SnailHail wrote:
Fnord wrote:
I think that he was not being sarcastic. 'Conformity' does seem to be a watch-word for NT society. Even when one of them does seem to lack conformity, it is with the approval and support of other non-conformists. In essence, it's okay to be 'different' as long as you do it in a way that is popular among NTs.
Other apparent NT rules ...[edited for brevity]
- There is something morally wrong with being disabled.
- The only acceptable complaints are those you make about how other people are jealous of your achievements.
... more to come ...
Where do you get the idea that there is something morally wrong with being disabled? Is this really true. I can see disabilities as bad but not the people with them.
When I was a child, people with mental or emotional deficiencies (and/or just *differences*) were still kept hidden for the most part. As were many physical deficiencies or differences from the norm. A big part of the reason the 1960's and 70's counterculture came about was because the social pressure to conform (& be shamed if one could not) had reached a breaking point.
The sociological / historical reasons vary slightly by local population and subculture, but some of the biggest influences during that time period were:
-Cold War mentality / public projection of perfection (this actually existed prior, in the 1940's but exploded in the 50's)
-Cold War mentality / projection of everything being a pure binary (easy to make things "good" or "bad" only).
-Surviving pockets and a strong larger cultural memory of a thousand year Christian concept that some people are closer to the Grace of God than others. "Grace" in this context among other things means perfection in body, soul and morality. Unfortunately, being "imperfect" often became equated with "immoral".
-Pockets of cultural resistance to the Civil Rights era equality efforts (race being a very visible difference with a strong social hierarchy in many regions and cultures)
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