Tags
American Myth Deconstruction, Capitalist Critique In Verse, Class Consciousness Awakening, Collective Memory And Erasure, Democratic Ideals Subversion, Generational Betrayal Theme, Historical Injustice Indictment, Imperial Legacy Reckoning, Labor Exploitation Narrative, Late Capitalist Despair, Moral Imagination Resistance, Neoliberal Disenchantment, Political Formalism, Postindustrial Lamentation, Structural Violence Exposition

They sold us sunrise, draped in stars and stripes,
A gilded lie that crooned of liberty—
That if we bled beneath the factory lights,
The harvest would be ours, eventually.
“Give us your tired,” the brazen promise rang,
While slave patrols kept order in the dark;
From the same tree the fruit of freedom hangs,
Each body branded on the nation’s heart.
We built the rails, we picked the cotton clean,
We mined the dark and left our fathers there;
Our sweat and blood still oiled the grand machine,
While marble men declared the ledger fair.
The postwar children climbed the gilded rung,
Their houses white, bright futures theirs to keep—
The Dream a hymn upon their grateful tongues,
While others bled to sow what they’d not reap.
A house once thrice a worker’s yearly wage
Now asks for six, then eight, to drain us dry;
We followed every rule through every age—
They sold the ladder, told us we could fly.
They swore the cap and gown would set us free,
Would part the gates that labor couldn’t breach—
We signed away our futures trustingly
For keys that fit no lock we’d ever reach.
The worker who gave forty years of labor
Now drowns in bills no pension can afford—
He trusted the company, the job, the neighbor,
And died in the ICU’s indifferent ward.
They swore our citizenship was ironclad,
Our sacred bill of rights, they guaranteed—
Now sons and daughters, stripped of all they had,
Disappear to cells where shareholders feed.
A child goes hungry for the bottom line
While yachts drift past the bodies in the stream—
Ten men hold more than half of humankind,
And call this plunder the American Dream.
We walked upon the graves and claimed our place,
To raise our steeples over stolen ground—
The Dream required a veil across the face,
Amnesia where the nation’s roots were found.
The Dream was never meant for huddled masses,
Just bodies burned to keep the engines hot—
The velvet rope is held by working classes,
For masters safe above the common lot.
And still we stand where fantasy must break,
Where stars and stripes reveal their threadbare seams—
The only freedom left for us to take:
To wake our children from the poisoned dreams.








