VOL. LIII, NO. 81
California State University, Long Beach Feburary 26, 2003
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Humans spawned from aliens?


Someone who really had his stuff together — or at least had a cousin working in the upper echelon of the stuff business — once said that ignorance is bliss.
 
Oh, the sheer multitude of smiles and grins and joyful expressions I see surrounding me daily. It is truly a wonder that homes haven’t been built upside down, what with all the bliss I witness in these parts.
 
Just the other day I was engaged in a conversation with a young woman who is renowned for her excessive happiness. Somehow the discussion screeched and slid to the well-documented and meticulously mapped question of where we come from. (It is unimportant how we reached this topic, but I will say that the conversation began with intricate testimony as to where Britney and Justin now stand. According to their rep’s, they are very happy and chock full of bliss.)
 
The young woman I was speaking with declared with conviction that she absolutely does not believe that we [humans] are descended from monkeys.
 
I began explaining to her that that is not how evolution works exactly when she interrupted me.
 
“Wait,” she said aghast. “Are you saying that someone as intelligent as you actually believes in evolution?”
 
It was a dirty, ego-stroking tactic meant to screw with me. She should have gone for broke and scratched the little spot behind my ear that sends me into a catatonic state of pure bliss.
 
But, I could parry her low jab.
 
“I would venture to say that at least 85 to 90 percent of highly educated people believe in evolution,” I said. “Even the Pope went so far as to say that the evolutionary process is a fact — after God created Earth initially though.”
 
“So what,” she replied. “He’s just the Pope.”
 
Touché. I needed another tactic, a full-frontal assault. Talk of genetic mutations, adaptation and the fossil record would only prove futile.
 
“So,” I said condescendingly. “Does this mean that you believe in creationism?”
 
“You mean that we were created by God?” she asked.
 
“Yeah,” I said.
 
“No, that’s bogus too,” she said.
 
I was stumped. She was smiling.
 
I always assumed that the debate on man’s origin was between two highly concrete and stable positions. I reluctantly asked her what the third option was.
 
“Aliens,” she said.
 
Really? That was her exact reply and she isn’t even a Raelian. And from the looks of her, I assumed she was much too happy to be bogged down by Erich Von Daniken’s book “Chariots of the Gods?”
 
I tried explaining to her just how ludicrous her theory was. No evidence. No explanation for similarities between species or biological remnants, (that tailbone used to serve more of a purpose than breaking on ski slopes). Not even a simple, easy to grasp theological treatise on man’s place in the so-called scheme, none of that. Just some half-baked babbling about aliens landing a few thousand years ago and dropping off some genetically engineered humans to populate the Earth and raise cattle for valuable lips, tongues and rectums.
 
She was so matter of fact about it; my face must have looked like the wide open, almost 100-foot high front door of NORAD — where the really big kids play really big video games for the highest of stakes.
 
I was still in a state of shock when she said, “But you know what? It doesn’t make the least bit of difference where we come from.”
 
My mouth shut halfway and I waited for next words.
 
“We are each only here for a short time, if we’re lucky,” she said. “You can sit and worry and fuss over the when’s and where’s and why’s, but that will just ensure that you don’t explore the who’s and what’s and I’s and the now. It’s so huge and heated and yet so utterly inconsequential. And for the record, Britney is a total slutbag.”
 
A moment after she walked away I felt a deep pang of understanding and I smiled as wide as a rainbow-billed toucan in a fresh bowl of Fruit Loop’s. Sweet bliss, how I longed for thee!
 
Greg Smith is a journalism major at Cal State Long Beach.

 


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