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Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts

Saturday, February 07, 2026

THE BALLAD OF LISA COOK

by Mark F. DeWitt

 


The despot stormed into the house
he'd lived in once before;
I’ll have my way this time—or else!
he yelled, he spat, he swore.

My enemies are doomed! he cried.
His list of them was long.
He massed his henchmen for the job;
he sang his grievous song:

These bureaucrats are evil, all!
And one by one they fell—
their choice: resign or be fired outright,
or work in living hell.

And so it went, week after week.
The firehose of flames
burnt through appointed expertise,
a litany of names:

Joint Chiefs of Staff, librarians,
commissioners, former friends,
inspectors general, lawyers, cops—
The list seemed not to end.

Congressional sycophants stood by,
appointed judges too,
while hatchets swung, reputations hung.
Resisters, they were few.

No matter what was not allowed,
he fired them anyway.
Museum boss, she quickly bowed
and meekly slinked away. 

But then he tried to fire one
who would not go so fast:
his charge was weak and she held firm—
the battle lines were cast.

Who was this woman dared fight back,
what brave, courageous soul?
Whence came she from, what had she done
to warrant such a role?

A girl was born in Milledgeville,
a Georgia town most fair;
her mama was a nurse and prof,
her pop a reverend there.

Such parents wise, intelligent,
and loving raised her well,
but the little Black girl in a Southern town
found challenges to quell.

Though segregation had been banned for years
and equality the rule,
it was up to her, and her sisters too,
to desegregate their school. 

While the little white boys and little white girls
beat them up and called them Nnnnnn,
they studied hard and got good grades
and refused all the while to bend.

After college she went on to earn
a scholarship abroad:
to Oxford University
she went and then she thought

to make a difference she’d apply
herself to something grand—
Economics seemed the way for her
the world to understand.

In graduate school she showed some range
to probe the Russian case,
then wowed them all with new research
on innovation’s links to race:

How can a nation really thrive 
when not everyone feels safe?
Her point was made, her tenure gained,
she’d finally found her place. 

Our professor Lisa Cook was now
appointed to the Fed
as governor, for her acumen,
a cool and level head.

The time was right for her to shine,
as reckoning was nigh
on issues dear, on race and class,
where she had cast her eye.

But then the demagogue roared back—
was re-elected strong—
and all the things for which she’d fought
were suddenly thought wrong.

I read it in the Times today—
that women got it worst:
when the thugs got out the chopping block,
Black women got cut first.

And so the despot did announce
that Lisa Cook must go,
despite the independence that
the Fed’s supposed to show.

But Lisa Cook refused to yield,
it wasn’t her first fight—
unlike those others who resigned
and fled into the night.

I’ll not step down, she said outright.
You see, you’ll have to wait.
My governor’s appointment lasts
‘til 2038.

You have no grounds, my duty’s here,
I’ll have my day in court!
Bring on your lawyers and your trolls—
your reign is growing short.

And so it was, when others saw
brave Lisa Cook stand up—
the head scientist at CDC 
said I’m not going to jump.

The spell was broken; people saw
resistance actually work.
With stiffened spines, stayed at their posts
the experts, judges, clerks.

Apoplexy gripped the president:
How dare they cross me now!
I’ll terminate that Lisa Cook
And the rest will follow down.

But miracle of miracles, 
the Supreme Court agreed
for once, the president was wrong,
and Lisa Cook was freed.

She was free to do her job and help
her country in its fight
for prosperity midst the despot’s whims,
delusions, moral blight.

Her countrymen began to see
what they could do, as well.
Division lessened by degree;
resolve began to swell.

Our leadership has lost its way,
so elsewhere must we look.
We woke up just in time to change,
all thanks to Lisa Cook.


Author’s note: At the time of this writing (February 2026), Lisa Cook's case is currently before the Supreme Court. Four stanzas from the end, this poem turns to a fictional future, in hopes that it comes true. Statements attributed to Ms. Cook in the two stanzas starting with "I’ll not step down, she said outright" are likewise imagined.


Mark F. DeWitt is an ethnomusicologist, amateur musician, and emerging poet based in Oakland, California, although parts of him still linger in Louisiana, Massachusetts, and Ohio. His poems have appeared in publications of the Society for Ethnomusicology and the Litquake Foundation. He is also author of an ethnography, Cajun and Zydeco Dance Music in Northern California: Modern Pleasures in a Postmodern World (University Press of Mississippi).

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

A SONNET FOR A CAPITALIST SOCIETY

by Claude Clayton Smith


But woke capitalism is a paper tiger. Companies embrace identity and cultural inclusion as a way to expand their market share to new communities while obscuring their raw political power and the ruthless underpinning realities of shareholder capitalism. Elites on the right, meanwhile, know very well that it is a paper tiger but are more than happy to play along with a shuck and jive that allows them to wield “woke” as a cudgel against the left—and for some voters, it does the vital job of stoking resentment. (Graphic by Brandon Celi) —Lydia Polgreen, The New York Times, July 12, 2023


They call us Homo sapiens but we
are no such thing. Homo consumo is what
we are—dumb dogs that chase our tails with glee
and gladly sniff the rank capitalist butt
that shits in the face that licks it, absolves itself
of sin, and crassly fouls America’s soul.
Got that? Harsh words, I know, knocked from the shelf
without Roget to soften. Life was whole
in early years on planet Earth—when all
survival meant was food and shelter, not
an endless senseless cycle of corporate gall.
Now comes a new human sort—Homo rot.
The economic life that fails to share
will never cure the ills that it lays bare.


Professor Emeritus of English, Ohio Northern University, Claude Clayton Smith is the author of eight books and co-editor/translator of four. His work has been translated into five languages, including Russian and Chinese. His first adventure as a solo editor—Gauntlet in the Gulf: The 1925 Marine Log & Mexican Prison Journal of William F. Lorenz, MD—was published in March of 2023. His degrees include an MFA from the Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa.

Friday, June 02, 2023

DEMO

by Michel Steven Krug


Jeff Koterba / Cagle Cartoons



In the House

there’s treachery afoot.

 

A leader sandwiched by volleys

of red sensation

and

what formerly was known

as consensus.

 

And the price to be paid:

parliamentary

demo-

li-tion. 

 

I move that the Country

Avert economic infanticide

By installing cold showers

That spray the margins where

Passion plays like theatre 

To astound the outer rings.



Michel Steven Krug is a Minneapolis poet, fiction writer, former print journalist from the Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars and he litigates. His poems have appeared in Sierra Nevada Review, Jerry Jazz, Whistling Shade, St. Paul Almanac, Liquid Imagination, Blue Mountain Review, Portside, New Verse News, JMWW, Cagibi, Silver Blade, Crack the Spine, Dash, Mikrokosmos, North Dakota Quarterly, Eclectica, Writers Resist, Sheepshead, Mizmor Anthology, Poets Reading the News, Ginosko, Door Is A Jar, Raven's Perch, Main Street Rag and Brooklyn Review. His collection Jazz at the International Festival of Despair is scheduled for publication by Broadstone Books, in the spring, 2024.


Wednesday, October 19, 2022

LIZ THE TERRIBLE

by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons




Liz Truss is Brits' prime minister du jour.
Inquiry's overrated in her book.
Zetetic minds were offered Liz's cure—
The Trussonomic leap before you look.
How Kwasi's top-rate tax cut tanked the pound
Escaped her, since she didn't do the sums
That would have shown her growth plan was unsound—
Except for Liz The Terrible's rich chums.
Research on trickle-down had long debunked
R. Reagan's fantasy. Though not for Liz.
In Economics One-Oh-One, she flunked,
Believing if you just say growth, growth is...
Liz did not last: her hare-brained stratagem
Exemplified how not to be PM!


Mike Mesterton-Gibbons is a Professor Emeritus at Florida State University who has returned to live in his native England. His acrostic sonnets have appeared in Autumn Sky Poetry Daily, Better Than Starbucks, The Creativity Webzine, Current Conservation, the Daily Mail, the Ekphrastic Review, Grand Little Things, Light, Lighten Up Online, The New Verse News, Oddball Magazine, Rat’s Ass Review, The Satirist, The Washington Post, and WestWard Quarterly.

Thursday, May 07, 2020

PENNED IN

by Patricia Davis

"Back to the Grind" by Pia Guerra at The Nib.


A thing half wild
carries a menace
             more complete than
the wild thing itself.
Farmers in Canada
               know this. They imported European wild boars
when the market for the boar meat
was good, several decades
             ago. The wild boars—
a number of
them—escaped
            and have since
mated with pigs.
Pigs are bred for bulk
            and have many more litters
and many more piglets per litter
than boars. Now, roaming northern
            and western Canada,
are colonies of pig-boars, spotted,
like domestic pigs
            and six hundred plus
pounds, with bristles
            and tusks.
To survive the winter, when temperatures
fall to 60 below,
           they make snow
burrows and line them with cattails
they've cut with their teeth.
           Pigloos, they’re called.
Porcine prodigies, they root
           through cultivated fields
like small backhoes.
They eat all that fits in their mouths:
           barley, wheat, small reptiles
and mammals.  They are spreading
           across the border into Montana,
North Dakota, hooved
Sasqueals whose habits have been
           only recently discovered.
This is all true.
There are stranger things than
           the odd killer pandemic.
Pigs, intended for slaughter, escape, mate
           with hirsute strangers from the woods,
build nests of soft weeds
that steam in winter from the heat
          so well made they are; pigs
give it all up—the feeding hour,
the predictable grain
         for freedom.
To die at the right time, not at the hand
of greed; not for the market.
Consider this: maybe
the fence is weak
          and our future is something
other than this, this
          waiting.


Patricia Davis has published poetry in Poet Lore, the Atlanta Review, Smartish Pace, Third Coast, and other journals. She works as a human rights advocate in Washington, DC.

Monday, August 19, 2019

GHOST LIGHT

by Kelley White




We settle into worship. Is it better to pray—
or to listen for the voice of God?

Is it better to wait on God
with eyes closed, cast down, or open to light?

I seek light in the meetinghouse’s tall
windows, the faces of gathered friends—

when Jondhi breaks Quaker silence to speak
of the Nicetown shootings we all know

it is too real—his, our, Healing and Transformation
Center, the Center for Returning Citizens

is a block from the crime scene.
He heard the sirens, he saw the masses

of police, the stunned neighbors, children
evacuated from day care centers.

He asks about community. About
the roots of drug crime. Fear. Economics.

Unemployment. I close my eyes. The ghost
light of the windows a negative beneath my lids. Then

D., who like Jondhi has done serious time, lifts his
walking stick to his lips: I see it

decorated with feathers and red paint, a line of holes
punched along its shaft—

and it is actually a flute, with a voice so pure and deep
it returns me to silence, to my lit darkness, truce.


Author’s Note: J. Jondhi Harrell is the Founder and Executive Director of The Center for Returning Citizens (TCRC) in Philadelphia. Twitter: @JondhiTCRC . “D.” is a pseudonym.


Kelley White, a member of Germantown Friends Meeting is a pediatrician working about 2 miles from the ‘active shooter incident’ this past Wednesday, August 14, in Philadelphia’s Nicetown neighborhood.

Thursday, April 25, 2019

REAGANOMITRUMPICS

by Rémy Dambron





what trickles down is not their tax breaks
is not charity or compassion

what dribbles rather their self importance
hunger for power dispassion

what trickles down is not investment is not
wealth or higher spending

what oozes rather is their gluttony vanity
and planned meddling

what trickles down are not more jobs are not
higher wages or social security

what flows rather are attacks on speech over
reach and obscurity

what trickles down is not healthcare is not
welfare or opportunity

what leaks rather are their lies transgressions
and impunity

what trickles down is not a future is not progress
or positive growth

what percolates rather their narcissism and
hypocritical oaths

what trickles down is not good faith are not
grand ideas or democracy

what slithers drips seeps and bleeds conspicuous
autocracy


Rémy Dambron is an English instructor and lyricist from San Diego, California. His work focuses on denouncing political corruption, advocating for the environment, and promoting social justice. He has been published by Poets Reading the News, The Veggie Wagon Journal, and What Rough Beast. This poem was written in response to recent reports that dozens of multi-million and multi-billion-dollar corporations (like Amazon) paid zero dollars in taxes last fiscal year.

Tuesday, August 04, 2015

UNITED NATIONS

by Howard Winn






My jeans were made in Mexico,
my shirt in Malaysia,
my shoes in China.
Socks were made in South Korea
and my jacket in Sri Lanka
although my underwear
remains anonymous
or perhaps I just missed
the country of origin
on some paper tag
that I threw away unthinkingly.
However it is clear that
my clothing is international
even if I am not and
I wonder what the now
unemployed workers of
my country are doing
with their spare time
and whether they will
vote Republican in
the next election when
pointless social issues
obscure the economic ones.


Howard Winn’s fiction and poetry, has been published recently by such journals as Dalhousie Review, Taj Mahal Review (India), The Long Story,  Cold Mountain Review, Antigonish Review, New Verse News, Chaffin Review, Thin Air Literary Journal, and Whirlwind. His B. A. is from Vassar College. He has an M.A. in Creative Writing from Stanford University. His doctoral work was done at N. Y. U. He has been a social worker in California and currently is a faculty member of SUNY as Professor of English.

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

UNCIVILIZED WORLD

by Charles Frederickson and Saknarin Chinayote




Global aim should be to
Keep civilization from destroying itself
Overcoming white man’s notion he’s
Less savage than other creatures

Overdeveloped egotistical rich becoming richer
Hapless helpless poor becoming poorer
All species not treated equally
Myopic justice failing colorblind test

Books hardcover carriers of civilization
Extolling knowledge wisdom freethinking mindsets
Outlandish insight progressive aesthetic sensibility
Trusted friends companions tutors mentors

Say Yes aiding unnatural tempests
Floods earthquakes volcanoes tsunamis tornadoes
Rejecting all forms of violence
Tolerating eccentricities respecting dignified uniqueness

War is brutal inhumane blood-letting
Say No to out-of-control handguns
Lethal weapons of mass destruction
Poisonous gases nuclear biological arsenals

Peace as essential to existence
As polluted air we breathe
Friendly persuasion agreeing to disagree
Preserving ethical moral aesthetic values


No Holds Bard Dr. Charles Frederickson and Mr. Saknarin Chinayote proudly present YouTube mini-movies @ YouTube – CharlesThai1 .

Friday, June 13, 2014

A HOPE IN PERILOUS TIMES

      by Buff Whitman-Bradley


    "Woman With Child & Calla Lilies" (oil) 24" by 30" by Renee Thompson.


      On my way to the grocery store
      Brooding about famine and endless war
      Environmental catastrophe and economic collapse
      I notice a young pregnant woman
      Her head held high
      Striding up the block like the whole brass band
      Following her big beautiful drum majorette of a belly
      Toward a future that I hope will be there
      To embrace her child


Buff Whitman-Bradley is the author of four books of poetry, b. eagle, poet; The Honey Philosophies; Realpolitik; and When Compasses Grow Old; and the chapbook, Everything Wakes Up! His poetry has appeared in many print and online journals. He is also co-editor, with Cynthia Whitman-Bradley and Sarah Lazare, of the book About Face: Military Resisters Turn Against War.  He has co-produced/directed two documentary films, the award-winning Outside In (with Cynthia Whitman-Bradley) and Por Que Venimos (with the MIRC Film Collective).  He lives in northern California.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

VALUE ADDED TEACHERS

by Ann Bracken


Image source: Precarious Faculty Rising


She feels frustrated
as she rumbles around in cramped offices
with all the people shouting
Words don’t matter.
Especially when she hears graduates
of the university
referred to as output.

When people become output
there is no need for nurture.
Sewage pipes have output,
as do factories that churn out row after row
of standardized parts.

In cramped classrooms and windowless lecture halls
teachers are gauged by their productivity--
here every human complexity is reduced
to a series of data points, quantified and measured,
success or failure—positive or negative output.

These days she no longer relishes
seeing joy or surprise or the flash
of an ah-ha moment on her students’ faces.
Instead of planning for a field-trip to the meadow
for a sensory experience,
she spends time trying to quantify
commitment, measure amazement
and determine a cut score for
how much inspiration one needs
for a journey into the unknown.


Ann Bracken is an educator and writer whose poetry, essays, and interviews have appeared in the Little Patuxent Review, Reckless Writing Anthology: Emerging Poets of the 21st Century,  Women Write Resistance: Poets Resist Gender Violence, Life in Me Like Grass on Fire:Love Poems, Praxilla, New Verse News, Scribble, The Museletter, and The Gunpowder Review. Ann’s poem, “Mrs. S” was nominated for a 2014 Pushcart Prize. In addition to teaching professional writing at the University of Maryland College Park and working as a poet in the schools, Ann presents frequently at writing and creativity conferences including Mindcamp of Toronto, Florida Creativity, the Maryland Writers’ Association, the Association of Independent Maryland Schools, and The Creative Problem Solving Institute.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

THE ECO-DEMON

by Judith Barrington




What kind of beast—wounded or blind—blunders
across dunes, scattering sand with its bleeding limbs
or dives from the sky, fiery breath burning everything
that grows and breathes?

Take a good hard look at the colors of the earth—
even now, much remains behind and beneath
the concrete we’ve poured, the hills shorn of forests,
oceans hilly with trash.

This beast holds back the current of the river
with brute force harnessing the water’s power
to its own greedy strength. Fish slam into the dam
and fall back stunned.

Look at it all while you still can. Resolve
not to feel sorry for the beast’s thick skin
or its red, weeping eye. Step out, alone if you must,
but watch your back.


Judith Barrington has published three poetry collections, most recently Horses and the Human Soul and two chapbooks: Postcard from the Bottom of the Sea and Lost Lands (winner of the Robin Becker Chapbook Award). She was the winner of the 2012 Gregory O’Donoghue Poetry Prize (Cork International Poetry Festival) and her memoir, Lifesaving won the Lambda Book Award and was a finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award. She teaches classes and workshops in the USA, England and The Almassera, Spain.

Saturday, March 02, 2013

FRAGILE COSMOS - HANDLE WITH CARE

Poem by Charles Frederickson
Graphic by Saknarin Chinayote 




Sustainable development meets present-day needs
Without compromising future generations’ legacy
Haunted by past demonic plagues
Climate change radical progressive transformation

Essentials food water sanitation shelter
Legitimate jobs ensuring equitable opportunities
Indeed greed poverty becomes endemic
Living beyond perceived ecological means

Endangered humanimals surviving minerals extraction
Diversion of watercourses heat emission
Noxious gases leaked into atmosphere
Commercial forests genetic life-support manipulation

Growth has no set limits
Beyond which lies ecological disaster
Rising costs diminishing causal returns
Taking into account systematic exploitation

Villains and victims joining forces
Unchained reactions missing vital links
Behavioral modification attitudes procedures approaches
Unification of economic ecological factors

Mega-cities deforestation materialism over-fishing commercialism
Inextricably related Common Cause challenges
Combined positive energy people power
We’ll succeed or fail together.


No Holds Bard Dr. Charles Frederickson and Mr. Saknarin Chinayote proudly present YouTube mini-movies @ YouTube – CharlesThai1 .