Monday, February 02, 2009

ApocaLust Now! or, Why Are So Many People Horny for Armageddon? or, Do Bugs in a Rug Going Up a Vacuum Cleaner Believe The Rapture(TM) is at Hand?

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Why are so many people horny for Armageddon?

It doesn't matter how crazy your rationale is. If you claim that the world is going to end, people will believe it. If you're feeling especially randy, you can even name some specific and very near moment that humanity's doom will be sealed. Don’t worry when the time comes and goes and the end doesn’t arrive. Just revise your prophecy and the followers will be back, hungry for more of your apocalyptic visions.

All of that would be laughable except for the fact that people who are delusional are often short on humor. The other trait that always seems bundled with a willingness to believe in The End is a desire to make sure it happens. Human nature, ya gotta love it: people would rather go to oblivion rather than be proven wrong. I find it all a little scary. When someone is delusional and suicidal, that’s when we sane people get hurt.

It's a state I call ApocaLust. It's not just the belief that The End is coming, but also a desire to make sure it does, or at the very least, a joyful hope that the afflicted person witnesses it.

Chances are you brushed up against someone stricken with ApocaLust when it was at a fever pitch as the year 2000 loomed. Never mind that other human calendars (Jewish and Chinese) passed 2000 long ago. The obnoxious faithful knew all those zeros on the Gregorian calendar were going to snuff us out! So what happened? Squat.

Well, just because Y2K came to nothing doesn't mean you missed your chance! New Armageddons are always on their way! Recent chart-toppers are The Rapture(TM) and The Year 2012.

What’s up with 2012? Well, apparently that's as far as the Mayan calendar goes, and since an ancient, extinct human culture knows much more than we do, well, there simply can’t be a 2013. Imagine our misfortune! If only Staples stores had been invented then, the Mayans could have just ordered a 2013 calendar. Instead, now we’re all gonna die.

Another modern example of ApocaLust is The Rapture(TM). Our religious friends just can't wait for that day, when the chosen are called to heaven and the rest of us can finally get down to some real partying. The Rapture(TM) is big business. Someone even wrote some books about it. They're called the "Left Behind" books, which always make me think they have something to do the port side of a person's ass. But enough about Republicans, whenever I hear about The Rapture(TM) I’m tempted to put a trademark symbol after it because it just seems like a product. It's the same old religion but New! and Improved!

Another Rapture(TM) product is the commonly-seen bumper sticker: "In case of Rapture this car will be unmanned." It's not only arrogant, but also stupid. Arrogant for assuming they will be chosen by God and stupid because every car I see it on is a hard-top. Shouldn't they be driving convertibles? They're going to look like helium-filled inflatable sex dolls pinned against the inside roof of their car as it careens off the road and sits in a ditch for all eternity.

As with everything that involves us human animals, I'm convinced there is some sexual component to Armageddon. How else to explain why people keep going after it without consulting logic or reason? I believe the band Bad Religion concurs. Notice the lyrics to their ripping song, New Dark Ages: "Our kin will be immaculate ejaculate in space." Well said, BR.

That's got to be it. The End makes people horny. Armageddon is some kind of primal Spiritus Mundi archetype in our subconscious, a cosmic-sized male orgasm wherein the chosen spurt into the sky during The Big Finish. As with many things religious, the female perspective is neglected, because, well, it's confusing. And girls are icky.

I have a secret desire that The Rapture(TM) is some kind of pre-programmed harvest by people-eating aliens. They planted us here a while ago, and they’re going to zip on by (in the year 2012 for sure) and suck up all the people. The faithful will cheerfully go along, realizing only too late they are not in heaven, but they’re the main course. It makes me wonder, do bugs in a rug going up a vacuum cleaner believe The Rapture(TM) is at hand?

I can hear some of you out there now: Oh yeah? Why are you attacking religion, you damn liberal? What about all this concern for Global Warming? Isn't that an example of damn liberal ApocaLust?

A decent point. While liberals are just as susceptible to ApocaLust as anyone else, anyone who chooses to FIGHT global warming obviously isn't wishing for the end of the world. I've never heard of someone who WANTS global warming to arrive, believes it will, and sees it as something to be coaxed and rejoiced over when it arrives (note unavoidable male orgasm references). Most see it as something to be avoided, but there surely could be some misanthropes out there for whom this description fits. Like any mental illness, ApocaLust doesn't discriminate.

So what is it about people that makes them crave The End? Is it too much destination, not enough journey? Well don't stop believin' kids, the end of the world will be here someday.

That's why in my novel, Where Did This Come From? The native chief's wife, Yuala, notes that the world as we know it is a living thing, and all living things are born and die. Someday, even if we somehow muscle past the idiots who deny global warming, and survive those who want to bring about The End, the earth will die despite all our best efforts, should we ever bring them to bear. That doesn't mean we should ignore caring for our planet, it means we should be aware that she's fragile and temporary.

Or we can just keep jerking off, literally and metaphysically.

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Larry Nocella is the author of the novel Where Did This Come From? available on Amazon. For more info, visit his website at http://www.larrynocella.com/.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

The NEWEST Pretrib Calendar!

Hal (serial polygamist) Lindsey and other pretrib-rapture-trafficking and Mayan-Calendar-hugging hucksters deserve the following message: "2012 may be YOUR latest date. It isn't MAYAN!" Actually, if it weren't for the 179-year-old, fringe-British-invented, American-merchandised pretribulation rapture bunco scheme, Hal would still be piloting a tugboat on the Mississippi. roly-poly Thomas Ice (Tim LaHaye's No. 1 strong-arm enforcer) would still be in his tiny folding-chair church which shares its firewall with a Texas saloon, Jack Van Impe would still be a jazz band musician, Tim LaHaye would still be titillating California matrons with his "Christian" sex manual, Grant Jeffrey would still be taking care of figures up in Canada, Chuck Missler would still be in mysterious hush-hush stuff that rocket scientists don't dare talk about, and John Hagee might be making - and eating - world-record pizzas! To read more details about the eschatological British import that leading British scholarship never adopted - the import that's created some American multi-millionaires - Google "Pretrib Rapture Diehards" (note LaHaye's hypocrisy under "1992"), "Hal Lindsey's Many Divorces," "Thomas Ice (Bloopers)" and "Thomas Ice (Hired Gun)," "LaHaye's Temperament," "Wily Jeffrey," "Chuck Missler - Copyist," "Open Letter to Todd Strandberg" and "The Rapture Index (Mad Theology)," "X-Raying Margaret," "Humbug Huebner," "Thieves' Marketing," "Appendix F: Thou Shalt Not Steal," "The Unoriginal John Darby," "Pretrib Hypocrisy," "The Real Manuel Lacunza," "Roots of (Warlike) Christian Zionism," "America's Pretrib Rapture Traffickers," "Pretrib Rapture - Hidden Facts," "Dolcino? Duh!" and "Scholars Weigh My Research." Most of the above is written by journalist/historian Dave MacPherson who has focused on long-hidden pretrib rapture history for 35+ years. No one else has focused on it for 35 months or even 35 weeks. MacPherson has been a frequent radio talk show guest and he states that all of his royalties have always gone to a nonprofit group and not to any individual. His No. 1 book on all this is "The Rapture Plot" (see Armageddon Books online, etc.). The amazing thing is how long it has taken the mainstream media to finally notice and expose this unbelievably groundless yet extremely lucrative theological hoax!

2:51 AM  

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