“It’s so sad,
what's happening
over there.”
They say,
As they
double tap the
romanticized,
normalized,
propagated,
famine-riddled,
war-torn,
image of what
used to be a
nation.
“I can't do anything,
though.”
They say,
As they lounge,
in their ancient
blackbird-gilded
thrones
Coated in
percolated gold
Resting, in a castle
carved from
native marble
“This sadness makes
me tired.”
They say,
As they cast their
cerulean globes
to the ceiling
that hosts crystal
chandeliers
dripping with
privilege
Shedding light
On material exuberance
In rooms painted
in mirrors
for the pleasure
of viewing their
adorned ignorance
“Oh, that's pretty.”
They say,
As they gaze
through pellucid
barriers
at the
romanticized,
normalized,
propagated,
famine-riddled,
war-torn,
image of what
used to be a
nation.
“The sunset.”
They say.