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Israeli settlers beat a Palestinian man in the occupied West Bank, stripped him naked, tied his arms and legs and then zip-tied his penis, he, his family members and another witness said on Wednesday. “I thought I was going to die,” the man, Suhaib Abualkebash (above), a 29-year-old shepherd, told The New York Times. “I thought this was the end.” Photo by Afif Amireh. |
Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
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Saturday, March 21, 2026
REMINDERS
Friday, March 20, 2026
HOW DO YOU SURVIVE A WAR?
by Bruce Black
It’s the stories that you don’t read
in the news that break your heart.
The old dog who can’t make it to the safe room
in the one minute you have to get downstairs.
The young children who blow out the candles on their
birthday cakes in the darkness of bomb shelters.
The couples whose weddings are held as missiles explode
overhead, bride and groom weeping in joy and sadness.
Life, I’m told, goes on in wartime but the war
changes the way you live your life.
Love still exists but hides in the bomb shelter
with you in order to survive.
Kindness still exists but stays out of sight
while the missiles are falling.
Hope huddles under an overpass or in the shelter of underground
stations where it can breathe and show itself again.
How do you survive a war without losing the ability to love,
to show others kindness, to safeguard and preserve one’s humanity?
Even when you live miles away from the war zone
and can’t hear the bombs exploding.
Even when you can only read about them or watch them fall
on the news or in your Facebook feed.
How do you hold onto faith
in the goodness of people?
How do you trust in kindness and love
to prevail?
How do you hope and believe—in spite of the bleakness
of the present moment—in a better future?
In a future without war? In a future of peace?
How do you survive a war?
Bruce Black received his MFA from Vermont College. He is the author of Writing Yoga (Shambhala) and editorial director of The Jewish Writing Project. His poetry, personal essays, and stories have appeared in numerous publications, including The MidAtlantic Review, The Amethyst Review, Write-Haus, Bearings, Super Poetry Highway, Poetica, The Lehrhaus, Soul-Lit, and elsewhere. He lives in Highland Park, IL.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO RUBBLE
Tiny backpacks, bloody body parts litter pulverized apartment and charred-
car-streets. Stolen lives litter flattened hospitals and schools. Litter crimson
coffee shop floors. Litter blackened fields of vaporized crops.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
Over and over Earth’s saddest symphony plays. Harrowing screams, wails, moans.
Same timbre, same tones. Same saline Palestine tears in Sudan. Same in Ukraine,
Lebanon, Venezuela, Iran. The same 1% is at war with workers of the world—and
Everything they touch turns to rubble
They bomb, they strut. They prance and ‘dance,’ and bomb and bomb again.
They bomb abroad shouting, “stay sheltered!” Lucrative explosions silence
music of whining saw, pounding hammer raising roofs, housing the unhoused.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
Hubris high off homeland invasion, hostile takeovers weeks before, they dream
of easy money. Quick work of weekend war. But weekend morphs into weeks.
And weeks into months. And months into long and lean years.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
They send holy warriors striking Saturdays, Sundays, holidays ‘round Epstein news
cycles like pyrite wrecking balls revolving around orange planet, Pedophilia. ‘Round
its death smell. ‘Round sulphur scent and white phosphorus fragrance anointing them.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
They strike when Essential Workers catch fleeting winks on speeding trains roaring
beneath snoring cities. When countrymen and women dreaming of better worlds are
not yet woke. Over and over again Cruel Reich Cult strikes under cover of darkness and
Everything they touch turns to rubble
Cruel Reich Cult strikes when working ones are doubled over panting, catching
blitzkrieg breaths. Or, when they meditate, chant, or pray protecting souls, spirits,
minds from repeated trauma of sadistic Psy-Ops on our damn dime.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
One Big Beautiful Bank Job body count equals wreckage in the wake of DOGE:
Department Of Grifter Enrichment. And drowned, frozen, burned bodies pile up
at feet of climate deniers battling Mengele Medicine Men for roadkill recognition.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
Ugly omen, J6 white supremacists storming Capitalist Hill, ransacking offices, shitting in
halls, foreshadowed shredded social safety net. Scuttled science and education. Heralded
War House-Offal Office golden grift; Kennedy Center shuttered; redacted Bill Of Rights.
Everything they touch turns to rubble
Raymond Nat Turner is a NYC poet; Black Agenda Report's Poet-in-Residence; and founder/co-leader of the jazz-poetry ensemble UpSurge!NYC.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
DO THE MATH
CULTURE (AND OTHER) WARS
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| "God is nonbinary": GOP activates over Talarico’s past comments characterizing him as too radical for Texas —Texas Tribune, March 12, 2026 |
God is non-binary
like a snail, like a worm
maybe a gynandromorph—
half-female, half-sod,
like a Hebrew Character moth,
a real name that asks you to suspend disbelief
in other words—have faith
the clownfish of the skies,
slipping behind enemy lines
a double agent
in the gender wars—
it almost makes me smile
if God exists at all
their gender is the least of it
as men, women, and children
are obliterated, is simple—
Are you even there?
Adele Evershed is a Welsh writer who swapped the Valleys for the American East Coast. A Pushcart-nominated poet, her work has appeared in Poetry Wales, Comstock Review, Literary Mama and Modern Haiku, amongst others. Her poetry includes the collection, Turbulence in Small Spaces (Finishing Line Press) and a forthcoming collection, In the Belly of the Wail (Querencia Press). Her flash fiction includes the three novellas-in-flash Wannabe and
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
COMMON-TATER COMMENTATOR
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| A book-keeper whose boss repeatedly shouted the word "potato" at her "in a strong Irish accent" has been awarded more than £23,000 by an employment tribunal after it found she had been racially harassed. —BBC, March 11,2026 |
NO. NO.
2016
We hold a protest silently with signs
that welcome all who worship other gods.
A pickup ploughs the shoulder
where we stand, kicks gravel as it stops.
We back up quiet, listening. A man in camo,
raging, crying, leans across his passenger
to scream his epithets: ignorant fuckers,
we don't know shit of the animals we invite.
Who of us has watched a friend
disintegrate, arms and legs no more
than shrapnel in a blazing Afghan sky?
His mind is full of massacre.
He loved. He hates.
I want to climb in next to him,
hold him in my Nana arms until he stills.
I've heard his wounds before.
My husband keened in nightmare
when he found again among the vines
of Vietnam his comrade's boots
with nothing of his comrade but his feet.
I know my luck that I don’t know.
Even as the soldier curses me
in his convulsive bitterness,
I want to love him back
from where he lives.
2026
Ignorant fuckers, haven't you learned
you kill the ones who survive ?
Nan Meneely’s first book Letter from Italy, 1944 (Antrim House) was noted by the Hartford Courant as one of thirteen important books by Connecticut writers in 2013. It provided the libretto for an oratorio of the same name, composed by Sarah Meneely-Kyder and performed twice by Connecticut choruses and symphony orchestras. Her second book Simple Absence (Antrim House) was nominated for The National Book Award and placed as a grand prize finalist in The Next Generation Indie Awards and the 2021 Eric Hoffer Award. She has been published and rejected by The New Verse News.
Monday, March 16, 2026
PINS ON THE MAP
| After spending some of his prime years aiding German concentration camp survivors and guarding Nazi leaders tried for crimes against humanity at Nuremberg, a US second world war veteran is now believed to have become his country’s oldest known organ donor. The story of 100-year-old Dale Steele (above), who died in February after a head injury led to his being placed on life support, demonstrates how donors’ health is a more important consideration than how old they are, according to Live On Nebraska, an organ-procurement organization in his home state. “Mr Steele … is a powerful reminder that generosity has no age limit,” Live On Nebraska’s president and CEO, Kyle Herber, said in a statement. —The Guardian, March 13, 2026 |
Whenever I swear I don’t care anymore,
I open the phone, that glowing atlas,
and touch the red pins I dropped like blood drops
across the skin of the world.
One for the women I fucked in borrowed rooms,
their breath hot against my neck, thighs parting
like pages in a book I never finished reading.
One where Father left the dog behind,
old mutt howling at the empty driveway,
a childhood door slammed shut forever.
One where I straddled a pine like Frost’s secret rider,
sap sticky on my palms, wind laughing through needles.
One where I held the knife above an evil man’s throat,
his wife asleep beside him, innocent as milk,
and mercy rose up, sour and sudden,
and I walked away empty-handed.
One for the half-mile district win,
lungs burning, crowd a blur of small-town faces.
One for the bear in the Rockies,
black eyes meeting mine, both of us startled
into stillness, two animals deciding not to fight.
One where I sank into Icelandic snowdrift,
white world swallowing me whole,
cold like a lover who won’t let go.
One for the switchblade in Mexico,
cold steel kissing my throat,
I tasted metal and my own pulse.
One where I crashed Clinton’s party,
slipped past Secret Service like a dream,
shook the president’s hand, felt history
warm and ordinary in my grip.
I pin these moments still,
geography of scars and small triumphs.
Late nights when the step counter mocks me,
a few thousand short of ten,
I walk the empty streets at ten p.m.,
beer can sweating in my fist,
streetlights buzzing like tired blues.
On my pointer fingers, tattoos: RS and LP,
right starboard, left port,
so even drunk I know which way the ship turns.
And somewhere in Nebraska,
a hundred-year-old veteran, Dale Steele,
WWII quiet in his bones,
gives his liver after death,
organ young as three, they say,
regenerating cells like a river keeps running,
old body gifting what still lives.
I think of him when I pin another dot:
a man who outlasted war, depression, time,
then handed over the soft machine inside him
so someone else could keep breathing.
The map glows.
I zoom in, zoom out.
Infinity folds in on itself,
tessellations, impossible stairs,
hyperbolic curves bending away forever.
Yet here I am,
walking home under stars,
beer almost gone,
still pinning,
still caring,
one small step at a time.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
WATCHING THE 2026 ACADEMY AWARDS
She’s three chemos down, three to go.
1.
A security officer at a women’s health clinic
arrives in the morning dark, organizes to assure
guests’ safety as Christian abortion protestors
take to the bull horn, scream at the sinners.
This childless guard wonders if, by aborting
her first child, she doomed the next to stillbirth.
2.
In 2022, photojournalist Brent Renauld was killed in Ukraine.
He said his autism helped him remain calm in war zones.
We see his war photos as well as videos of his brother with the
friend who desperately tried to save him. In tears, I secretly
wondered why we exposed our suffering friend to this.
3.
Journalist dad of a young girl reports on vacant bedrooms
of children murdered in school shootings. They remain as they were
when the child was gunned down. SpongeBob pillows, hair ties,
trophies testify to a child’s life well-lived. Dad returns home and
his daughter paints his fingernails green.
The world’s pain surrounds us. No amount of candy or popcorn
can keep it out of our movie theatres, health clinics, wars, or schools.
We walk out, stunned, and apologize to our friend.
Nan Ottenritter has published chapbooks Eleanor, Speak (Finishing Line Press, 2021) and My Year 2023 (2024). She co-edited Discovery, Recovery: A Journey with Veterans (2023) and has been published in Artemis, Still Points Quarterly, Poetry Society of Virginia Anthologies, Dissent: an anthology to end war and capitalism (2023), and Writing the Land: Virginia (NatureCulture LLC, 2024). Her concern about American democracy has prompted her to read and understand the books of contemporary historians and host informal Citizens' Salons with friends, neighbors, and strangers in informal settings.
CALLING MY PERSIAN SISTER-IN-LAW THE DAY THE U.S. BOMBS IRAN
We’re not close, the thicket
between us hard to cross after years
of my snide asides about her aloof Persian polish
and her opinions about my sloppy American life.
We chat about the weather in Santa Barbara,
my brother’s iffy health, her worry for the citrus trees
she had to leave behind when they moved.
I remember stories about her childhood—
the neighborhood where she lived,
its tree-lined quiet and shaded gardens
far from crowded downtown Tehran,
skyscrapers like gravestones in the smog.
Finally getting her wish to enroll at Berkeley,
alone at 17, with little English and no friends,
Stranded in the states the day of the revolution,
her father was lost without his factory. Her mother,
who had never held a job, taking in beadwork
to earn enough for them to live.
She isn’t sleeping these days.
Her older brother, still in Iran, joked to her last week
that traffic is light in Tehran now that so many people have left.
She mentions the trees she had to abandon
as if they aren’t the only ones
without protection in a world turned away
from the possibility of grace.
We’re not close. For now, we wait
within our separate lives for whatever comes
as if nothing has changed,
now that everything has changed overnight.
For nearly 30 years, Carol Boutard farmed a small piece of the Tualatin Valley with her husband, Anthony. A farming partnership and the animal life migrating through their land were the focus of her book, Each Leaf Singing, published by MoonPath Press in 2021. Carol and Anthony now live in Penn Yan near Upstate New York’s Keuka Lake. Tucked into hardwood forest, their land is often occupied by deer, fox, turkeys and magnificent native marmots.
Saturday, March 14, 2026
BREADCRUMBS IN A NATION OF LOAVES
In the marble halls where voices echo
like coins dropped into deep, indifferent wells,
they debate the price of labor
as though it were a frivolous shadow;
weightless, distant, theoretical.
Outside, the morning opens its weary eyes.
A banker straightens his Hermes tie
that costs more than a week of someone's rent.
His salary is quite the dome;
built stone by stone, pension and bonus,
arches of security rising
towards stained-glass futures.
A manager clocks in,
midway up the ladder of breathing space.
Her wages are a narrow bridge—
not golden, not broken,
but sturdy enough to cross the river of bills
if the current stays calm.
And then there is the worker
whose hands smell of fryer oil and sanitizer,
whose chapped palms hold the ghosts
of a thousand barcodes,
and ears fatigue of a million complaints.
Their meager wage is a candle in winter.
Each hour they feed the flame,
yet the room refuses to grow warm.
And no one says the quiet truth aloud:
this fire was never meant to heat the house.
It was meant to prove endurance.
So the worker learns the mathematics of survival—
how many hours equal a gallon of milk
and a carton of eggs,
how many aching hours on torn soles
and blistered toes equal rent,
how many meals must disappear
so the light bill does not.
Jazmine Crandall is a Colombian-Cuban poet in Atlanta, Georgia. She's beginning her journey of sharing her poetry and strives to make a difference. Her work explores feminism, inequality, and the struggles of immigrants and the working class, using her writing to advocate for marginalized voices.




