America
There is blood in the water and blood in the streets
 and blood in the tempest raging. As I was
 walking this billy club highway, I saw before me
a hate crime skyway, homeless shackled to harassment,
 tent lives tossed to tears by storms of badged
 blue blues. I saw before me, the Native water-hosed
in winter we, the black and brown incarcerated sea
 of we — Arkansas, bedazzled by Midazolam —
 the executed legions we, manacled to Last Mile
gurneys, twitching like tails of Grackle birds. Trouble
 in my way, got to cry sometime, got to launch this
 wailing like a rocket, until chemtrails of our suffering
write their zig-zag names on the bosom of the sky.
 There are hellhounds guarding fences of separate-
 ness, unfettered by Gabriel’s horn, or any sweet pluck
of Dust Bowl guitars. Teeth of these dogs are tazers,
 their stop and frisk spit like pepper spray.
 From the roller coaster back of the Blue Ridge Hills,
to the pancake plains of Texas, this land is cancer
 ruling reservations, Bible belts like nooses,
 diamond deserts flooding with migrant worker’s
bones. I am stopped in Arizona and they are fetching
 felonies to plant in my car. I am stopped in Brooklyn
 and they are breaking the windows of my teeth. I am `
stopped and stopped in Baltimore, where white step
 blocks bear witness, where one of these days —
 it won’t be long — like Freddie, I’ll leave the body
of this instrument, along with turds on gunpowder
 streets flying flies and liquor store, liquor store
 liquor store and bar bar bar and jail jail jail and police
roaming and rambling, following my footsteps
 everywhere the sun goes walking
 in this land.
		


