Land of the free; home of the caged.
They branded it Alligator Alcatraz like this was a theme park.
Like barbed wire in the Everglades could be spun as patriotic.
But we know better.
And we remember what “Never Again” is supposed to mean.
This poem is not metaphor.
It’s warning.
It’s weapon.
It’s thunder.
Read it like the fences are electrified—because they are.
The poem that follows is not polite.
It is not patient.
It is written for the caged,
the silenced,
the ones whose names won’t make headlines —
but whose pain will not go unrecorded.
Alligator Auschwitz
They called it Alligator Alcatraz
like this was a game of Monopoly
and not a goddamn genocide in beta,
like branding brutality in Florida swamp chic,
makes the cages more palatable.
Alligator Auschwitz.
Say it with your chest.
Say it with the stench of peeled skin and stale mosquito-bitten sweat.
Say it like you’re spitting out blood
because that’s what history tastes like
when it loops on repeat.
You think this is metaphor?
This is the warm-up.
This is what it looks like
when fascism wears camo and Ray-Bans
and calls itself “law and order.”
The lights stay on 24/7
to keep them disoriented.
Water rationed.
Phone calls denied.
Medication paused
like suffering is a minor inconvenience.
You know who else kept the lights on?
You know who else controlled the names on the ledger?
You know who else said
“we were just following orders”?
I don’t want your sanitized tour.
I want the walls to talk.
I want the guards to lose sleep.
I want every politician smiling in photo ops
to wake up gagging on the smoke
of history burning down around them.
This isn’t poetry.
This is a goddamn Molotov.
This is me howling at the stars
because screaming into a pillow
never changed a fucking thing.
You want to know what it feels like to be an American right now?
Like John Wick with a shovel and a rage-filled heart,
digging up the buried guns
we were told to forget.
And this time,
they’re aimed at silence.
At complicity.
At that smug little smirk on your face
when you say “they broke the law.”
Law?
The law once said I was property.
The law once said they had to sit in the back.
The law once said gay was a disease,
and Jewish was expendable,
and internment was necessary,
and torture was liberty.
So miss me with your law.
Your law is a leash with barbed wire teeth.
And we’re done bleeding
They are not “in processing”—
they are being digested
slowly,
by the rotting gut of empire,
its teeth too dull to kill clean
but sharp enough to make them bleed hope
drop
by
drop.
I am no longer writing poems.
I am building bombs
out of breath.
I am loading syllables into shotguns
and aiming them
at the myth of American mercy.
Because if this is order,
then let me be chaos.
If this is patriotism,
then I’ll burn the flag
just to light a better path forward.
And I am not alone.
There are thousands of us,
waking up mid-scream
with blistered tongues and bloodied pens,
trading lullabies for battle hymns,
trading tears for gasoline,
trading silence
for a war cry.
I will not go quietly.
I will not “wait and see.”
I will not make peace
with a nation building prisons
like they’re fucking playgrounds.
We see you.
We hear the testimonies.
We feel the tremors.
And when the reckoning comes,
don’t you dare say
you were never warned.
Because thunder doesn’t ask permission.
It erupts from the pressure,
barrels down the sky like divine indictment,
tears through the belly of clouds
like the truth through a lie,
and when it lands —
it shatters windows.
This poem is thunder.
And this time,
you will hear us.
Even if you plug your ears
and hide behind your laws
and sleep like the dead,
we will echo
again
and again
and again—
until your foundations crack
and the wind
carries our whispers
into every courtroom,
every capital,
every camera lens still pretending not to look.
So go ahead:
Build your Alligator Auschwitz.
But just know—
we’re coming for it
with torches,
with testimony,
with truth so loud
it’ll make the Everglades shake.
And when the thunder hits—
We will make you remember
their names.
With Liberty & Justice for All,
—Rebecca M. Bell
@rmbellwrites
At what point does cruelty become atrocity?
It’s not as bad as a death camp: the real Alcatraz by itself was bad enough, so “Alligator Alcatraz” is an appropriate name. Indeed, since the Trump administration named it that, whilst they are abhorrent they are honest in their abhorrence: they are not pretending they care, unlike half of radical centrists (H. Ross Perot and Jesse Ventura supporters) and all of the white moderate New Democrats.