But I don't like this interpretation of his actions as I find it too unrealistic. I think this Tralfamadorian perspective is a derivative of his instability from trauma inducing moments from war. This is the more realistic approach to Billy's actions as it doesn't involve aliens and other nonsense. Instead Billy has an unstable grasp of reality, frequently afflicted by powerful flashbacks to different moments in his life. But these flashbacks are aided with the creation of the Tralfamadorians and their ideology in his imagination to help him cope with the trauma. In fact the creation of the Tralfamadorians could've been as soon as Billy's capture in the war as the Tralfamadorians had also abducted Billy and put him in a zoo. This would mean that Billy's despondency is due to war trauma and PTSD with the usage of the Tralfamadorians as a coping mechanism.
The idea of Billy suffering from PTSD also fits in nicely with Kurt Vonnegut's goal of writing an anti-war novel as it shows the wild imagination and suffering from one of its participants as they re-experience past traumas through a warped reality caused by the war.
Your theories would make Slaughterhouse-Five a much more realistic war story then, as the Tralfamadorians are nonexistent - except in Billy's mind. The connection between Billy's zoo captivity and his time as a POW is good - perhaps his delusions did stem from this incident.
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