An oceanic texture
topped with black oil.
-
Your bright blue freedom
crushed to ash by the night sky,
the nauseating moonlight.
-
The open road ahead
disrupted by a blockade.
-
Medusa’s hair through the streets,
the same slithering, the same fear
I shook in position, shivering, the stone setting
around my flailing legs.
-
Frozen moments,
reflections my eyes try to avoid.
-
A history best ignored,
a future best avoided,
a present like a lump of coal
but not one that’s been earned.
About the Creator
Reece Beckett
Poetry and cultural discussion (primarily regarding film!).
Author of Portrait of a City on Fire (2020, Impspired Press). Also on Medium and Substack, with writing featured… around…
Trickle Them Down, But Not Out
The thing about smart people is that they should know better, but alas, intelligence is not the same as wisdom. Not only do the mistakes of experts too short on vision—when they are not corrected—have the potential to do great and far-reaching damage, but they also undermine public confidence in the very notion of expertise. This is particularly so when expertise is wielded in defence of the rich and powerful as a cudgel against those laid low. As an academic, this lack of faith in “so-called experts” is painful to see as it plays out in the spread of dis-/misinformation, conspiracy theories, and anti-intellectualism writ large. But it is also an understandable impulse given the catastrophic failure of an economic ideology pushed by certain economic experts. Supply-side economics has shaped a broken system for the last half-century and has arguably done more to undermine the fabric of the American Dream than any policy framework of the past century.
By Cory Wright-Maley7 days ago in Humans
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