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Showing posts with label Bull Connor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bull Connor. Show all posts

Sunday, January 25, 2026

DIRGE FOR AMERICANS

by Greg Friedman 




shoot first 
lie after 
 
They came in search of virgin 
land but found earth who was 
mother, sky who was father 
to those who walked on, under, 
in harmonies unknown across 
oceans. Unaware in the grasping. 
 
shoot first 
lie after 
 
They told us the stories: patriots 
of liberating pine trees and snakes 
un-tread-upon, wresting liberty  
from plough-wielding hands and  
chained feet brought unwilling, 
un-asked-for to bondage. 
 
shoot first, 
lie after 
 
We learned the lie, detonate it 
annually with fanfare and fire, 
touting tricornered hats and parchment 
promises which excluded souls 
with hypocrisy’s math which 
wove the original sin into 
the flag-fabric of a nation. 
 
shoot first 
lie after 
 
Even the taciturn words of Lincoln, 
mixing the knife-edged speeches of 
Douglass, passed into shades on blood- 
lands, and twisted into stone idols of 
Lee and Jackson, while newer  
promises stonewalled freedom. 
 
shoot first 
lie after 
 
Riders of terror hiding under white  
in black nights un-re-constructed 
the fragile facades of freedmen’s 
bureaus and the warrior-president, 
while carpetbags carried the poisons  
of our Adam’s choices, the apple  
eaten once and choking, choking us still. 
 
shoot first 
lie after 
 
They marched, some walked into water- 
cannon resistance, some earned ropes 
others bullets. But a people progressed, 
overcame, would not be moved until law 
moved and protections etched on stones 
hewn from prophets’ preaching. Alas, 
though, alas, the original grasp of  
the banned fruit reached again to 
roll back black tides of truth, un- 
write the engraved securities and 
spread denial with ballots and faces 
shrouded lest we see hate’s true faces. 
 
Shoot first 
lie after 
 
What mirrors can poets hold up  
to who we are, the maga-faces of 
us, masked and armed with original 
animosity, that snake-fed wish for 
the knowledge of evil without good, 
the forbidden fruit of persistent 
preferences, potent with orange truths, 
to contrive, convince what eyes saw, 
not innocence—but what hate reshapes. 
 
shoot first 
lie after 
 
Our weak words gain spirit in gathered 
places of open and zoomed assemblies 
of naming, crafted calls for hands to 
join and more voices to move between 
the guns and the victims, recognize 
the lies as they spew like Connor’s 
cannons to push us off the streets 
of spoken truths. We speak first, 
second, third and always,  
after  
and until. 


Greg Friedman is a Franciscan priest, author and poet, currently living in Rome, Italy. 

Saturday, February 15, 2020

APOCALYPSE

by Charles Harvey


Police escort the last of about 150 masked members of the Patriot Front from a parking garage, after they peacefully ended a march near Capitol Hill, in Washington, U.S., February 8, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Theiler


I don’t give a fuck
About Donald Duck
Cluck! Cluck! Cluck!
He a chicken shit
He a mouth too small to
Blow smoke up my ass
But he sure blowing jazz
Up some white folk’s corn holes.
He blowing smoke, and they
Inhaling the shit he shit.
He gonna paint the White House red
From the blood of busted skulls,
‘Cause the cops are coming
The Neo-Nazis are coming
The skinheads are coming
The KKKs are coming
The Jew-haters are coming
The nigger-haters are coming
The stars and bars are coming
The Uncle Toms are bowing,
“Yas suh! !Yas suh!” thirty pieces of silver
to seal they thick lips.
They raising Bull Connor from the dead
The fools have been fooled
The turkeys are coming home to defecate,
But the wise will rise
From the ashes of democracy.


Charles Harvey lives in Houston Texas. He is a novelist and poet. He is currently working on a volume of poetry, Rough Cut Until I Bleed, due to be out on March 24. He has numerous volumes of poetry and short stories all over the web. He is in the middle of revising several novels to be re-released soon.

Saturday, November 26, 2016

CONFRONTING THE GHOST OF BULL CONNOR AT STANDING ROCK

by Dana Yost



Pray With Standing Rock November 26th at 3:00 PM Central US Time

So.
Bull Connor lives
again, dragging his water hoses
to North Dakota. The spray of hate
and intolerance. The dogs, the nightsticks,
broken bones and open wounds.

But.
Bull Connor
forgets. On the streets of Birmingham,
people slipped and fell as his hoses shoved
them, slickened their footing, exposed a shin
to dog teeth and paw. But they got back
up. They outlasted the water, the spray
that sliced flesh. They stitched and bandaged and stood
and took it again, the sidewalks resolute
with the content of their character.

In North Dakota, they get back
up, too. They will let their flesh be split,
they will outlast the hoses. Duty and justice
will overtake the ache. Open wound, broken bone: honorable sacrifice
for the right to march over the bridge. Bull Connor with his nozzle
always ends up the embarrassment, the one slip-sliding
down the drizzle, down the sidewalk of disgrace.


A lifelong resident of the Upper Midwest, Dana Yost was a state and national award-winning daily newspaper journalist for 29 years. Since 2008, he has published four books. His fifth book, a history of 1940 Middle America, comes out early in 2017. 

Monday, November 21, 2016

BEFORE THE ANTI-TRUMP RALLY

by Jon Wesick


Model Train Museum, Balboa Park, San Diego


Three hours sleep, one hour early
I wander Balboa Park. If only
today was just about healing crystals
and the gentle girl selling yoga pants.
It’s unseasonably hot as if flames of spite
burned the calendar back to August.

There have always been two Americas. Banana Republicans
elected the America of empty promises,
magical thinking, witch hunts, and internment camps;
the America of George Wallace and Bull Connor.

Little hope
for a country this far gone.
If I’m lucky, a lonely exile
of plantains and fried yucca.
The bureaucracy of overseas visas
so disheartening.

There’s a Japanese bridge
in the gully below the tea garden.
Up ahead a Baroque tower
and gold-flecked dome of lapis lazuli.
I’ll miss this place, its people,
my language

One protester shot in Portland.
My bulletproof vest, too bulky
for today. Ten minutes left. No time
for the Model Train Museum’s miniature world,
a world more perfect than this.
I backtrack toward a perilous future


Anti-Trump protesters in Balboa Park. Nov. 12, 2016. Photo by Jean Guerrero/KPBS


Jon Wesick hosts Southern California’s best ice cream parlor poetry reading and is a regional editor of the San Diego Poetry Annual. He’s published hundreds of poems and stories in journals such as the Atlanta Review, Berkeley Fiction Review, Metal Scratches, Pearl, Slipstream, Space and Time, Tales of the Talisman, and Zahir. The editors of Knot Magazine nominated his story “The Visitor” for a Pushcart Prize. His poem “Meditation Instruction” won the Editor’s Choice Award in the 2016 Spirit First Contest. Another poem “Bread and Circuses” won second place in the 2007 African American Writers and Artists Contest. Jon is the author of the poetry collection Words of Power, Dances of Freedom as well as several novels.