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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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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
DEAR JUDY
Monday, September 15, 2025
THE ART OF WHAT’S LEFT
lying helpless on his back
has now been scrubbed
into anyone, anywhere where
faceless power hammers
the harmless: families asleep
in wrecked schools and sad tents,
thousands on foot, on donkey carts,
and in cars fleeing their flattened
neighborhoods, starving hundreds
shot while crowding for food,
the badly wounded and bleeding
on their backs begging for mercy.
A gray afterimage of the mural
remains on the courthouse wall
like a blast shadow in Hiroshima,
like a black-gray pall of smoke
above human beings being burned,
like some relentless nightmare ghost
that ought to haunt us night and day.
Matthew Murrey is the author of Bulletproof (Jacar Press, 2019) and the forthcoming collection, Little Joy (Cornerstone Press, 2026). Recent poems are in Dissident Voice, Escape Into Life, Tiny Wren Lit, and elsewhere. He was a public school librarian for more than 20 years and lives in Urbana, IL with his partner. He can be found on Bluesky and Instagram under the handle @mytwords.
Sunday, September 14, 2025
NO MERCY
Nick Fuentes has denied speculation circulating on social media his followers, known as “Groypers,” were responsible for conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s death, after messages on unfired casings written by Kirk’s alleged shooter Tyler Robinson appeared to be linked to the far-right movement. —Forbes, February 13, 2025
A revolution always eats its young,
Devouring true believers in its urge
To prove itself more faithful to the cause.
With cries of heresy on every tongue,
There has to come a fateful final purge,
And then the end. Same as it ever was.
Steven Kent is the poetic alter ego of writer and musician Kent Burnside. His work appears in 251, Asses of Parnassus, Light Poetry Magazine, Lighten Up Online, The New Verse News, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Philosophy Now, Pulsebeat Poetry Journal, The Road Not Taken: A Journal of Formal Poetry, Snakeskin, and Well Read. His collection I Tried (And Other Poems, Too) was published in 2023 by Kelsay Books.
WE GET TO CHOOSE
you get to choose which expert to believe,
which news source delivers the truth to eyes and ears,
which problem needs solution and which solution
you like best and think will work and ought, therefore,
be funded beyond your wildest ability
to count the cents one by one in your little life.
So close your eyes and jump to page 47,
the just say no, the walls and cages, the answer
that puts ever more troops and officers and masks
on your streets, the security of surveillance,
of armed patrols—here, there, and everywhere. Or jump
to page 76 and guns for everyone
and self-defense in every hand and every home.
Or turn to page 2021: the moment
we decide which police we must obey
and which we must overrun to guarantee our rights.
Or, maybe, see what happens when we choose that page
where we realize that schools and social services
are less expensive than prisons or where we build
villages of tiny homes for our veterans
unhoused and struggling instead of casting them,
so much chaff, to streets and parks, to make-shift tents,
where they like dandelions can sprout in the cracks.
Which America will we choose for our families?
Saturday, September 13, 2025
CHICAGO AND THE SWINE
After and with Carl Sandburg
“Each day, it seems like the president is deciding maybe he read something in the newspaper and he’ll send troops to Portland or perhaps to New Orleans or perhaps to Chicago, so I’m always glad to know he’s not sending them to Chicago. We don’t need them. There’s not an emergency in Chicago,” [Illinois Gov. JB] Pritzker said. —WGN-TV, September 11,2025
Stormy, husky, brawling,
City of the Big Shoulders:
Euphoric, I recall Chicago and my strenuous birth in Mercy hospital eighty-seven years ago,
as shaggy as an ape, they said, big shouldered like our city, and soon to be mentored
by its churning and creating twin energies of increasing good and encroaching evil—
but never like the present and deadly evil of the lurking and hulking Super Swine.
He intends to break your will with his weaponized and endlessly destructive lies.
Carl, like you, I have seen the gunmen kill and then set free to kill
again, when he, the Swine, forgave his armed and loyal mob
of treasonous thugs he ordered to overthrow democracy.
But I know Chicago is brutal: brutal enough to resist his folly, expose
that he’s no better than another hog to butcher for the world.
As you chanted, Carl: Show me another city with lifted head singing so proud
to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning.
It needs to be; for if the Swine slogs through our city, destroying lives and laws,
unmet by brutal resistance, he will make moves to widen his war throughout our land.
Ralph La Rosa has published prose on major American writers, including Emerson and Thoreau, and has placed short fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and film scripts. These days, he mostly writes poetry, appearing on the Internet, in print journals and anthologies. His books include the chapbook Sonnet Stanzas and full-length Ghost Trees and My Miscellaneous Muse. And he loves The New Verse News!
Friday, September 12, 2025
DEBATE RESTS
Gang violence?
Missile drills
by buzzwords.
Hard evidence.
Fingers fumble
to investigate.
Cannot say
Now show me
another one.
body already
set in place
as latest step
next armchair
commander
strides over.
Chad Parenteau hosts Boston’s long-running Stone Soup Poetry series. His work has appeared in journals such as Résonancee, Molecule, Ibbetson Street, Pocket Lint, Cape Cod Poetry Review, Tell-Tale Inklings, Off The Coast, The Crossroads, The Skinny Poetry Journal, The New Verse News, dadakuku, Nixes Mate Review and The Ugly Monster. He has also been published in anthologies such as French Connections, Sounds of Wind, Reimagine America, and The Vagabond Lunar Collection. His newest collections are All's Well Isn't You and Cant Republic: Erasures and Blackouts. He serves as Associate Editor of the online journal Oddball Magazine and co-organizer of the annual Boston Poetry Marathon. He lives and works in Boston.
BULLY PULPIT
what any of us think
but language changes
& we change with it
& you know a bully
when you see one—
some preaching leviathan
who offers a shaky
social contract
insisting life is
not worth living
unless we have
a kind of freedom
from each other—
say six feet
or the Grand Canyon
where your views
stop mattering
unless my views
comfortably overlap
which happens
less & less
in a crumbling Democracy
while the old guard
hammers home
the same tired tales
of Middle Class bliss
with fenced neighbors
who deep down
share our core
values & beliefs
which fall flat
in the face
value of daily reminders
hammering home
who we care
enough to protect
Thursday, September 11, 2025
COMFORT FOOD
Today I finally noticed the furniture store
on the corner has been going out of business
for three years according to their chipped
window paint advertising consequential
rock-bottom prices, and forgive me, Father,
but the Christian radio station that keeps
asking for money to stay on the air keeps
claiming to just fall short of their need
while staying on the air asking for money.
Noah spent seventy-five years building
the ark and I applaud the persistence of
obedience and woodwork, but how do
you determine the caloric intake between
feeding and milking, grace and gluttony?
And today the president ordered all U.S.
flags to be flown at half-mast due to the
assassination of the political influencer,
but he seems to like the way they always
wave like taunting after each school
shooting. Tonight ended with a movie for
me as I burrowed my hand into the tub of
popcorn because the top is always too buttery,
and it’s like that sometimes—we show how
much we’re willing to dig to uncover what
satisfies us vs. settling for what we’re being
fed as we forgo napkins and lick our fingers
in satisfaction and defiance.
Daniel Romo's latest book is American Manscape (Moon Tide Press 2026).
DEPARTMENT OF WAR: WHAT’S NEW IS SO OLD
“War is only a cowardly escape
from the problems of peace.”
“War is a racket. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only
one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives.”
—Major General Smedley D. Butler
Slaughtering Seneca, Seminole;
Slaughtering Creek, Choctaw, Mohawk,
Cayuga, Blackfeet—like some demonic
Department Of War. It was always Department of War.
Slaughtering Sioux, Shawnee, Chickasaw;
Slaughtering Chippewa, Lakota, Ohlone—
Like some demonic Department Of War. It was
Always Department of War.
Capturing bodies; and looting labor of Ashanti,
Fulani, Huasa, Wolof, Yoruba, Ibo, Kongo,
Mongo, Hutu, Zulu… Like some demonic
Department Of War. It was always Department of War.
Great oceans east and west.
Friendly neighbors north and
South—Department of Defense
Never made sense. It was always Department of War.
It was always Department Of War. Always
Class war with Offal Office in War House!
Class war with Capitalist Hill! Class war with
White Supreme Courtesans in revealing black robes!
Does dull thud of boot heels goose-stepping down
D.C. streets to “Dixie” surprise you? Have you been
Attaching Fox-box electrodes to skull; stuffing pizza
Hole; self-lobotomizing for decades on the La-Z-Boy?
It was always Department Of Cooked Books. Department Of Can’t
Pass An Audit. Department Of Greasy-Thumbed Grifters. Always
Department Of $500 hammers and $10 pencils billed as “impact
Fasteners,” and “portable hand-held transcribing devices” on our dime!
It was always ‘Luftwaffe’ dropping 2,000 lb. bombs on
Hospitals and homes. Making pools of blood bloom from babies’ heads—
And rechristening children, ‘Civilian Casualty,’ and ‘Collateral Damage’
With lethal lies.
It was always ‘Wehrmacht’ with nightmarish music of moans—
Hair-raising, heart-pounding shrieks. With unlimited capacity for
Cruelty and savagery—like cutting off fingers of fallen fighters
For souvenirs… and urinating on their bodies …
It was always confederacy—champion of chains and whips. Blood-
Thirsty warfare state—unleashed on neighbor, inhabitant alike. It
Is also glorious, technicolor, dream! Will we rise, realizing it? Or,
Will we fall, presenting ‘Nobel War Prize’ to traitor-pedophile-Führer?
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.