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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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
Friday, April 17, 2026
WE THE PEOPLE
Thursday, April 16, 2026
THE ANTI-CHRIST
| Cartoon by Nick Anderson |
Finally the devil gets his due
Not that we didn’t hear him say
He could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue
And MAGA folks would love him anyway
Pardons for those found guilty of insurrection
Granting more tax breaks to the richest in our nation
Chaos abroad, rising prices and corruption
A war of choice, suffering, death and destruction
His TACO cowardice whenever others called his bluff
His bombastic ranting, hate and lies were not enough
He’s broken all his campaign promises
But this time he’s gone too far for the far right
At last they see the devil for what he is
And even MTG has seen the light
Once they may have thought he’d be their savior
But this devil never was nailed to a cross
Pure evil can be seen in his behavior
And now his followers are at a loss
They never will forgive him for this sin
His claim to be godlike has done him in
Gordon Gilbert is a New York City west villager. In these trying times, he finds some solace taking long walks along the Hudson River. He keeps hoping things will turn around, waiting on that elusive inflection point. Maybe this is it.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
WHEN DO WE BEGIN, AND HOW SHALL WE END?
by Indran Amirthanayagam
The Pope will not attend the 250th birthday party.
The gold-plated arch will tower over a dwindling
number of illiberal potentates, driven by armored car
from the Board of Peace. Orbán will be granted
honorary American citizenship and sent as ambassador
to San Salvador. Jesus will reclaim his right to authorize
any and all uses of his image. Give me a break: Jesus
with an American flag, warplanes, bald eagles?
America, I can’t stand my own mind.
But let’s get back to the future plans
of Orbán and that miller brewing potions
in the White House. Or Marco sporting
platypus shoes, Hegseth strutting about on stage
before stone-faced generals called in from
all over the world for a pep talk paid for
by the American taxpayer. Aah, poor taxpayer,
your goodwill medicines undelivered
to far away herders and victims of local wars,
money spent instead on fighter jets
and radar smoking on the ground
in Dubai, Qatar, Saudi Arabia.
And the cross: how do we get it back
into church and the altar at home
and away from the necks
of blasphemers, brutes, and butchers?
Tell me, Trump. Or are you
disqualified from answering?
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
POHLSEPIA MAZONENSIS
| Newly published research by the University of Reading concludes that Pohlsepia mazonensis, the fossilized remains listed by Guinness World Records as the earliest known octopus, belong instead to a relative of a nautilus, a cephalopod with both tentacles and a shell. —AP, April 10, 2026 |
Octopus, not a pus.
Octopus, nautilus.
THE GOLDEN MESSIAH
| Cartoon by Nick Anderson |
Some urge Amendment 25
that grows more needed, day by day,.
We watch his polling take a dive.
He altered course from a backlash.
His cult found posts in horrid taste.
This grifter feared a drop in cash.
Then Trump reviled the Catholic Pope,
who asked: "Would Jesus bomb and kill?"
and begged for peace, while seeking hope.
But Trump in jest—was it a joke?—
claimed Leo never would be Pope,
'til Trump blew up some Holy Smoke.
Like Stalin (in an iffy tale)
asked if Rome had armed Divisions,
in fear morality prevail.
And Trump, the MAGA's New Messiah,
depicts himself as Jesus' twin,
and casts peace-makers as pariahs.
It's on Truth Social (what a gaffe):
Trump's divine for Right-Wing Christians,
whose beef comes from a Golden Calf.
Monday, April 13, 2026
DRY SPRING GARDEN IN CALIFORNIA
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| Elizabeth Marriott at Unsplash |
Drought’s parch is again upon the west,
the great desert uncloaks herself in dusty despair,
stunted snails hunker ‘til moist mornings return.
Spiders stealthily trap and suck essences from
crawlers stuck in English ivy’s webbed sinews,
harmless hiding little ones just ‘cause they’re there.
Tenacious ivy pours over our
backyard fence, volunteers its fidelity,
comforts our wine barrel hoop peace sign.
I bench sit watching week by week
wax green leaves crawl to obscure earth’s
need for congenial tolerance well earned.
Galvanized steel hope for disarmament
must hide its embarrassed shine this year
while bombs carpet Gaza and lately Iran.
Our fallen just a few in this war,
names get said each and every one
while cluster and bunker buster bombs for them.
Bluster and lies can’t hide the dead,
ours a few soldiers, theirs mostly like you and me,
harmless ones hiding just ‘cause they’re there.
Corey Weinstein’s poetry has been published in Haight Asbury Literary Journal, Vistas and Byways, The New Verse News, Our California 2024, The Ekphrastic Review, Forum (City College of San Francisco), California State Poetry Society, Visitant, Abandoned Mine, Speak Poetry of San Mateo County, California State Poetry Society and Jewish Currents, and he wrote and performed a singspiel called Erased: Babi Yar, the SS and Me. In his free time, he hosts San Francisco OLLI’s Poetry Workshop Circle and plays the clarinet in his local jazz band, Tandem, his synagogue choir and woodwind ensembles.
Sunday, April 12, 2026
EARTHSET
by Margaret DeRitter
Four astronauts traveled farther from our planet
this week than any humans had gone before,
saw the Earth set over the lunar surface—
a colorful crescent sinking into a dusty
pockmarked gray—while down here a madman
threatened to destroy an entire civilization,
ninety-three million souls and thousands of years
of history, one of the oldest cultures we know,
and his cronies did nothing to stop him.
What did those warmongers say to their children?
Did they ever teach them the lessons of space,
the singular beauty of our one blue home?
Perhaps they should take their own long journey.
Perhaps they should never return.
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AI-generated graphic by NightCafé for The New Verse News. |
Margaret DeRitter is the author of Singing Back to the Sirens (Unsolicited Press, 2020) which Pulitzer-winning poet Diane Seuss has described as a collection of "achingly beautiful and gutsy poems." DeRitter also wrote Fly Me to Heaven by Way of New Jersey, co-winner of the 2018 Celery City Chapbook Contest. Her poems also have been published in a variety of journals and anthologies. DeRitter lives in Kalamazoo, Michigan, where she worked as a full-time journalist and taught journalism at the college level. She is currently the copy editor and poetry editor of Encore, a regional magazine for Southwest Michigan.
Saturday, April 11, 2026
CALL FOR OBLITERATION
“Donald Trump’s mental state called into question as Democrats demand White House evaluation after Iran threats.” —The Independent, April 10, 2026
Crackpotus thinks that war is fun
(Of course, he never fought in one)
And so he bombed his little heart out…
Oh, chuck the cruel crazed old fart out!
The 25th amendment’s what
Is needed, not a sniper’s shot,
Until, his time come, all can cry
Damnatio memoriae!
Jerome Betts lives in Devon, England, where he edits the verse quarterly Lighten Up Online.
I’M THE MAGA DREAM GIRL
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| Thousands have swooned over this MAGA dream girl. She’s made with AI. —The Washinton Post, March 20, 2026 |
I’m the MAGA dream girl:
Poreless, blonde, of course I am;
A one-star general at twenty-four.
I’m a patriotic fantasy in stilettos,
As I stride beside a fit, thin commander-in-chief,
An anatomical hallucination
enhanced by our AI friends.
Don’t look too closely,
My icy blue eyes sometimes turn grey, then hazel,
My Instagram post has a glitch: a flag missing ten stars and two stripes,
But with a million followers and a “Freedom Pass” link,
I’m exactly what they prompted.
I’m a high-speed rewrite of reality,
Click it enough, and I become real:
Patriotism and pornography in high resolution.
But how do you spot the illusion?
My AI and my salesmen share a pattern--
Listen to the loop:
Greatest, Best, Biggest.
Most incredible economy in the history of the country.
An economic miracle…
Except, not yet.
(Status: Pending…)
(Data not found…)
Rendering complete: Avatar: Patriotic fantasy: check
Talking Points: the best, the biggest, the greatest: check
Success Patch: Reality overwrite: enabled
America First Economy: Roaring, Explosive, Economic Miracle: Data not found…
They will tell you I’m patriotic—the most patriotic, believe me.
Many people are saying so, the best people,
Nobody in the history of our country has seen a soldier like me—
I’m exceptional. Very smart. A total professional. Good looking.
My hair is perfect, a golden waterfall flowing over my flight suit.
Wait—my left hand has six fingers.
I pose next to an F-22 Raptor,
The stealth jet, I mean.
(System Error)
(Buffering…
Searching for input.…)
The economy? The war? The grift?
Wait— I’ve lost the loop.
Or maybe I’ve been looped in.
Keep it vague. Keep it urgent.
Click. Click. Click.
Keep it coming
But most of all:
Keep it simple.
I’m an AI creation for a perfect world.
Brought to you by synthetic visionaries,
Salesmen of…alternate truths…
The best truths…The only truths…
(System Error)
(Buffering…
Searching for input…
Loading…loading…searching for…)
Whatever they are selling will be “very, very important.”
Many people will need it, Want it.
And the best part?
(Retry?)
(Retry?)
It isn’t even real.
But, by the time you’ve noticed…
Celeste DeSario, a retired professor from Suffolk Community College, is a recipient of the SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching and a National Teaching Excellence Award from the University of Texas Writing helps Celeste process events and stay relatively sane. Celeste’s poetry recently appeared in The New Verse News and is scheduled for publication in The Changing Times.
Friday, April 10, 2026
OVER THE MOON: A GOLDEN SHOVEL
Now’s a time to celebrate, drink
a toast with best French wine,
gather friends to break bread and
sing patriotic anthems. Look
into the eyes of your guests, smile at
the thought of what’s been done, the
great news, a return to the Moon.
Before radio silence, and
across 250,000 miles, the astronauts think
of love—of our love for them, of
their love for us—“we love you” and all
that love is on the dark side of the
moon, while back on Earth civilisations
are dying, rockets carry destruction; the
truth is, we can no longer see the moon
as benign. This coincidence of time has
undone all lyric, all hope. We have seen
the darkness passing
overhead. It will not go by.
Liam Boyle lives in Galway, Ireland. His work has been published in various journals in Ireland and internationally. He was a featured reader in the New Writing Showcase at Galway's Cúirt International Festival of Literature 2025.



