Year 2025 Poem: Unapologetically Me, by Moseka Ole Ntiyia

This year, I am the sun—
rising on my own terms,
glowing for myself first,
burning away anything that dims me.

I will nourish my mind, body, and soul,
not as a luxury, but as survival.
I will come through for myself first,
not as an option, but a necessity.

I will appreciate me, thank me,
stand before the mirror and nod—
not waiting for the world to clap,
but knowing I deserve the applause.

Yes, I have started this year thinking,
but every thought is planting something—
growth, wisdom, strength, clarity.
This is my foundation, my blueprint.

I am giving the world two things:
Silence to nonsense,
Kindness to those who earn it.
One of these will reveal my best self.

No dimming, no shrinking, no breaking.
I am not here to be played with,
not here to be small,
not here to be anyone but me.

This year, I choose myself.
Unapologetically.

47th President Poem: Dear 47th President, by Shadeara Hall

I’m Tired
Feeling wired
Who will hire
A lovely woman
Like mañana?
I’ll say nada
Not a got damn soul
Because the world is cold
Colder than ice
They can’t even give us free rice
Or, they just simple
Raise the price
The price of our homes
You see, that ain’t right
That’ll leave us going home at night
With no lights
No lights in my home
Because the government owns
Everything
But still, they must collect
Because all the government is,
Is walking debt
Why we got to pay when God gave us day?
Daylight to see
For daylight, we pray

47th President Poem: Jester and King, by Mark McHugh

Face grizzled, features set
in predictable patterns
of scowl and machismo.

Bronzer or spray tan awkwardly
brighten his cragged face.
He is all danger and dynamo,

brawn and buffoonery.
He walks stiffly and sternly,
comically serious, to the podiums

where he presides as both
jester and king. We know the drill:
Bloviating rants invoke the crank and cackle

of rural boomers suddenly rapt
in the cheap thrill of a rich man’s
blustery one-liners.

He is a conductor who tunes
to the reflexes of his orchestra,
reading their rage, raising

their pitch just as he strikes a chord.
It’s an ear-splitting, repulsive sound.
There is no symphony, no melody,

nothing that anyone might consider
legitimately musical. And yet.
A 78-year old felon’s awkward, fist-pumping

sway to YMCA has reached NFL endzones
which just months ago were backdropped
by Black Lives Matter billboards.

The wealthiest man in the world
leaps like a schizophrenic deer
as he’s invited on stage.

The world’s most popular podcaster
welcomes him to an audience of 70 million
without challenging a single fallacy.

And 77 million freedom-loving Americans
say, Yes. This guy. Again.
Because fuck it.

Is it the thrilling, dual embrace
of tyranny and comedy?
Is it the backlash

to a perceived condescension?
Is it a phone-fomented addiction
to drama?

Or is it perhaps the fact
that a system whose success
is supposedly the envy of the world

has suppressed and stunted
the ones who from the start
knew only struggle?

Is it that the dream
is but a dream
or that life is merry

only for money-movers
and shareholders?
May we hold these truths

to be self-evident:
We were conned well before
this clown-king came around;

duped dirty by a California dream
that America could once again be great,
as in – 😉 –

and that the juice from the fruits
at the top of the tree
would find their way to the tongues

of everyone else.
A slow drip.
Or so says the gaping mouth

of the graph we’ve come to know.
The one Occupy and social media
and Bernie showed us,

the mouth that widens year after year,
waiting to be quenched
before its jaws break

and all data points blast into
a welter of cosmic debris
in whose criss-cross chaos

all collective structure breaks.
Too much? I’ll tone down
the abstract hyperbole

with something more concrete.
A convicted felon/sexual predator
tried to overthrow American democracy.

Then, America democratically
elected him President.
There we are, grounded in reality.

Under the shade
of the distant canopy,
his sycophants throw rocks

at the targets he marks
by playing Pin the Tail on the
Donkey. Who will teach them –

us – how to cut down
the stupid fucking trees?

47th President Poem: Beast, by Vincent Carbonneau

A dirty wind across the plain
Drags scum dried in the sun
A grey veil gathers all
As pungent particles press on
Breath short, air stale
Blossoms stymied to a still
Absurd abyss, light captured
The light we long fought for
A creature in flesh adorned
Towers above the land in scorn
Blind but to its grand self
A demon up through the ages

47th President Poem: A Clouded Horizon, by Nicole Sorensen

In the dawn of the forty-seventh,
A name echoes, but with weight of doubt,
Uneducated words spill like ink,
Filling the air with mistrust and fear,
The promise of change now tainted,
Replaced by echoes of false claims.

Beneath the surface, a current surges,
Anger festered in heartbeats and breaths,
For every boast that skips on the truth,
A silence stirs, heavy with consequence,
As division seeps through the cracks,
Innocent hopes now wear thin.

Mean-spirited rhetoric clings to shadows,
A ruler unhinged from the pulse of the people,
Turning passion into echoes of resentment,
Igniting the flames of discontent and dread,
Eyes turned towards a disheartening future,
Where kindness diminishes, replaced by fear.

The unraveling of civility looms large,
As the past whispers warnings,
Reminders of hatreds rekindled,
What once felt like progress retreats,
Into the gloom of a mismanaged moment,
As anger finds a home in each declaration.

Yet within the storm, voices rise,
As sincerity threads through the darkness,
Individuals urging truth and empathy,
Finding strength in unity’s embrace,
Demanding an awakening from complacency,
Refusing to settle for false promises.

For the next four years unfold like an unsteady path,
Shaped by words that dance on the edge of deception,
Yet steadfast hearts are not easily swayed,
By the tides of distortion or hollow ambitions,
Together, we’ll navigate this tumultuous sea,
Holding fast to the belief that change is possible.

So we stand, vigilant and aware,
Charting a course through murky waters,
Determined to reclaim hope from despair,
For in the shadows of doubt, the light still flickers,
And even now, we dream of a better tomorrow,
Unyielding against the weight of undoing

47th President Poem: American Flags raised in Harlem, by Morenike Davis

American Flags raised in Harlem
I get down for the National Anthem
Closed my eyes after looking left to right
The Earth needed what I have inside
To fight for my dreams, keep the fears outside
We all get the chance to lift our name up high
To represent the people, no matter which side
To act mature, The power of the blind
Number 47, like a wrinkle in time
Inaugurated a pace, allowing mental notes for your marathon
America, the beautiful, Much Money is needed to survive
America, Be Great, keep your passions alive

America, Raise your flag!
Any Day, YOU can be chosen to shine!

America, Donald Trump is our President this time..

America is ME, Mor-ren-neek Day-vis.

Original Poetry by: Morenike Davis
http://www.youtube.com/@Ekinerom

47th President Poem: The Colosseum, by Kimberly Madura

Yes Thoreau. It is nice
to be actuated by love.
But really, meet me in
the Colosseum
at High Noon.

We will fight in the Dust Bowl
of ruins with strength,
toughness and grit,
in the great style of Gary Cooper,
Winston Churchill, John Wayne,
Teddy Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan.
For we are strong, and they are weak.
We are the classic.
We are the tradition.
We are the standard.
And we will be the very last ones standing.
We were built for eternity.
Thank you President Trump.