)


"And it was striking, how much less alone that could make you feel, because of course to be peopled at all was a high-order gift, but to find people beyond your people was nothing short of miraculous.”
—Claire Lombardo


“No.” “We’re a bunch of weirdos”—
the response I get when asking if
the group of huddled people are
veterans. There’s another group,
also not veterans. And I realize,
no one showed up for the protest.
It’s hard to interview nobody.
It’s hard to get a quote about
the value of protesting when
the total number of protestors
is 0. Iowa has become I0wa.
In front of me is a wonderful
park, as if it was made solely
for protesting. It has a base-
ball field feel, but with no base-
balls. There’s even a sign that
says, YOU HAVE THE RIGHT
TO express yourself ON CAMPUS
and there’s this beautiful campus
and this absence of expression.
The sign is placed on the ground,
like home plate. I imagine this
field filled with the ghosts of
protestors. There’s The Ghost of
Protestors Past, and of Protestors
Future. I’d left a U Iowa lecture
about writing hybrid fiction/non-
fiction, Emily White talking about
her love of The Armies of the Night,
heteronormative male Norman Mailer
recounting the March on the Pentagon
in 1967… This is History as a Poem,
The Poem as History… In honor of
Mailer’s “Ultimately a hero is a man
who would argue with the gods.”
Although it’s 2026 and Mailer’s
“Ultimately a hero is a man” is dead.
I’d argue with the god of Mailer…
I rush back to the lecture, missing
the pissing break, to only catch
the tail end, but, luck, there’s a vet
in the audience, an infamous one—
Jimbo Gillchrist, an active activist
writer who, when I start asking him
about the value of protests quickly
points out the fairly obvious, stating,
“I’m white.” He says this inside of
a building with a prominent BLACK
LIVES MATTER sign tucked, very
appropriately, on the far left side
of the building, problematically no
black lives in the sole class I’m taking
this summer at U Iowa, a fiction class,
the kind instructor talking of her Chicago
homelessness social work background,
class conscious, the room more than
three-quarters women, but race an issue
where we discuss the namelessness and
facelessness of the indigenous characters
in one of the stories and no one has any
problem with it, which I’m not expecting
in 2026 woke culture, but woke culture
tends to be whatever is represented in
the room and what is absent is absent.
Jimbo’s a combat vet who introduced
himself to the class quickly pointing out
his PTSD. In the lecture, I’m surprised
he sits up front, not a cliché of being in
the back of the room, in a corner, hyper-
vigilant. His breath, a Jim Jarmusch mix of
coffee and cigarettes. His beard, a mix of
casual and casualties-of-war where he
wants to distance himself from Army
cadet hairlessness. I ask him about
the hopelessness of protests where no
one shows, but first ask him how many
were at today’s protest. He guesstimates
“6,000.”  I tell him 0. Only the last
digit of 6,000. He tells me he doesn’t
have time for an interview, needs to
see a friend, but then he gives me
the interview, talks about how hard
it is to assemble humans. He tells me
that, from experience, if you get 6,000
people to attend a protest, only about
“5” will actually stay on to do consistent
work on a daily/weekly basis of what
it takes to do true community change.
I ask him the hard questions—a Black
Lives Matter’s DeRay McKesson inter-
view I saw where he talked about violence
against blacks increasing—not decreasing—
after protests, and Radley Balko’s book
Rise of the Warrior Cop, how protests
Fund the Police (not De-), how post-protest,
police put together policies to promote
more violence, more police, more pepper
spray, more weaponry, more SWAT teams,
more cops with AR-15s, CQBRs, M4A1s,
Colt Commandos, Sig Sauers, Hecklers,
names like diseases, how these collections
of letters kill better than previous weapons,
getting better at death. Zach Cregger-level horror.
Not comedy. I discuss indigenous protestors, if, after
arrested, they become even more disempowered,
if you’re poor and vulnerable prior to the protest,
but then poor and vulnerable and you’ve just been
incarcerated, if you’re now even more poor and
more vulnerable. I ask him if it’s better to be
involved in actually changing the system, rather
than the performativity of protest. Wearing
a purple T-shirt with bold white letters of
PEACE, Jimbo tells me protests give us
expression, give us solidarity, give us a “node”
for community change. I think of lymph nodes,
fighting for the immune system, fighting
infections, diseases of plutocracy. But I keep
bringing up the loop, how Republicans take
something like fat-shaming and fast-food
companies further the message to increase
unhealthy eating, not ¢aring about the harm$.
How Republicans profit off mass shootings,
where gun sales increase afterwards. How
Republicans profit off of cancel culture, where
liberals are hardest hit by it, how Al Franken
is no longer a senator but Trump’s re-elected,
and how protests just expand police militarization.
“I’ll have to think about it,” Jimbo says.
I ask if there’s anything he wants to say
to New Verse News readers. He does.
He says, “I want to tell people, like, tap into your
local community and find ways you can to get
involved,” that “there’s all these ways to get
involved that aren’t protests.” He talks of
medic training, housing assistance, community
aid centers. I’m surprised how logical he is,
was expecting more of an emotional response.
Online, I viewed his arrest at a protest the week-
end after George Floyd’s death. Jimbo says he’s
processed what happened, his arrest. I’ve seen
him taking routine smoke breaks, alone, little
self-harm rituals. He’s a combat vet, a person
who risked his life in the George Floyd protests,
a grounded interviewee for the National Catholic
Reporter, speaking about how “none of us had
grasped that what we were doing was obviously
unjust,” referring to the war, his face shot alone,
a disembodied voice interviewing him. I have
a strong visual of Jimbo smoking by himself outside,
as if it represents combat veterans as a whole,
alone, outside, fresh air, yet breathing in smoke,
taking in a stimulant to relax, how jolts of
adrenaline feel normal, this male who comes
to class, his shirt ripped, my wondering if he
knows… I go to the library to write this history,
but it’s closing—both history and the library—
them turning the lights off in a slow sequence,
but I keep writing, trying, wanting to describe
the Pentacrest. Such an odd name. Conjuring
up Rage Against the Machine’s “five-sided
Fistagon,” the pentagram, pent-up frustration,
Penthouse and penthouses, repenting, the state
pen, the need to take pen to paper, the Pentagon.
I stumble on the Pentacrest webcam online, view it,
studying the buildings. How would I describe it?
An online description of its “diagonal axes,”
its “nineteenth-century brick,” touches of Italian
Renaissance, aims at “prestige.” And there,
in the corner, on the screen, I see a man, waving
a flag, like he’s on a desert island, a plea of SOS.
I rush there. It’s hours after the posted start time.
I see all of the protestors. All one, yes, one, of them.
He marches, slowly, in the heat, humidity,
where I’m sweating just from the short walk over.
He carries two flags, a miniature Palestinian
flag, and a massive white Veteransforpeace
flag, that he’s not waving, but, rather, the wind is,
for him. He has no energy, walks like a senior,
not a U of Iowa senior, but a citizen, and he is
a citizen, proudly protesting, but I’m not sure what.
I ask him. He’s not enthusiastic to talk, quickly
hands me a pamphlet, a petite piece of paper
the size of my palm, a Statement of Purpose
that he is here “1. To increase public aware-
ness of the causes and costs of war.” So I ask
him to increase public awareness by sharing
his story with me, wondering if he’s a vet.
He asks why I’d want to know that. I tell him
that he’s carrying a flag that says both ‘Veterans’
and ‘peace,’ so I figured I’d ask him about both.
He accepts this answer. He’s a Vietnam vet,
there, 1966-1967, a “radio op,” says, “What
we did in Vietnam,” says, “things that transpired
were horrific and insane.” I ask what happened,
but he doesn’t want to tell me. He was drafted
at 19. In the 1980s, diagnosed through the V.A.
with “10%” disability for “PTSD and some
physical” symptoms. I ask him what those are,
which angers him. He tells me he’ll “end this
right now” if I don’t start asking him the right
questions. He wants to know why I’d want to
know if he’s a vet, if I’m an “investigative
reporter,” that others “come around asking
questions.” He tells me he’s “tired of this
whole thing.” I wonder if he means this
interview, but he means “what’s happening
in the world.” He tells me he marches from
“a half hour to an hour,” going back and forth,
this prestigious building paired with this man
who looks so tired, a Santa Claus without joy,
a Vietnam vet Saint Nick, this feeling that
Christmas has been cancelled this century.
He tells me his disability rating was upped
to “60%,” later, after going back to the V.A.
“multiple times.” I ask about his PTSD;
this triggers him. Asking about his PTSD
triggers his PTSD. In the last year for
New Verse News I went, frequently, into
gang territory in Detroit, Flint, and, oddly,
I’m actually the most on-guard with this vet,
a feeling he could explode at any second,
but this knowledge that the danger with veterans
is largely exaggerated in the media. I see the Vietnam
vet in him, but I also see the Santa Claus. I keep
talking. He wants to know if I’m conservative,
if I’m “ABC, NBC,” warns of “all the networks bought
out by billionaires, right-wingers.” I laugh,
telling him New Verse News would not exactly be
labeled right wing, not even close, rather on the far
other side of the pendulum. He relaxes a bit.
I ask his name. At this, he’s done. For some
reason, this angers him the most. I tell him
it can just be his first name. Or a nickname.
But he’s done. He tells me the interview is “over.”
He stands under “Devonian limestone” building,
“Beaux-Arts architecture.” The elite and impolite,
the ruling and the unruly. I go to the other side
of the street, distant, watching him, walking,
back and forth, so slowly, families with sons
and daughters walking by, orientation week,
like they don’t even see him, and he pauses,
stands there, alone, so incredibly alone, this
strange sadness I didn’t expect, again, having
gone to multiple mass shooting sites and, yet,
yes, this moment, where—am I the saddest
yet? The lack of energy to his motions. This
sheer repetitiveness. And, then, for a moment,
a student, I believe, dressed all in black, such
contrast, talks to this man, walks with him,
across the circular opening area in front of
the Pentacrest, a car blocking my view,
where I actually hope he’ll stay and talk
to this nameless vet, a vet who refuses
to be named, and the car moves, and I see
he’s left, that this man is alone, his white
flag, his white skin, ghost-like, the flag
waving, like the signal for surrender, this
feel as if he himself is a surrendering ghost.




Saturday, July 11, 2026

WHAT IS THE GUT TO A PUNCH?

by Malaika King Albrecht



The shooting death of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo occurred as immigration enforcement has ramped up across the country, with thousands being arrested daily. —The New York Times, July 10, 2026


          For Lorenzo Salgado Araujo (1974–2026), initially identified as John Doe.

 

A soft landing. We aren’t the first, scratching our matchsticks along a sidewalk, setting buildings on fire. We want to spark a future we all can breathe in. Family's not nothing, and we’re all relatives in an absolute kind of way, wearing our single-use bodies like prom dresses on our daily trips to the mailbox. The flickering space between birth and death is an unfolding dance of DNA and circumstance. Start the heart like a stopwatch. Let the ticking noise be background sound. Is it personal if it’s all of us? Here is the secret we tell one another in the closet of our dreams: you can’t sit this one out. We’re all John Doe as we pack lunch for work. This war is not a war but is a war if you resist. Behold our given names. Behold the milk poured over tear-gassed eyes. Behold how his speeches are tambourines full of bees.


Malaika King Albrecht's fifth book is forthcoming from Main Street Rag.

Friday, July 10, 2026

SWIM THROUGH THE VEIL

by H. G.




UN Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory calls on the Israeli Government to urgently protect Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya and ensure his safety, dignity, and physical integrity. The Israeli Government must immediately release Dr. Abu Safiya, or promptly charge him with a recognizable criminal offence and grant him a fair trial. In the meantime, he must be urgently transferred to a civilian hospital to ensure that he receives life-saving medical care. Dr. Abu Safiya, the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza, has been held in Israeli custody since December 2024 under Israel’s Unlawful Combatant Law, without charge or trial. He was arrested at the hospital after refusing to evacuate while treating critical patients. According to his lawyers, Dr. Abu Safiya appears to be at imminent risk of death. Information available to UN Human Rights--OPT indicates he has been subjected to torture and other ill-treatment, including prolonged solitary confinement, repeated severe assaults resulting in grave injuries, and denial of medical care. —United Nations, July 9, 2026


Reoccurring
nightmares of my childhood
suddenly surprise my adult dreamscape

I'm drowning again
too deep underwater
sometimes
my ankle tied to a boat
other times
my car went over a bridge 

my chest and lungs
burn building
crescendo of terror
tension rising
behind my eyes
my head:
a pressure cooker
needing to whistle

I accept death
mouth and lungs
a vacuum 
sucking in
only to find

I can breathe underwater 

and I see
my Irish great (times two) grandparents
drowning
as the Staten Island Ferry sinks
with them on board

I feel the rage burning in her chest
the pressure of millions of colonized generations of the Irish
screaming in her head
freedom murdered
death in diaspora 
finally sucking water
into her lungs

and she swims through the veil
into my dreams

bloated
water laden corpses
newly lifeless buoys
bobbing
left behind 

and she breathes underwater with me

she whispers to me,
follow the call
follow our footsteps
to Staten Island
and Jersey City 

to our Palestinian brothers and sisters
and promise
not to leave them behind
even if we all drown
in the blue
of two colonizer flags

and so I wait
in my dreams
with my great (times two) grandmother 
and Refaat Alareer, Michael Collins, and Anne Frank
and the starved, shot, drowned, hanged, gassed, exiled, vaporized, reanimated (and reeliminated), dismembered masses
for Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya

when he arrives
we swim through the veil
and try again


H.G. is an American poet based in New York. She holds an MA in history and is working on her first verse novel. Her previous poems have appeared in The New Verse News, The Inflectionist Review, The Amphibian, Blue Minaret and is forthcoming in Neon & Smoke.

Thursday, July 09, 2026

THE MAINE EVENT

by Steven Kent


"Platner Suspends Senate Bid in Maine After Rape Accusation" —The New York Times, July 8, 2026



A Dem is out, and rightly so.

How very, very different, though,

The whole affair would surely be

If he were in the GOP—

He'd say she lied re: the event

And then he'd run for President.



Steven Kent is the poetic alter ego of writer and musician Kent BurnsideHis work appears in 251, Asses of Parnassus, The Dirigible Balloon, Light, Lighten Up Online, The Lyric, New Verse News, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Philosophy Now, The Pierian, Pulsebeat Poetry Journal, The Road Not Taken: A Journal of Formal Poetry, Snakeskin, and Well Read. His collections I Tried (And Other Poems, Too) (2023) and Home at Last (2025) are published by Kelsay Books.