diseased society poems

Wall Street Cannibals | G. Louis Heath - A Poetry Website Featuring Poems by Contemporary Poets

Wall Street Cannibals | G. Louis Heath

The indigenes of Papua New Guinea share
a bond with the capitalists of Wall Street,

for they are both cannibals. In the highlands
surrounding Port Moresby and far into the

hinterland, taking heads and eating human
flesh was considered sacred, part of the

native cosmology. Abolished too late for
Michael Rockefeller, it is no longer practiced.

But no such ban has been imposed on Wall
Street, where the cannibalism derives not from

religion, but greed. Greed IS the religion. One
fourth of US children are poor, many mal-

nourished. Greed cannibalizes resources that
should be passed to them and future generations

intact. Greed installs nuclear Armageddon into
tubes of steel far beyond any rational definition

of defense. Each dollar spent on folly is a theft
from the poor. The word for it is cannibalism.

Five Stages of Grief Post Election 2016 | Heidi Seaborn - A Poetry Website Featuring Poems by Contemporary Poets

Five Stages of Grief Post Election 2016 | Heidi Seaborn

Denial: To wake up, shake off the nightmare as an illusion, a trick of the brain. I saw a brain last night in its raw form, watched a surgeon randomly slice the frontal lobe off and proclaim, “That’s how a lobotomy works.”

Anger: Pitchforks disappeared with family farms and agriculture jobs. This angry American mob sharpens its words against the whetstone of the Internet. Click. Post.

Bargaining: Let this father stay here, his children are young, He
works hard at a job no one else wants. He is a good man.

Depression: To wake up spooning the nightmare, entangled with this
dark lover who twists his tentacles around your wrists and ankles,
rolls onto your chest, punishing your breath.

Acceptance: That happened.

Confused and Confused | Diane Woodward Dorff - A Poetry Website Featuring Poems by Contemporary Poets

Confused and Confused | Diane Woodward Dorff

How did we get here?
How did our people
Come to believe
That down is up
And up is down?
That kindness is defeat,
And hatred is strength,
And understanding is wrong?
Is this the nation whose establishment
Used to be full of war and money
and decisions made over and over again?
Whose establishment is now
Regard for differences,
Careful thinking,
Examination thought by thought
And gun by gun.
Who would have thought
Our highest ideals would become
Meanness and ignorance?
That salvation would come
By letting go of one another’s hands?

Honoring My Grandmother | Shelly Blankman - A Poetry Website Featuring Poems by Contemporary Poets

Honoring My Grandmother | Shelly Blankman

I sit in the grass by my grandmother’s grave
as I do every year, leave a stone, a Jew’s way
to show respect. I feel our souls touch.

I speak to her, about family events she never saw,
great-grandchildren she never met. I tell her how
much I love her, miss her, and I leave fulfilled.

This year, I tell her I’m sorry she is forgotten…
her pain, her struggles, her terror, her arduous journey,
her American dream destroyed in a cyclone of hate,

where swastikas and slurs swarm like bees, effigies
hang like ornaments, and Nazi chants draw cheers.
This year I mourn for her and for all those like her.

I am sad for those who say get over it.
Wounds have left scabs that are being picked open.
I feel chilled, my spirit broken.

The stone of respect I left behind seems crushed
like the fragile bones of fledglings under
Nazi boots in fresh dirt.

Don’t tell me to move on. Not yet.
Don’t judge, listen.
Don’t tell me you know. Hold my hand.

I want to feel protected. I want to feel safe.
My grandmother sacrificed more than you know
so I could live unafraid. She deserves that.

I do, too.

Generic Struggle | Stephen Mead - A Poetry Website Featuring Poems by Contemporary Poets

Generic Struggle | Stephen Mead

It’s sort of a horror —
Ashes in the mouth, fish subsisting
on mud —
hypothetical fringes, camps, camps
of cracks where real humans slip…

Homeless, here on the last frontier
there’s room enough for millions
to live out of a car, pitch a tent, grow
up in a dark the texture of thatch.

To taste the stale odor of resources drying,
to breathe that exhaust
is to suddenly find yourself another
bottle-tossed boat person
washing, washing…

I’m inside that knife
experiencing the exposed belly’s
sensations, and what pierces, and when.

It’s the heart of a photo of three women
weeping over some body shot down.

Madonna’s aren’t myths. Truly, martyrs feel:
Grief, the black garb, not a symbol simply,
but more a face wrinkled expressive with
gestures, of having stolen sights gelling
as dreams at the edges of breathing, of breath.

Is to lose them to harden, become brittle,
hollow, a shell of straw
whistling in the breeze?

Down at the bowels of featureless dots on
a chart, down past the grid to a network
of sewage tunnels, the human soul’s reduced
to the garble some loudspeaker blasts.

Each evening, on the air waves, that trouble,
a roomful of mirrors, delivers the same news.

More at http://stephenmead.weebly.com/links-to/poetry-on-the-line-stephen-mead.

The opposite of Everything Is True |  Stan Morrison - A Poetry Website Featuring Poems by Contemporary Poets

The opposite of Everything Is True | Stan Morrison

The opposite of everything is true
just look around for telltale clues
corporations don’t pay their share
hard work and talent get me nowhere
it’s just the same in every town
poverty and hatred still abound
we hallucinate on the American dream
while a small number get all the cream
unions are evil but not the banks
it’s time to vote and I say no thanks
we’re all on treadmills getting nowhere fast
how long do you think slavery’s gonna last
the revolution will not be televised

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