Poetry Against ICE (full performance and panel discussion)

In early February 2026, I invited Minnesota poets Ollie Schminkey, Isha Camara, and SEE MORE PERSPECTIVE to this asynchronous panel discussion and performance, sharing poems related to the ongoing federal occupation of Minnesota, as well as some insight into what makes political poems “work.” Here is the FULL VIDEO, with some additional notes below.

Here is an MP3 audio file, if you prefer to listen, podcast-style (right-click and “save link as”)

Music by SEE MORE PERSPECTIVE.

This video is also a fundraiser: If this is valuable to you, we’re asking people to consider supporting CTUL (Centro De Trabajadores Unidos En La Lucha)’s emergency & rapid response fund.

The idea behind this event was (1) an excuse to keep sharing that CTUL fundraiser; (2) a cool poetry event people could watch on their own time, from home (especially when so many are minimizing trips outside; we want to be in community with you too); and (3) a kind of counterpoint to my last big virtual event, where we focused on what artists can do beyond our art. That’s still an important conversation, but I wanted to also make time to dive into the art too, especially since I’m in community with so many poets, songwriters, and other creative people.

This conversation is about sharing—aside from some great poems—specific tools and tactics for other people who do creative communication work. I got to “talk shop” with three artists I respect, and I think we uncovered some really valuable insights about what works when we choose to speak out.

I totally understand if this video doesn’t get a ton of views or find a mass audience; it is two hours long, after all. But my hope is that it can be useful to YOU. Watch it in chunks over your lunchbreaks, or listen to the audio during a long drive, or even just read the “short version” aka this bank of pullquotes.

ADDITIONAL LINKS

A FEW PULLQUOTES

I know not everyone is going to sit and watch a whole two-hour thing. I hope you do! But either way, I pulled out 20 highlights. Here are four:

As a poet, I try to be really careful about when and how I add my voice to things. People are hungry for emotional reflections of this moment, and that is one of the functions of poetry: to be a mirror, a witness. *And* I try to be aware of where I am sitting. Because I can only offer the witness that I have, and my witness is not the witness that everybody needs. - Ollie Schminkey, from Poetry Against ICE, February 2026
I think it’s messy, and that’s okay. There’s a version of this poem that I own that no one will ever see. Then there’s this version that lives online because I believe art should be accessible. And then there’s this version that exists between me and you (via performance), and I think that’s okay. It’s not meant to be this colossal thing that’s engraved in stone. - Isha Camara, from Poetry Against ICE, February 2026
People might say ‘I’m not an artist; I’m not a poet’ or whatever, but storytelling is in our nature. And being disconnected from that is one of the fundamental tactics of fascism: to cut ourselves off from our expression, what we think and feel. [So] go to the open mic! Watch people perform. Read poems to yourself. Go to events. Get ideas. Stay open. Don’t think you have to know it all right away. - SEE MORE PERSPECTIVE, from Poetry Against ICE, February 2026
The notion that poetry can only be good if it’s subtle, mysterious and metaphorical is just so deeply ahistorical. So much of the greatest poetry, the greatest art of all time, is not particularly subtle. It’s people saying the thing that needs to be said. - Kyle Tran Myhre, from Poetry Against ICE, February 2026

Finally, because I’m a poetry nerd, I also highlight 16 specific tools and tactics from our conversation here. I hope they can be useful.

Thanks for watching.

A collage of four video chat screens featuring Kyle Tran Myhre, Isha Camara, Ollie Schminkey and SEE MORE PERSPECTIVE. In the center of the  image, text: "poetry against ICE: an asynchronous panel discussion: spring 2026"