Read The Douchebag Bible Online
Authors: TJ Kirk
is that, just a million years ago, the Earth’s climate was
completely different than it is now. The sea level was 80 feet
higher. The air was far more humid and stifling. Imagine
planet Louisiana. It got from there to here without our help.
Why do we automatically assume that it must be our fault that
it’s going back again?
Sure, adjusting to a changing climate will suck, but
that’s what evolution is for—adapting. And if the planet
becomes uninhabitable, that would certainly suck but we’ve
already got caffeinated donuts and Die Hard 4 . . . I think it’s
safe to say that we’ve had a good run.
The conservative’s arguments for what’s wrong in the
world makes even less sense. At least liberals have the
scientific community behind their doomsday scenario. The
neocons have only got “biblical” evidence (read: jack shit).
And the conservative idea of hell on earth is rampant
alternative sex and drugs with no legal consequences
whatsoever. If this hell were ever realized, people like me
would find themselves in heaven.
Meanwhile, their idea of heaven—you know, clouds and
harps and all that jazz, er, gospel—is about the least appealing
thing in the world to anyone with half a brain and a set of balls
(don’t be offended ladies, the analogy could as easily be ‘and a
functional cunt’) It would be like the worst hell imaginable!
Eternal bliss may sound good to the people who have never
even had a single second of bliss in their lives, but those of us
who have orgasmed without procreation even crossing our
minds and not felt so much as a single iota of guilt afterwards,
know that there is little worse in life (or afterlife, I’d presume)
than too much of a good thing.
For the sake of making a larger point, let’s all pretend
that the conservative notion of human liberty as the
apotheosis of immorality is, indeed, as bad as they think it is.
Let’s just ask ourselves these two questions:
Could the liberals be right about the world being
fucked by global warming?
Could the conservatives be right about the world being
fucked by God?
The respective answers are maybe and no.
But the more important question here is, “what about
the people who think things are the best they’ve ever been and
are getting better?” We exist, I assure you. Don’t we get a say
in all this? Where’s our media exposure? Where are our
celebrity icons? Our propaganda films?
All we’ve really got is that stupid fucking Bobby
McFerrin song, “Don’t Worry, Be Happy.” But how can we not
worry when everyone else assures us that there’s so many
things that we need to worry about? How can we be happy in
a world full of miserable people?
Being an optimist sucks.
THE OUTSIDER GENERATION
In all my years of spouting my crazy opinions, I have no
recollection—not one—of ever changing anyone's mind about
anything.
I've written essays and poems and songs and stories and
paragraph-long insanities on a million different subjects, but
none of it has ever made anyone who didn’t already agree with
me say, “Wow, you’re right!” I've constructed arguments that
I believed to be air-tight, but my enemies keep breathing
comfortably. I've produced, on a few occasions, nearly
incontrovertible evidence to back up this claim or that claim,
but the dissenters only scowled at me and stayed their course.
As I've stayed mine.
I state my opinion, you state yours—and neither of us
changes our mind? Neither of us improves or evolves in any
immediately conceivable way?
No one wants to change their mind about anything.
They actively resist it. They hate the very notion of it. If you
examine the words "change your mind" closely, with a
psychologist’s eye, it's easy to see the source of these fears.
Hell, if there was ever a word that scared the living pig
shit out of every man walking this little ball of shit in our toilet
bowl of a galaxy, its change:
"Things change," says the scraggly villain when
the hero falls.
"You've changed," says your girl or boyfriend just
before they dump you.
"He's changing!" screams the protagonist of a
werewolf
story
when
someone
begins
the
transformation.
It's a very negative word. At least, usually. It does have
positive connotations as well:
"It's time for a change," says a new leader to a
crowd sick of the way their old leader mislead them.
"Nothing ever changes," someone says sadly. (This
is a negative statement, but change has positive
connotations.)
The rule here is easy enough to discern—change has a
positive connotations in dissatisfactory circumstances and a
negative connotations when people are content (or content
enough) with the way things are.
So when someone tries to change your mind, you reject
their attempts. Why? Because you're a human being who
secretly believes that you are perfect, in spite of your character
flaws, of which you are mostly aware. You are content enough
in your mind to feel as though it is untouchable and sacred—
something to be preserved at all costs.
Why do you think the first step any cult leader or
government agent takes to brainwash someone involves
eroding their sense of identity and smashing their self-esteem
to pieces?
Any human being functioning normally is not very
susceptible to the overt suggestions of his fellow man, despite
our instinct to take cues from the pack and go along with
whatever the general consensus is. In fact, ironically enough,
our built in conformity streak is a big part of what makes us
so reluctant to go along with people. This is because we are
“wired” to distrust the outsider and accept only the ideas of
those within our social group. In this age of extremely limited
social interaction, this mechanism, once crucial to the
evolutionary process, has begun to destroy us.
People are cynics who distrust everything. In the 1950’s
when the government and corporations churned out endless
propaganda, the masses, for the most part, believed every
word of it. Today, people distrust everything they hear,
everything they read, everything they see, everyone they meet.