Cockroaches Respond to Peer Pressure, Study Suggests
— The New York Times
In nuclear fallout films—like the ones
my brothers watched on Sunday noons
between the Packers and the Vikings,
on our only channel with clear pictures
—cockroaches ruled.
It didn’t matter that the heroine
had big breasts, enough fat to handle
the starved weeks ahead, or the hero
was crafty with pipe-bombs and wheat germ.
Even if the couple and the orphaned 5th-grader,
a tagalong with his stray-dog blue heeler
(cleverly named Blue), escaped the zombies
and leather-clad neo-Nazis,
the bugs would get them
in the end. In apocalyptic films,
insects always inherit the earth.
If only the hero (the war vet
who lost everything) or heroine (rail-thin
with two exceptions) or that scrappy kid
with 180 IQ, or even Dog Blue, knew
about peer pressure and how to engage
a single cockroach in a game of Truth
or Dare. Then surely, like lemmings running
over the edge, all those roaches would have fallen.