The poem you’re about to read is not a quiet reflection—it’s a flare shot into the night. It emerges from a moment when the boundaries between surveillance and censorship feel increasingly porous, and when the act of reading itself can be seen as resistance. The poet draws a chilling parallel between masked agents detaining immigrants and the quiet erasure of books from our schools and libraries. Both, he argues, are expressions of unchecked power—one overt, the other insidious.

This work invites us to confront the slippery slope where government overreach meets cultural suppression. It challenges us to ask: What happens when the stories we tell, the knowledge we share, and the communities we protect are deemed threats? And who gets to decide?

As you read, consider not just the words on the page, but the freedoms they represent—and the vigilance they demand.

We wait. In freedom, we read:

Some history, some fiction, some memoir.

The bus is late; but we don’t heed

Since we have our devoir to complete:

Books, our trusty companions, they are.

Screeching to a stop, a Hummer unloads

Masked men in lumpy uniforms, batons

At the ready to bruise us, this bodes

Ill for our library, for our printed icons.

“Hand it over!” they shout, pointing

At History, at Fiction, at Memoir.

Confiscating all in a smelly black trash bag

Already torn, too full with the harvest

From other bus stops, like us left sad.

On board, bookless, we are reduced

To reading bus ads for crypto, red headwear,

Pushed by the huckster-in-chief.

Many of us barely afford bus fare.

Seizing these wordy companions

Incites a flame, an anger that burns

Like Sahara hot dunes, a Grand Canyon

Of loss, an empty desert that spurns

Intelligent life for the wasteland.

There is horror over coward leaders

Bent on squelching anything green.

No fresh shoots allowed, all sparks

Are snuffed to repeating brainless

MAGA lies about the doddering king.

One day the dunce will expire

And all of his commands wither.

Anew we will again rise higher

To craft new tomes of how

People, born free, can throw off

Groupthink shackles, to celebrate

Swelling reason to rise from the trough.

Yes, they may burn our books.

Yet, our stories live inside us,

Our minds cannot be enslaved.

Our minds crave what’s righteous.

Michael Varga is the author of “ Under Chad’s Spell.” He was a Foreign Service officer, serving in Dubai, Damascus, Casablanca, and Toronto