Mutually Said: Poets Vegan Anarchist Pacifist
A blog shared between poets John Kinsella and Tracy Ryan: vegan, anarchist, pacifist and feminist.
Sunday, July 19, 2026
On the Trauma Caused by Hancock Mining, Gina Rinehart, Pauline Hanson, Colonialism, and the Residues of the White Australia Policy
Friday, June 5, 2026
A Poem On Laurie Anderson's 2026 Tiny Desk Concert
Graphology Recovery 14: Laurie Anderson’s May 2026 Tiny Desk Concert
Between phrases,
interstices
of rejuvenation
& counterpoints
to cataclysm.
Fewer streets here.
Of differing
commencement
inside
this infarct
where I’m told
it will always be night
but it’s not. Dogs across
this valley collate
angles
of voice
while roused sheep
offset
those risible
clouds
adoring room to gather
or dissipate,
manoeuvre ordinary
attributes
of soar. Glimpse
of a barn owl
overflying
late afternoon
ahead
of its night.
John Kinsella
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
The Indian Ocean Defence and Security Conference and the Government's Call for an Arms Hub in Western Australia
We already live in a militarised state here in Western Australia, with the Stirling Naval Base (it makes me iller than I already am just writing this name) and its 'key' role in the developing AUKUS nuclear submarine horror junket, but the latest effort of the Cook government (pseudo left-lite... essentially populist and not based on consensual politics in any real way) to create an 'arms industry hub' reaches new levels of appalling.
As much as 'overuse' of adjectives horrifies certain writing teachers, so too the underuse allows the militarists to push their way through to outcomes that serve their violent, profiteering orientations. Further, they make every use of propaganda methods that they can, from the 'subtle' behind the scenes approach, to the grand announcement designed to appeal to an imagined 'majority's' desires and 'requirements'.
Missiles are the key selling point because we have all seen the 'power' they have to rule from a distance, but this pitch to arms companies to tender for such a hub is 'inclusive'. Wars across the world serve to illustrate this, just as drone-manufacture and software have become a passport to trade viability.
When in 1956 G. E. M. Anscombe coined the term 'scare quotes' with reference to irony and specific usage in Aristotle's writings (see Mind: a Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy (VOL. LXV. NO. 267, January, 1956; p.3), she might have been more than aware of its Cold War and active war implications (but this is guesswork on my part). Scare quotes and adjectives can barely expose the brutality and shortsightedness of Premier Cook and his compadres' thinking in this; with even the lightest challenge from a press conference journalist asking if to create such a hub meant that he was happy to be an arms dealer, he replied that he saw himself as a 'jobs dealer' (though roughly direct representation of speech, this actually deserves no quote marks beyond an accusatory function).
The Perth Convention Centre we hear is heavily policed for this stanza (quote marks? my term...) of the Indian Ocean Defence and Security Conference, to ensure the war talk and arms dealing can go along without interruptions or too much visible opposition. We hear the police will intercept those approaching, we know that national media will play down questioning.
The Labor government sell of jobs, jobs, jobs has a corona of run-on employment about it: the threat of war creates work, and war itself demands everything (including control) of and over a community. The recent fossil fuel crisis (ongoing, as it can only ever be) has roused receptivity to fever-pitch susceptibility. Even the Tesla drivers yearn for the byproducts, just as Musk delivers his racist, polluting discourses via the SpaceX rockets and his broader industrialism. Yes, this is a conflation, but it's all about conflations. That's capitalism at full tilt... a martial metaphor. Oh, Tesla Cybertrucks are part of the 'targeting' program of the US military.
In the consumer-materialism of a 'resource rich' state (as they call Western Australia: scare quotes again but with a different inflection), such jobs obviously promise the sustaining of some lives at the expense of others. The translation of weapons into death is a far-away problem, until it isn't! And to heap more destructive pernicious corrosive and glib adjectives onto the whole, it is barely surprising that the town of Collie is being suggested as a feasible location for this arms hub.
We learn that as the workforce transitions from its focus on coal mining, jobs lost will be jobs found (hand in hand with tourism and the natural environment?). The hard labouring base of mining and all it evokes in class struggle workers' rights achievements, even if those struggles meant something very different and more 'positive' in the times when they were so fervently pursued, is exploited by the implied correlation that one dirty industry can easily translate into another. Now, some miners might feel this way, but I am sure many others won't (even if someone like me opposes their very work base in the first place due to the rampant ecological and climate damage it causes).
Human rights are human rights. Our histories might be different, but we need to start from a premise that we all deserve to live without direct or oblique threats. The arms industry is an industry of threat.
A personal note to all this, as it so directly affects the colonial gazetting I spend so much time in... I have been seriously ill of late and am hindered regarding what I can do in speaking out as this is happening, and I am hoping this short statement contributes to the groundswell of opposition. Missiles and mining, military vehicles and mining, first aid kits... and mining. These are binaries, they're part of the language of a conference that requires much ongoing background activity, and that defies anyone who contest its murderous reality.
In Australia each state and territory is manipulated as a synecdoche for the people within its voting catchment (of course). So when Western Australia (meaning the government and specific lobby groups) calls for missiles, it's 'the people' who 'want them' because jobs mean not only sustaining one's own life (and family), but also destructively enhancing 'prosperity' through consumerism. Individuals and families destroyed by these activities (directly or indirectly), have no say and are not going to have a say in any way.
John Kinsella
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Support to All Those Suffering from Repression in Georgia
I post this poem in support of those I know in Georgia, and for all those who are suffering under its repressive Georgian Dream Party government. For information on what's happening there, you might start with the Amnesty International report on human rights in Georgia here. I especially send this poem to those imprisoned or harassed for their belief in freedom of expression and for their peaceful resistance to tyranny, and will work for their release using my pen, even if it's at a distance. Poets are always among those whose voices are crushed by the institutions of power, but poets speak beyond borders and will be heard. So many younger people are deeply distressed by the reactionary shifts in their life situations, and need to be heard, to be understood, to be affirmed.
A Pacifist Sends Support to All Those Suffering from Repression in Georgia
I have never visited Georgia,
though I have seen how pictures
of mountains and their valleys
can evoke both the fantastical
and pragmatic, how the comforts
and tensions of family
can be illuminated,
how distance between
village and city
can be both a stress
and relief. I hear talk
outside the global news
services and their selective,
delegated, weighted stories.
And I hear charged voices
arising from many
streets, houses, work-
places, parks, burning
with anger and frustration
but galvanised, polyphonic
through power-lines, through leaves,
a choir of terrain and its people,
gathering across altitudes.
I sense those after-image fragments
reaching out over the sea —
a mist with clarity —
coalescing to stir
all sacred places.
Lines of pain stretch out
from prisons, their speakers
hidden away, smothered,
and I know those, too.
You are heard, people,
you are heard. I send
this back in the hope
that it acts as a talisman —
to help keep you safe,
to show that we care.
John Kinsella
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Poem in Memory of JH Prynne
No Ultima Thule, No Coda
im Jeremy
Obituaries will slant
towards inclination —
in this
de-realming,
wood pigeons bombilate
and you watch their
history
with application.
Roasted root vegetables
were more than an invitation,
and the ferry
was work
across speech bubbles
of reflection: what holds
an identikit
against conspiracy,
swayed in the circuitry,
limited to outreach emoticons.
What will
become
of that manuscript (monumental)
of love poetry (deprogrammed)
shown
beyond
the fallout of the Financial
Times? Contractions
from the epoch
of typewriter:
less space for questioning
before punctuation
seizes
the tiller.
Offering company, hinting
chimeras — drizzle
arcing efflorescent
powerlines:
how power is sourced,
distributed, made in reliance.
John Kinsella
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Mass Destruction of Habitat on Toodyay Road, Western Australia... it has biospheric implications
The horror of witnessing more and more habitat destroyed along and near Toodyay Road, Western Australia, is so overwhelming that it is causing post-traumatic stress disorder for some of us, and for the biosphere itself. And it's ongoing. Soon, large swathes of bushland will remain only as photos and memories. Then people can forget it was ever there and adjust to the new reality? No.
This 'road realignment' and 'improvement' for safety reasons, to bring into accordance with 'modern road standards', is excessive and counter-intuitive. The violence of driving patterns is in evidence for all to see on any journey along that road and that's a huge part of the safety problem. Upgrading doesn't have to mean mass destruction. Further, the extraction industries and their trucking patterns are a doom in themselves. Trucks are supposed to be speed-limited to 100kmh, and I can promise you that's frequently not the case — I have seen trucks overtaking cars that were doing 100kmh. The plus or minus in their limiting must be truly flexible.
Associated (above ground) power line installation (and the wide clearing for fire-safety reasons required around power lines), the nearby mining of gravel for road-building, and ongoing agricultural land clearing (clearly some are escaping scrutiny or working the laws to their advantage) are part of a package from Dante's Inferno.
Yesterday, nearer Toodyay, we also saw machinery tearing down vegetation around a creek, with the tracks of the diggers embedded in the stream bed itself. Have permissions been obtained from the Noongar community/elders? These are sacred waterways, as is very well known in the region.
The environmental 'sign-offs' on these kind of 'works' is reprehensible, and the gall of the justifications, including a specious argument that because there's nearby national park, animals have other habitat available to them, is appalling. And as soon as you read that some of the bush being cleared is 'degraded', you get the (il)logical rhetoric at work. And a sign on the road saying a section being cleared is 'dieback affected' is not going to prevent its spread!
Every crunch of the bulldozer kills innumerable smaller creatures — reptiles, rodents, marsupials — and demolishes bird nests and so on. We have for many years watched white-tailed black cockatoos roosting in the very trees that are being literally plucked out by the roots —it's an inventive array of machinery the destroyers have got at their disposal.
It bemuses me to see the operators of these machines chatting between killing sprees. Sure, people are compelled to make a living, but all of us have consciences, and surely these must be bothered? It reminds me of the 'just-war' scenarios and the military tyranny we are all being affected by, some catastrophically. A pseudo-theological debate just as governmental 'environmentalism' is a pseudo-ecological fait accompli. And these demolitions are yokings of government and business — the twin arms of the modern Western state doing their best to cover each other's complicity in ecocide by fulfilling 'promises', 'contracts', and meeting 'outcomes'.
This is a local issue with planetary implications — if habitat can be treated with such disdain, then all life is devalued, and we all know where such degradation leads. We all have an obligation to act, including those doing the damage and hiding behind specious justifications. We are all in this together, let's start acting as a community that recognises that all roots reach into the planet itself, and roots around here are specifically Noongar and without ongoing Noongar consultation, there's no way through on any level.
Stages of Planet Killing on Toodyay Road
It starts in offices and conferences room,
unless it is that grim whisper on the road
as drivers overtake on double
white lines or thrash the speed limit.
It echoes through government,
through departments, to business —
that search for quotes combining
frugality, outcomes, and brag sheets.
The surveyors come — neat harbingers
with their deft theodolites, stakes
through hearts, pink ribbons
streaming like dead arteries.
Environmental clearances an exquisite fait
accompli, ultimately, and sacred water-
ways re-mapped to be entered by tracked
machinery, banks undone, water stained.
There is the language of minimisation,
which we’ve come to expect, thanks, and down-
loads to offset the distress. And as old trees
are yanked out by the roots, and buttressed
bulldozers mount vegetation
before crushing, carrion vehicles
buzz like powerlines, the land rewritten
outside so many memories — but not all.
Wildlife told there are other places
it can go as it is slaughtered. Contract
killers anonymous as, later, efforts to tidy
with a few plantings, or just guiderails.
John Kinsella
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
In Response to Cyberbullying
Alphabetical Disorder 24
Apocryphal as spite,
false social media account
purports & implicates,
engines the basic ingredients,
kicks home goals, exclaims
yum yum to suffering,
zips personality into a body
bag — always on the hunt,
traducing through ‘own lips’,
deploying capitals & exclamation
marks. The storm came
though it wasn’t forecast,
sheet lightning sarcasm
while the buddy buddy
republic of letters
caught on & followed
xenologists throughout —
globe-trotting, re-routing,
questing & occupying
(virtually) every outlet.
High fives over drinks,
jolly hockey sticks,
increments of fabulist
lingua franca. Exploration
of those private spaces,
ululating with gratification.
New bullying — cyber & otherwise.
John Kinsella