A budget written by a nutter
Favors guns instead of butter.
Starve the people, stoke the power?
No, said Mr. Eisenhower.
Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
by Lisa Seidenberg
The Jesus totes were hung
from a bare nail in the store
among the tables of baby tees
and short shorts seen
by tweens who pause purposefully
at the offerings of each station
Not a full body Jesus
Not a loving Jesus—
It was only the head
tilted slightly—quizzically even—
sporting the brambled crown
of thorns he wore
with signature aplomb
An odd sight, nevertheless
as Brandy Melville is a brand
for the body-con set
with its “one-size-fits-most"
if you are young and female
with a bikini-ready silhouette.
With doleful eyes cast downward,
the tote bag Jesus regards
the teetering mountains of
drawstring sweatpants
In soporific shades
of gray and blue and sand
A fitting attire for the desert breeze
of Bethlehem
or the Sea of Galilee
One wonders what thoughts
might cross his mind, aware
that Brandy M permits no returns
of any kind?
James Penha edits The New Verse News. His latest book is Queer As Folk Tales.
by Anne Gruner
Your radiant gaze
belies your violent birth—
a cataclysmic collision
delivering you from the bowels
of Mother Earth into
her synchronous embrace.
As asteroids pummeled your baby face,
lava cracked open your eyes—
Imbrium and Serenitatis—and forced
the smile of Nubium and Cognitum.
Your mother found you precious.
You shielded her from solar winds
and nurtured her atmosphere,
tugging her primordial soup
back and forth to salt life
upon her terra firma.
Now, as you age and find yourself
somewhat more distant,
you still stabilize her Goldilocks tilt,
regulate her ebbs and flows,
and calm her mood swings
as maturity and abuse take their toll
on her temperate temperament.
And at long last, you reveal
your greatest secret—
water ice at your poles,
holding out the promise
you will help her denizens,
the dwellers of graying Earth,
reach for the stars.
Anne Gruner is a two-time Pushcart nominee whose poetry has appeared in numerous print and on-line publications including Amsterdam Quarterly Review, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Wayfarer Magazine, The New Verse News, Humans of the World, Spillwords, and Written Tales. A former career CIA analyst and lawyer, Anne lives in McLean, Virginia with her husband and two golden retrievers.
by Lawrence J. Krips
This morning I tossed an empty toothpaste tube
into the toilet bowl instead of the basket.
Later, the just simmered Marinara sauce
went from the stove into the everything drawer.
You see, the system I relied upon,
has taken an unapproved vacation.
My friends insist dictators will save the world
and that being independent is an unnecessary burden.
My children are beginning to wonder not at the barking
but by the preternatural scratching with my left foot.
By overwhelming minority opinion, The Supreme Court
declared the United States null and void.
The stairs took me up to the basement, while
the dump sink in the attic overflowed to the roof.
The President has ordered all new maps
eponymously rename the Western Hemisphere.
Who knew vaccinations cause fleas or
cameras can substitute as hearing aids?
From now on, men’s votes are the only ones counted
in all the elections we will no longer have.
For as a woman seweth so does a man reapeth,
the oceans tideth and space-time discontinueth.
Nothing does lead to something
and a stitch in mine is yours in time.
I no longer need to study all those tedious details for elections,
the decisions have been and will be made for us.
Do not fear this upheaval. The old normal
In a word
Melanie Choukas-Bradley is a naturalist and author living in metropolitan Washington, DC. Her books include City of Trees, A Year in Rock Creek Park, and Wild Walking—A Guide to Forest Bathing Through the Seasons. Many of her poems have appeared in The New Verse News and Writing in a Woman’s Voice.
Utah’s new study aims to kill ‘as many cougars as possible’ —High Country News, March 24, 2026
Reclusive Monty,
as I like,
in kinship,
to call you,
visits in deepest night,
not to hunt,
as one might expect,
our abundant deer,
but to slack your thirst
at the water-filled grotto
lying just beyond
where I rest my head.
We each,
in our way,
share
the same story,
breathing life
here at seven thousand feet.
where our ridge overlooks
the Rio Grande Valley.
ancestral home to Puebloans,
who worship you
as “the beast god”,
revered beyond
any other animal,
including the bear,
for your lithe beauty
and stealth.
I see you
as a high desert
panther,
royalty of solitude.
Your prints
in the snow,
broad as my hand
wide,
leave me breathless,
in their suggestion
of power unbridled,
eager
to pounce.
Recent sightings
in the neighborhood,
remind how closely
our lives touch.
Though an Anglo
living in Indian Country,
it would crush me
to see your mythical
presence eradicated.
Another gift
of your species,
the smaller,
but far less shy,
Bobby the bobcat, loves
to roll around
on the welcome mat,
outside our glass-paneled
front door.
as he taunts ravens,
into a squall
of angry screams
and fly-bys.
I find it impossible
not to feel
an intense connection
with you creatures
of the wild,
Hunters,
yes,
you will
always be,
but much more,
as even Puebloans’
ageless reverence
for Bobby shows.
Which begs
the question:
should rampant
cravings
for hooved
trophies,
outweigh
sustenance
for one’s
innermost
bearings,
linking us
to nature?
Dick Altman writes in the thin, magical air of Old West’s high desert plains, where, at 7,000 feet, reality and imagination often blur. He is published in the American Journal of Poetry, Santa Fe Literary Review, Fredericksburg Literary Review, Foliate Oak, Landing Zone, Cathexis Northwest Press, Humana Obscura, Haunted Waters Press, and others here and abroad. Pushcart Prize nominee and poetry winner of Santa Fe New Mexican’s annual literary competition, he has authored some 300 poems, published on four continents.
According to a website calculator
what I paid in taxes last year
bought the government
350 to 500 rounds of ammo.
I wonder if I bought the bullets
that killed Pretti and Good
in Minneapolis
by men in masks
Or perhaps I helped pay
for the tomahawk missile
that killed over 100 girls
in a school in Iran.
I protest policies,
but pay my taxes
the way I was taught
good Americans should.
In this way I’m complicit.
Every dollar I send
will be signed by the culprit,
and signed off by me.
Mark Hendrickson (he/him) is a poet and writer in the Des Moines area navigating the Sturm und Drang of daily life through wordcraft. His words appear in The Ekphrastic Review, The New Verse News, and Modern Haiku. Follow him @MarkHPoetry, https://www.chillsubs.com/
or on his website: www.markhendricksonpoetry.com