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Showing posts with label law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label law. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

QUESTIONS

by Katy Z. Allen



President Donald Trump declared Wednesday evening that his power as commander in chief is constrained only by his “own morality,” brushing aside international law and other checks on his ability to use military might to strike, invade or coerce nations around the world. –The New York Times, January 8, 2026

But the more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and spread out… —Exodus 1:12
 
asking yourself a question / that's where resistance starts // and then asking someone else, the same question —Remco Campert, "Someone Asks the Question"


The money began to disappear

and the people, 

adherence to the law,

whether ours or everyone’s,

environmental protection,

childcare and other services,

a sense of safety and security,

more money,

more people.


The killing and wounding began—

always with an explanation—

adherence to personal morality alone 

prevailed.


Yet questions were spoken,

whispered and shouted, 

in the open and behind closed doors, 

among friends and in public, 

on airwaves and in cyberspace,

by children and by grandparents, 

by the energized and by the exhausted,

in solitude or to another

question were repeated, 

multiplied 

and spread out,

until 

they were on the lips of every caring woman 

and child 

and man,

every caring human being.


And that was the moment that led,

in the end,

to the beginning.



Katy Z. Allen is a lover of the more-than-human world, poet, retired rabbi of an outdoor congregation, former healthcare chaplain, co-founder of a Jewish climate organization, and eco-chaplain. She has been writing in one context or another all her life. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in print and online in such places as Amethyst ReviewThe New Verse News, The Bluebird WordCosmic Daffodil, and Art on the Trails: Number 9. Her book, A Tree of Life: A Story in Word, Image, and Text was published by Strong Voices Publishing.

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

LIBRE VENEZUELA

by Chris L. Butler


Animus aggression
unhinged & unchecked.

Jet propulsions
accompanied by
mass explosions.
Convicted felons
claiming criminality.

An ironic eruption.
Manifest destiny?
No, even worse.
Manifested violations
of international law.
A cruel collective
giving dangerous
directions to gain
crude investments.
Got other nations
quaking each time
he utters the word

liberation. Cabinets who
claim to be peacemakers 
yet 
the traits exhibited
are the total opposite
of Quakers. Some see

a circle of friends.
To us? We see a circle
of dictators. Perpetrators
of neo neo colonization.
It’s like we learned nothing
from Iraq, Afghanistan,
Vietnam, Libya, or Syria.
Forget our issues in America
if oil money is on the table.
Copy & paste a country name
here enters Venezuela.
How is this any different?


Chris L. Butler is a Black American-Canadian poet from Philadelphia, PA living in Southern Ontario outside of Toronto. He is the author of the forthcoming chapbook Melodies of the Oppressed (Ethel Zine, 2026) and four other chapbooks. Chris' work has been featured in Variety PackPoems for Persons of InterestGhost City ReviewPinch JournalSouthern Florida Poetry Journal, and more. He is a 3x Pushcart Prize nominee, and a 1x Best of the Net nominee.

Thursday, October 30, 2025

LOGIC DOWN THE DRAIN

by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons


Burcu Yesilyurt said enforcement officers told her it was illegal to dispose of the remnants of her coffee in a road gully. —BBC, October 22, 2025


The morning joe
That you don't drink,
At home, will flow
Down through your sink
To later meet
The coffee poured
Straight down a street-
Drain when you board
Your bus. Their slime
Pollutes the same,
But one's a crime,
One gets no blame...
The law's designs
Are out of bounds—
For coffee fines,
There are no grounds!


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

Sunday, September 28, 2025

INCENDIARY SONG

by Matthew King


Baby you’re the Reichstag
I’m setting you on fire
You no longer represent me
I’m immediate desire
Our constitution is suspended
on a fence of barbed wire
Baby you’re the Reichstag
I’m setting you on fire

I’ve cancelled your election
I’ve exposed your fatal flaw
Trapped in your reflection
we argued to a draw
The people want perfection
they love to be in awe
Baby you’re the Reichstag
my will is the law

Our union needs annulment
our wedding was a sham
The preacher stole the word of God
now he’s on the lam
He said he’d bless the devil
he didn’t give a damn
Baby you’re the Reichstag
who do you think I am

Like lightning this befell me
not you but I self-crowned
No court can now compel me
my power is unbound
I dare you try to tell me
my methods are unsound
Baby you’re the Reichstag
I’ll burn you to the ground

I’m rounding up your lovers
each one of them a liar
They tell me they don’t know you
say it’s me they most admire
Now I alone can save them
or throw them on the pyre
Baby you’re the Reichstag
I’m setting you on fire


Author's noteMany, not on only one side of the political divide, have been watching for a "Reichstag Fire moment." The thing about historical echoes is you're never sure what you're hearing is exactly what it sounds like, but with some things sounding like them at all is bad enough. A hat tip to Leonard Cohen, whose shade I seem to be channelling in this poem, and who would have turned 91 on Sept. 21. Leonard! thou shouldst be living at this hour; lucky for you you're not, I guess.


Matthew King used to teach philosophy at York University in Toronto; he now lives in what Al Purdy called "the country north of Belleville," where he tries to grow things, counts birds, takes pictures of flowers with bugs on them, and walks a rope bridge between the neighboring mountaintops of philosophy and poetry. His photos and links to his poems can be found at birdsandbeesandblooms.com.

Monday, April 07, 2025

HOW DO YOU READ THE LAW?

by Jeff Hardin


The Tennessee Senate on Thursday approved legislation that could subject churches and charitable organizations to lawsuits if they provide housing aid to immigrants without legal status who go on to commit a crime… Sen. Jeff Yarbro, a Nashville Democrat, noted the bill makes changes to a portion of Tennessee’s “Good Samaritan” statutes, which are designed to shield individuals and organizations that provide aid from lawsuits. “What we are doing here is we are literally limiting the application of the Good Samaritan law,” Yarbro said. —Tennessee Lookout, April 3, 2025


We finally got around to laws against
loving one’s neighbor. After all, feed
someone hungry, then ever afterwards
one should be accountable for any crime
he commits. Had he died instead, he
wouldn’t have crossed that yellow line!
 
There was snow on the roads, a dark night.
In another month, buttercups in the ditch.
None of us survives experiments going on
around us—a high limb nudged by wind,
a few words spoken in haste, others unvoiced.
 
A friend describes an island—secluded
but uninhabitable. Think of standing—
wind-lashed, unsteady, uncertain—on
ground knife-edged in every direction.
 
New weights are added the longer one
hesitates deciding which step to take.


Jeff Hardin is the author of seven collections of poetry, most recently WatermarkA Clearing Space in the Middle of Being, and No Other Kind of World. Recent and forthcoming poems appear in ImageThe Laurel ReviewThe Inflectionist Review, and others. His eighth collection, Coming into an Inheritance, is forthcoming. He lives in Tennessee.

Thursday, January 23, 2025

DEFENDING WOMEN FROM GENDER IDEOLOGY EXTREMISM AND RESTORING BIOLOGICAL TRUTH TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT

by Cindy Ellen Hill

an extraction poem from...


Text


Purpose.  

deny the biological reality of sex purpose

access intimate sex

spaces for women, from women, to women  

eradicate the biological reality of sex

attack women

depriving them of their dignity

The erasure of sex in truth is critical

immutable biological reality of sex

biological facts. 

the true and biological category of “woman”

transforms laws and policies

defend women’s rights

protect freedom of conscience

recognize two sexes, male and female.  

These sexes are

grounded in fundamental

incontrovertible reality.  

promote this reality “Sex”

immutable biological classification “Sex”

not a synonym

there is a vast spectrum of genders

disconnected from one’s sex. 

from biological reality and sex

existing on an infinite continuum,

as a replacement for sex.

the term “sex”

Federal employees’ sex,

single-sex rape

shelters the freedom to express

the nature of sex



Cindy Ellen Hill has authored three chapbooks, Wild Earth (Antrim Press 2021), Elegy for the Trees (Kelsay Books 2022), and Mosaic (Wild Dog Press 2024). Her full-length collection Love in a Time of Climate Change is forthcoming in 2025 from Finishing Line Press. Her essays on poetry have appeared in American Poetry Review and Unlikely Stories. She twice won the Vermont Writer’s Prize.

Sunday, November 03, 2024

PEEING IN ODESSA, TEXAS

by AV Rasmussen


People look twice sometimes,
call me “sir, I mean ma’am”
sometimes turn away quickly
sometimes snicker
sometimes look at the sign
on the bathroom door
Their eyes
are now weapons
that drill through
stall doors
and strip me for parts
They rip off my clothes
desperate, I suppose,
to know the original
plumbing
my body
is their bounty
but my body proves only
the human need
to pee

AV Rasmussen is an avid teacher, writer, backpacker and photographer who teaches English at Dallas College in Texas. Their poetry has appeared in many journals and anthologies, including North Dakota Quarterly; Veils, Halos, and Shackles; and Impossible Archetype.

Wednesday, July 03, 2024

THE ONCE AND PRESENT KING

by Ralph La Rosa


Source: Laughter


Viva Joe Biden
Whose power is thriven
A SCOTUS thing
May make him king!


Ralph La Rosa has published prose on major American writers, including Emerson and Thoreau, and has placed short fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and film scripts. These days, he mostly writes poetry, appearing on the Internet, in print journals and anthologies. His books include the chapbook Sonnet Stanzas and full-length Ghost Trees and My Miscellaneous Muse. He Loves The New Verse News!

BACKCOURT VIOLATION

by Paul Brassard


The original Unsplash photograph of the Supreme Court building by Tim Mossholder was adapted by the poet using the GIMP image manipulation software for use in this haiga.


Paul Brassard is a retired teacher of high school students with behavioral challenges. He has been writing poetry and fiction since he wrote his first short story Honolulu Calling at the age of twelve. Paul has been writing a personal haiku, senyru or haiga every day for the past several years as a method of self-reflection or in response to current events. He writes his short stories and poetry at his home in South Portland, Maine, which he shares with Patti, his wife of 50 years. "Backcourt Violation" is his first published work.

Monday, May 20, 2024

SIGN OF THE TIMES

by Lisa Seidenberg


Woman found living in Family Fare sign in Midland, Michigan for almost a year.



It had a roof and a door

space for a laptop and clothes

electric kettle, plant and more

in her improvised home

above the big box store.


warmed on chill Michigan nights

wrapped in rays of a red neon sign 

while unseeing shoppers passed below 


What thoughts crossed her mind

as she lay perched behind the sign;

Is it a crime to be homeless in America?


settlers came to this land 

with only their hands

and some tools and their wits

making up the rules of wrong

and right as survival

is the primal law


not simply a need for shelter

led her to this penthouse nest. 

living for a year like a stealthy mountaineer

scaling the crest of Family Fare. 

a temporary home.

a summit of her own.



Lisa Seidenberg is a writer and filmmaker who makes documentaries and poetry films. She enjoys reading poems on the Rattlecast and other poetry performance venues.