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© 2003 In
These Times
Knowing Whats Nice
by Kurt Vonnegut
November
6, 2003

Authors
note: Im working
on a novel, If God Were Alive Today, about a
fictitious man, Gil Berman, 36 years my junior, who
cracks jokes or whatever in front of college audiences
from time to time, something I myself have done. Here
are excerpts from some of what I myself said onstage
at the University of Wisconsin in Madison on the evening
of September 22, 2003, as we touch off the last chunks
and drops and whiffs of fossil fuels.
K.V.
September 24, 2003
Sagaponack, New York

It must be kind of spooky to be a
student or teacher in a university as great as this
one, with its libraries and laboratories and lecture
halls, while knowing it is within the borders of a nation
where wisdom, reason, knowledge and truth no longer
apply.
I realize that some of you may have
come in hopes of hearing tips on how to become a professional
writer. I say to you, ''If you really want to hurt your
parents, and you dont have the nerve to be a homosexual,
the least you can do is go into the arts. But do not
use semicolons. They are transvestite hermaphrodites,
standing for absolutely nothing. All they do is show
youve been to college.''
But actually, to practice any art,
no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul
grow. So do it. Dance on your way out of here. Sing
on your way out of here. Write a love poem when you
get home. Draw a picture of your bed or roommate.
And hey, listen: A sappy woman sent
me a letter a few years back. She knew I was sappy,
too, which is to say a lifelong northern Democrat in
the Franklin Delano Roosevelt mode, a friend of the
working stiffs. She was about to have a baby, not mine,
and wished to know if it was a bad thing to bring such
a sweet and innocent creature into a world as bad as
this one is. I replied that what made being alive almost
worthwhile for me, besides music, was all the saints
I met, who could be anywhere. By saints I meant people
who behaved decently in a strikingly indecent society.
Perhaps some of you are or will become saints for her
child to meet.

And now I want to tell you about my
late Uncle Alex. He was my fathers kid brother,
a childless graduate of Harvard who was an honest life
insurance salesman in Indianapolis. He was well-read
and wise. And his principal complaint about other human
beings was that they so seldom noticed it when they
were happy. So when we were drinking lemonade under
an apple tree in the summer, say, and talking lazily
about this and that, almost buzzing like honeybees,
Uncle Alex would suddenly interrupt the agreeable blather
to exclaim, ''If this isnt nice, I dont
know what is.''
So I do the same now, and so do my
kids and grandkids. And I urge you to please notice
when you are happy, and exclaim or murmur or think at
some point, ''If this isnt nice, I dont
know what is.''
Thats one favor Ive asked
of you.
Now Ive got another one, a show
of hands. How many of you have had a teacher at any
point in your entire education who made you happier
to be alive, prouder to be alive than you had previously
believed possible? Now please say the name of that teacher
out loud to someone sitting or standing near you.
OK? All done? ''If this isnt
nice, I dont know what is.''

Ill be 81 on November 11. Whats
it like to be this old? I cant parallel park worth
a damn anymore. Please dont watch when I try to
do it. But no matter how bad things may get for me,
the music will still be wonderful. My epitaph, should
I ever need one, God forbid: ''The only proof he ever
needed of the existence of God was music.''
You and the police are entitled to
know, since I am going to spend the night near you,
that I am both a Humanist and a Luddite. I may hold
a Black Mass in the parking garage of the Best Western
Hotel, if I can find a neo-conservative baby to sacrifice.
Do you know what a Humanist is? I
am honorary president of
the American Humanist Association, having succeeded
the late, great science fiction writer Isaac Asimov
in that functionless capacity. We Humanists try to behave
well without any expectation of rewards or punishments
in an afterlife. We serve as best we can the only abstraction
with which we have any real familiarity, which is our
community.
We had a memorial services for Isaac
a few years back, and at one point I said, ''Isaac is
up in Heaven now.'' It was the funniest thing I could
have said to a group of Humanists. I rolled them in
the aisles. It was several minutes before order could
be restored. And if I should ever die, God forbid, I
hope you will say, ''Kurt is up in Heaven now.'' Thats
my favorite joke.
Do
you know what a Luddite is? Thats a person
who doesnt like newfangled contraptions. Contraptions
like nuclear submarines armed with Poseidon missiles
that have H-bombs in their warheads, and like computers
that cheat you out of becoming. Bill Gates says, ''Wait
till you can see what your computer can become.'' But
its you who should be doing the becoming. What
you can become is the miracle you were born to worknot
the damn fool computer.
Now you know what a Humanist and a
Luddite are. Do you know what a Twerp is? When I was
in high school in Indianapolis 65 years ago, a Twerp
was a guy who stuck a set of false teeth up his rear
end and bit the buttons off the back seats of taxicabs.
(And a Snarf was a guy who sniffed the seats of girls
bicycles.)
And I consider anybody a Twerp who
hasnt read the greatest American short story,
which is ''Occurrence
at Owl Creek Bridge,'' by Ambrose Bierce. It isnt
remotely political. It is a flawless example of American
genius, like ''Sophisticated Lady'' by Duke Ellington
or the Franklin stove. ''Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,''
by Ambrose Bierce.
I consider anybody a Twerp who hasnt
read Democracy
in America by Alexis de Tocqueville. There can never
be a better book than that one on the strengths and
vulnerabilities inherent in our form of government.
Want a taste of that great book? He
says, and he said it 168 years ago, that in no country
other than ours has love of money taken stronger hold
on the affections of men. OK?
And many of you, if not most, have
surely at least dipped into that great book. But I can
hardly call you Twerps, or even Snarfs, if you have
never even heard of the next book I want to celebrate.
Practically nobody has, since it is basically a medical
text: The
Mask of Sanity, first published in 1941 and written
by the late Dr. Hervey Cleckley, a clinical professor
of psychiatry at the Medical College of Georgia.
Some people are born deaf, some are
born blind or whatever, and this book is about congenitally
defective human beings of a sort who are making this
whole country and many other parts of the planet go
completely haywire nowadays. These are people born without
consciences. They know full well the pain their actions
may cause others to feel but do not care. They cannot
care. They came into this world with a screw loose,
and now theyre taking charge of everything. They
appear to be great leaders because they are so decisive.
Do this! Do that! What makes them so decisive is that
they do not care and cannot care what happens next.

Now then, theres a good news
and theres a bad news tonight. The bad news is
that the Martians have landed in New York City, and
are staying at the Waldorf. The good news is that they
only eat homeless man, women and children of all colors,
and they pee gasoline.
But seriously, if you read the supermarket
tabloids you know that for the past 10 years a team
of Martian anthropologists has been studying our country,
the only country worth a damn on the whole planetforget
Brazil and Argentina. Well, they went back home last
week because they knew how really awful global warming
is about to be. Their space ship wasnt a flying
saucer. It was more of a flying soup tureen. And theyre
little, only six inches high, but they arent green.
Theyre mauve.
By way of farewell, their little mauve
leader said there were two things about American culture
no Martian could ever understand. ''What is it,'' she
said in that teeny-weeny, tanny-wanny, toney-woney little
voice of hers, ''what can it possibly be about blow
jobs and golf?''
That is stuff from a novel Ive
been working on for the past five years, about a standup
comedian at the end of the world. It is about making
jokes while we are killing all the fish in the ocean,
and touching off the last chunks or drops or whiffs
of fossil fuel. But it will not let itself be finished.
Its working titleor actually
non-working titleis If God Were Alive Today.
And hey, listen: It is time we thanked God that we are
in a country where even the poor people are overweight.
But the Bush diet could change that.
And about the novel I can never finish,
If God Were Alive Today: The hero, the standup
comedian on Doomsday, not only denounces our addiction
to fossil fuels, with the pushers in the White House.
Because of overpopulation, he is also against sexual
intercourse. His name is Gil Berman, and he says to
audiences like this one, ''I am a flaming neuter. I
am as celibate as at least 50 percent of the heterosexual
Roman Catholic clergy. Celibacy is not a root canal,
and it is so cheap and convenient. Talk about safe sex!
You dont have to do or say anything afterwards,
because there is no afterwards.''
Gil Berman goes on: ''When my tantrum,
which is what I call my TV set, waves boobs in my face,
and tells me that everybody but me is going to get laid
tonight, and this is a national emergency, so Ive
got to rush out and buy pills or a car or a folding
gymnasium I can hide under my bed, I laugh like a hyena.
I know and you know there are millions upon millions
of good Americans, present company not excepted, who
arent going to get laid tonight.
''And we neuter vote! And I look forward
to a day when the President of the United States, no
less, who probably isnt going to get laid that
night either, decrees a National Neuter Pride Day. And
out of our closets well come. And we will go marching
up main streets all over this great land of ours, shoulders
squared, chins held high, and laughing like hyenas.''
What about God, if He were alive today?
Gil Berman says, ''God would have to be an Athiest,
because the excrement has hit the air-conditioning big
time, big time.''
©
2003 In These Times
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