Protest #1, base of Pentacrest, Iowa City, IO, July 10, 2026 (approximate number of protestors: 1)
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Sunday, July 12, 2026
WE’RE A BUNCH OF WEIRDOS
Protest #1, base of Pentacrest, Iowa City, IO, July 10, 2026 (approximate number of protestors: 1)
Saturday, July 11, 2026
WHAT IS THE GUT TO A PUNCH?
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
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
nightmares of my childhood
suddenly surprise my adult dreamscape
too deep underwater
sometimes
my ankle tied to a boat
other times
my car went over a bridge
burn building
crescendo of terror
tension rising
behind my eyes
my head:
a pressure cooker
mouth and lungs
a vacuum
sucking in
only to find
my Irish great (times two) grandparents
drowning
as the Staten Island Ferry sinks
with them on board
the pressure of millions of colonized generations of the Irish
death in diaspora
and Refaat Alareer, Michael Collins, and Anne Frank
Thursday, July 09, 2026
THE MAINE EVENT
"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 Burnside. His 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.
A FINE DECLINE
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Marchers demonstrate against AIPAC on 22 February 2024 in New York City. Photograph: John Lamparski / NurPhoto / REX / Shutterstock |
May its bellicose influence cease!
AIPAC was just undermining
Any tentative prospects for peace.
Tuesday, July 07, 2026
THE FINAL F%^#ING MASS SHOOTING (THAT WON’T BE BECAUSE THIS IS AMERICA)
“If you’re not connected emotionally to a story,
then you’re dead.”
—Paul Feig
“Help is what he’s most short on tonight.”
—Raymond Carver,
“Stupid”
Driving to the Iowa Writers Workshop summer program,
I’m listening to the Rattle podcast; Tim Green asks a poet,
“How do you know when a poem is dumb?” or, at least,
that’s what it sounded like to me, so I leaned in, listening,
wanting to know when a poem is stupid, which, honestly,
is a good thing to know, when you have written some-
thing idiotic, and being able to recognize it, so I loved
the question, then realized, from the answer by the guest
that he’d asked, in fact, “How do you know when a poem
is done?” And I know I’m done. Listen, Michigan, I know
you’re one of the top places in the world for gun violence,
but I’m done. I know we’ve had two $%^&ing mass shootings
in the last two days—5 shot on July 4, and 4 shot on July 5—
5 injured in Mount Clemens, at, yup, another block party, a 10-
-year-old girl shot, at 11:11 p.m., the final @#$%ing hour, because
the mass shooters won’t quit, are insane with rage, endlessly,
and I chatted with a waitress today and she’s dedicating her life
to reducing violence, works with domestic violence, but, also,
she’s a waitress, because of the pay, but she’s dedicated, and
I’m exhausted, and we exchange numbers, talking about how
men who want to reduce violence need to partner with women
who want to reduce violence, and I find out about another mass
shooting on July 5 at Madison Church in Grand Rapids, at
a goddamn church, because Michigan is a hydrogen jukebox,
and a deafening silence, and old news, and a good grief, and
a living oxymoron without the oxy-, low oxygen levels in
the brain. And there’s a scene in Apocalypse Now, a movie
I watched for the first time when I was in the military,
staring at the screen, alone, my bunkmate’s piece-of-crap
TV, VHS, in horror, realizing I volunteered for this world
of hell, watching the film pre-Desert Storm, unknown future,
with a scene in the film where I stopped the tape, the only
scene where I rewound, the scene of the actor screaming,
“I’m not going, I’m not going, I’m not going!” because
it was me. And then he gets pulled off the helicopter.
You’re going. You’re going to die. Fate. Except, Michigan,
I’m done. I’m dumb. I’m not going. I’m smart. I’m done
with your dumb mass shootings, Michigan. 40% of Michigan
households own guns. And I’m done with the suicides of
your children, Michigan. I’m done with your husbands
killing your wives, Michigan. I’m done with the story
of a dog accidentally setting off a shotgun and shooting
its owner, the multiple stories of that happening, more and more
knowing gun = dumb, because gun owners’ houses are filled with
suicides and homicides and are Far Side comic strip
madness that they choose. Gun owners, Death awaits you.
Enjoy your guns. I’m done. I’m not going. This is stupid.
The End.
Editor’s note: Ron Riekki covered all seventeen mass shootings in Michigan from July 4, 2025 through July 3, 2026 for The New Verse News.
Ron Riekki co-edited Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureate on Social Justice.
Monday, July 06, 2026
NO GUNS LEFT BEHIND
their kids running wild
down dark city streets
shooting each other
with fireworks, handguns
fighting and flocking
in one huge roiling mass
of raging hormonal insanity
preteens to twenty-somethings
alerted online, on phones
to create havoc together
a youth wilding
a teen takeover
flash crowds run amok
in Orlando, DC, Pensacola
a fatality on the 4th
ten kids shot and
where are the parents
now that their children
are hospitalized
or dead?
GUNS
“And I wonder if we can’t talk about guns.
So that’s why I wanted to talk about guns this year.
Because we can’t.”
—Ron Riekki, “My Only Friend, The End”
a series of poems responding
to photos of high school students
who were shot in random gun violence
Each picture showed their wounds
their scars
some horrific
some less so but
but they were gunshot wounds
to kids
in school
minding their own business
Each picture had a brief story
of what happened
Some told of best friends
sweethearts
kids they knew
dying in front of them
next to them
for no apparent reason
other than some angry
person had access
to a gun
One, way back in the 50s
yes, the 50s
was a kid from Brooklyn
who dreamed of being
first baseman for the Yankees
A guy walked up to him
in the high school hall
and shot him in the gut
and he felt his
dreams die
But he was the lucky one
The exception
He lived and played
first base for the Yankees
and the Cubs
He showed the camera
his scar
I guess
you never know
So, I wrote a series
of poems to those
pictures
remembering watching
the Columbine kids
running from the high school
and thinking I had kids
they could be running too
or worse
There was a shooter
My oldest went to
While he was there
But no one was hurt
And I thought of
all this unnecessary shooting
of guns
and sent those short
narrative poems out
And not one was accepted
An editor said,
“No one wants to read
stuff like this”
That’s why we have guns
Why we have school shootings





