"And now please welcome today's anti-terrorism speaker, Anonymous!"
[anonymous applause, dwindling out]
"Thanks, everyone. The reason I prefer anonymity should be self-evident, but just to make it clear, I wish to avoid the recrimination of the hostile element."
"Before I got here I was just reading, and believe me I'm still not believing, but it would seem, on the whole, that planetary aggression is on the slow."
A hand is raised A hand is ignored The speaker moistens his lips Prepared to emit a bit more.
"I have stats and stories Tortuous anecdotes about little girls and boys Food and sanitation is a crime itself And I'm prepared to say we live in our own hell."
Arms upheld wither down As new hands reach for attention But the speaker ignores them all Intent on his own presentation.
"The reason for hate Is more or less clear We fiercely believe one thing As they devoutly believe another.
But do not fear! We are right and they are wrong They saddle their own children with a death song No cartoons of basic morality Just legs with bombs Made to go off remotely."
An angry rustle Amidst lowered hands Quieting now Like they're getting the hang of it.
"Humans are robots Programmable, malleable and sometimes trustworthy Highly complicated machinery! Indoctrination is the virus That seeks to destroy the outside."
Again the raised hands And eyebrows too All these fluttering robots Fluttering in a pseudo-free zoo.
Ignoring the obvious The speaker plods onwards But modulates his voice Against their trained reactions.
"We need to accept and enfold An ideology only thousands of years old To mutate and twist Into what our children might wish."
Someone yells "Disney!" Another mutters "Black whiteys" But there are a few Who remain to hear it through.
"Despite what you think Despite who you are Against all you've been taught We've come quite far.
You may not know your son You may not know your daughter But leave them alone And tomorrow may happen.
Put the guns aside Drink from your hidden bottles without shame You are who you are And you should let them be them."
This is not what anyone wanted Anyone over the age of ten This is not what anyone wanted With children and the urge to brainwash them.
The room trickles out Leaving the most devout Devoted to the future Any future left standing.
But amidst this group Are hard-liner elements And one has a voice Cutting through it all To ask, "What about bomber babies?"
And riding right on top Is a fat slobbery Republican fop Demanding in his self-entitled way "What the **** about America?"
The speaker shrugs As if to indicate Which question Is more stupid.
"We seek to leave the planet And develop tech to make it happen You go your way And we go ours."
The room is smaller now They indulge in eye contact Personal communications Words, hands, heads and eyebrows.
The speaker sighs As if on the cusp of absolute honesty Then spills his true guts To these few radicals and emissaries:
"Our worst enemy is ourselves Through millennia fashioning our own hells Subjugation of non-prominent DNA Believing destruction will pave the way.
But on a not-much larger scale We're just cheap entertainment For every other race That crawled up this hill."
The crowd is slightly subdued Probably more from shame Than anything Because shame is in the DNA And experienced by everyone.
But we can always rely On some fat Republican to decry "But not me! And for sure not my children!"
And now even more file out Hearts emptied and minds afloat Now it's just the sweating speaker And a few odd haters.
"We're a microbial phenomenon Miraculously still alive And still inept At staying alive."
He waves a casual hand like a maestro And behind him the stage glows A 30x30 screen descends Illuminating bugs as they crawl.
"We're slightly smarter But no more hardier Than Hymenoptera Except we can leave this planet."
Red-faced and obviously insulted The old fat plushy storms out Leaving now just a few To adopt this future-flung view.
"We need to terraform and colonize Sure, and design space suits Pleasing to the eye But ultimately, We need to get the hell gone."
One clap, one frown The speaker shrugs As if wondering Why aren't we all gone?
And so he is left With the clean-up crew And one fruitcake Who asks "Will God come with us?"