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Strange Weather Lately: 

Kurt Vonnegut on Real Americans

By Kurt Vonnegut, 

In These Times, May 9, 2003

http://inthesetimes.com/comments.php?id=191_0_4_0_C



The following is adapted from a Clemens Lecture presented in April for
the Mark Twain House in Hartford, Connecticut.

First things first: I want it clearly understood that this mustache I'm
wearing is my father's mustache. I should have brought his photograph.
My big brother Bernie, now dead, a physical chemist who discovered that
silver iodide can sometimes make it snow or rain, he wore it, too.

Speaking of weather: Mark Twain said some readers complained that there
wasn't enough weather in his stories. So he wrote some weather, which
they could insert wherever they thought it would help some.

Mark Twain was said to have shed a tear of gratitude and incredulousness
when honored for his writing by Oxford University in England. And I
should shed a tear, surely, having been asked at the age of 80, and
because of what I myself have written, to speak under the auspices of
the sacred Mark Twain House here in Hartford.

What other American landmark is as sacred to me as the Mark Twain House?
The Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. Mark Twain and Abraham Lincoln
were country boys from Middle America, and both of them made the
American people laugh at themselves and appreciate really important,
really moral jokes.

I note that construction has stopped of a Mark Twain Museum here in
Hartford - behind the carriage house of the Mark Twain House at 351
Farmington Avenue.

Work persons have been sent home from that site because American
conservatives, as they call themselves, on Wall Street and at the head
of so many of our corporations, have stolen a major fraction of our
private savings, have ruined investors and employees by means of fraud
and outright piracy.

Shock and awe.

And now, having installed themselves as our federal government, or taken
control of it from outside, they have squandered our public treasury and
then some. They have created a public debt of such appalling magnitude
that our descendants, for whom we had such high hopes, will come into
this world as poor as church mice.

Shock and awe.

What are the conservatives doing with all the money and power that used
to belong to all of us? They are telling us to be absolutely terrified,
and to run around in circles like chickens with their heads cut off. But
they will save us. They are making us take off our shoes at airports.
Can anybody here think of a more hilarious practical joke than that one?

Smile, America. You're on Candid Camera.

And they have turned loose a myriad of our high-tech weapons, each one
costing more than a hundred high schools, on a Third World country, in
order to shock and awe human beings like us, like Adam and Eve, between
the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.

The other day I asked former Yankees pitcher Jim Bouton what he thought
of our great victory over Iraq, and he said, \1CMohammed Ali versus Mr.
Rogers.\1D

What are conservatives? They are people who will move heaven and earth,
if they have to, who will ruin a company or a country or a planet, to
prove to us and to themselves that they are superior to everybody else,
except for their pals. They take good care of their pals, keep them out
of jail, and so on.

Conservatives are crazy as bedbugs. They are bullies.

Shock and awe.

Class war? You bet.

They have proved their superiority to admirers of Abraham Lincoln and
Mark Twain and Jesus of Nazareth, with an able assist from television,
making inconsequential our protests against their war.

What has happened to us? We have suffered a technological calamity.
Television is now our form of government.

On what grounds did we protest their war? I could name many, but I need
name only one, which is common sense.

Be that as it may, construction of the Mark Twain Museum will sooner or
later be resumed. And I, the son and grandson of Indiana architects,
seize this opportunity to suggest a feature which I hope will be
included in the completed structure, words to be chiseled into the
capstone over the main entrance.

Here is what I think would be fun to put up there, and Mark Twain loved
fun more than anything. I have tinkered with something famous he said,
which is: Be good and you will be lonesome. That is from Following the
Equator. OK?

So envision what a majestic front entrance the Mark Twain Museum will
have someday. And imagine that these words have been chiseled into the
noble capstone and painted gold:

be good and you will be lonesome most places, but not here, not here.

One of the most humiliated and heartbroken pieces Twain ever wrote was
about the slaughter of 600 Moro men, women and children by our soldiers
during our liberation of the people of the Philippines after the
Spanish-American War. Our brave commander was Leonard Wood, who now has
a fort named after him. Fort Leonard Wood.

What did Abraham Lincoln have to say about such American imperialist
wars? Those are wars which, on one noble pretext or another, actually
aim to increase the natural resources and pools of tame labor available
to the richest Americans who have the best political connections.

And it is almost always a mistake to mention Abraham Lincoln in a speech
about something or somebody else. He always steals the show. I am about
to quote him.

Lincoln was only a Congressman when he said in 1848 what I am about to
echo. He was heartbroken and humiliated by our war on Mexico, which had
never attacked us.

We were making California our own, and a lot of other people and
properties, and doing it as though butchering Mexican soldiers who were
only defending their homeland against invaders wasn't murder.

What other stuff besides California? Well, Texas, New Mexico, Utah,
Nevada, Arizona, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming.

The person congressman Lincoln had in mind when he said what he said was
James Polk, our president at the time. Abraham Lincoln said of Polk, his
president, our armed forces\19commander-in-chief: \1CTrusting to escape
scrutiny by fixing the public gaze upon the exceeding brightness of
military glory, that attractive rainbow that rises in showers of blood
-that serpent's eye, that charms to destroy, he plunged into war.\1D

Holy smokes! I almost said, Holy shit!\1DAnd I thought I was a writer!

Do you know we actually captured Mexico City during the Mexican War? Why
isn't that a national holiday? And why isn't the face of James Polk up
on Mount Rushmore, along with Ronald Reagan's?

What made Mexico so evil back in the 1840s, well before our Civil War,
is that slavery was illegal there. Remember the Alamo?

My great-grandfather's name was Clemens Vonnegut. Small world, small
world. This piquant coincidence is not a fabrication. Clemens Vonnegut
called himself a freethinker, an antique word for humanist. He was a
hardware merchant in Indianapolis.

So, 120 years ago, say, there was one man who was both Clemens and
Vonnegut. I would have liked being such a person a lot. I only wish I
could have been such a person tonight.

I claim no blood relationship with Samuel Clemens of Hannibal, Missouri.
Clemens, as a first name, is, I believe, like the name Clementine,
derived from the adjective clement. To be clement is to be lenient and
compassionate, or, in the case of weather, perfectly heavenly.

So there's weather again.