A question posed by Yossarian in Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 to find out why so many
people were working so hard to kill him.
This seemingly rhetorical question is what
one asks when one feels that everyone else is asking stupid questions and one wants to join in and/or point out how obviously stupid their questions are. Or, merely, because one wants to find out why so many
people are working so hard to kill oneself.
Yossarian was a collector of
good questions and had used them to disrupt the educational sessions Clevinger had once conducted two nights a week in Captain Black'
s intelligence tent with the corporal in eyeglasses who everybody knew was probably a subversive. Captain Black knew he was a subversive because he wore eyeglasses and used words
like panacea and utopia, and because he disapproved of Adolf
Hitler, who had done such a great
job of combating unAmerican activities in
Germany.
Yossarian attended the education sessions because he wanted to find out why so many
people were working so hard to
kill him. A handful of other men were also interested, and the questions were many and good when Clevinger and the subversive corporal finished and made the mistake of asking if there were any.
“Who is Spain?”
“Why is
Hitler?”
“When is right?”
“Where was that stooped and mealy-colored old man I used to call poppa when the merry-go-round broke down?”
“How was Trump at Munich?”
“Hi-ho beriberi!”
and “Balls!” all rang out in rapid succession, and then there was Yossarian with the question that had no answer:
“Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear?”