Comprobatio (com-pro-ba’-ti-o): Approving and commending a virtue, especially in the hearers.
“You are all perfect. Perfect in myriad ways. Perfect liars. Perfect cheaters. Perfect narcissists. Perfect assholes.” These were the opening words of my opening address as the newly elected president of the “Northridge Neanderthals.” Our credo was “Go against the flow,” as our namesakes did millennia ago. While the other cave men were wearing footwear and bearskins, our male namesakes were running around naked and wearing little hats made out of tiger dung. They believed that tiger dung hats would attract mates. They were wrong. They repelled mates, so they had to chase after them, barefoot. When they caught a mate they would often have bloody feet. Frequently they would get infected and the Neanderthal would die before having a chance to mate. Their burial rite consisted of throwing the deceased into a saber-tooth tiger den. This was easier than digging a hole and throwing the colleague in.
We revere the Neanderthals for their stupidity and laziness. One of the requirements for joining the Northridge Neanderthals is a lower than average I.Q. Prospective members have to visibly struggle with math and spelling and most tasks that invited physical coordination like driving a car or fishing. Also, perspective members have to demonstrate a clear tendency to be scammed—especially on the Internet.
We filled a niche in natural order. Once fully-fledged we would be permitted to make the Neanderthal Cry: “Fu*k this!” It celebrates our hostility toward any kind of challenge—intellectual or physical—and the valor of giving up and falling behind.
It is our heritage. We look forward to extinction like non-Neanderthals look forward to going to heaven. We have folksongs celebrating our hope: “Where did all the Neanderthals go?” “She’s not there.” “There goes my baby.” “Extinct doesn’t stink.”
We hope for natural disasters. Don’t take this the wrong way. We want you to survive as the “fittest.” in this sense, Charles Darwin provides us with hope.
Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).
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