47th President Poem: They Chose, by Grady VanWright

The rally at Madison Square Garden was loud. The words were louder. The banners hung thick like smoke, and the cheers rose sharp and cruel. It wasn’t the insults that mattered—though they mattered plenty—it was the faces of the crowd. Some smiling, some screaming, and others just nodding. It wasn’t the first time a man like Donald Trump took the stage and said what he said. But this time, they made him president again.

“We have to take our country back,” he said. From who? From what? The faces in the crowd nodded along because they knew the answer, even if they wouldn’t speak it. It was from other Americans. The ones with darker skin, the ones who prayed differently, loved differently, spoke languages that didn’t roll easy off the tongue. It was from women, too—women who dared to think, lead, demand, or refuse.

Trump stood tall, a 34-count felon in the office of president, saying he’d make America great again. Great like when? No one asked. Maybe they didn’t want the answer.

This country has always had a story about itself. A story where it stood for freedom and fairness. But the truth is something else, and everyone knows it when they’re honest. They don’t like being called racist, no, but they’ll nod along when a man says “poisoning the blood of America.” They’ll hear it and not flinch. They’ll clap and shout and tell themselves it means something else. And when he calls a woman “nasty,” when he mocks her ambition, when he reduces her to her looks or her silence, they’ll nod along to that, too.

The browning of America is happening. That’s true. And for some, it is a terror. For others, it’s the rising voices of women they fear most. Misogyny runs through this country’s veins as deep as racism does, and they often walk hand in hand. A woman in power? A woman with confidence? It’s not just distaste; it’s rage.

They elected the man who bragged about grabbing women by the parts of themselves they didn’t offer him. They heard him say it, and they laughed. Or they excused it. Or they shrugged because they’d said worse themselves. And when they’re called what they are—racist, misogynist—they get angry, because the truth burns worse than any insult.

When did it become so ugly to be called a racist or a misogynist in America? It wasn’t always that way. It was a badge of pride for many for a long time. Maybe they stopped saying it because the world told them to. Maybe they thought if they stopped saying the word, the stain would fade. It didn’t.

After World War II, you couldn’t find a Nazi in Germany if you tried. Not one. Everyone was suddenly clean. But the camps didn’t build themselves, and the mobs didn’t cheer alone. It’s the same here. You can’t find a racist in America if you ask around. You can’t find a misogynist, either. But the votes are counted, the rallies are full, and the truth is in the loud silences between cheers.

A nation doesn’t elect men like this unless it sees itself in them. That’s the hardest part of it all. To understand that it isn’t just him—it’s them. It’s us. The racism isn’t just in the slogans or the speeches. The misogyny isn’t just in the jeers or the jokes. It’s in the silence that follows. It’s in the hands pulling the lever in the voting booth. It’s in the stories we tell ourselves to feel better when we look in the mirror.

America chose. They chose knowing what he said, knowing what it meant. They chose because it was who they are. That’s the truth, and it is heavy

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Author: poetryfest

Submit your Poetry to the Festival. Three Options: 1) To post. 2) To have performed by an actor 3) To be made into a film.

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