- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
I really like how United States have somehow developed this idea that if you have a crippling disability, like not being able to hear, or being morbidly obese, then it's okay for you to be that way, to do absolutely nothing with it, and to turn it into a virtue and then call anyone who sincerely tells you to improve on those aspects for your own good mean words. It's a very interesting phenomenon.
As someone from the center of Europe with impeccable hearing, I personally know two people with hearing impairment. An old classmate who would constantly crack jokes about being deaf despite the loss only being partial, and we would crack the same jokes at them and we would all have a good laugh, and a family member whose hearing has been impaired since birth (breech birth), to the point where their speech is also impaired, where I need to speak loud and clear and then I have to take a second to understand what they're saying.
Both of them got dealt a shitty hand in life, both of them managed to overcome their disabilities to move forward in life, and both are doing well as functioning members of society despite their hearing impairment. And I accept them both, they're completely normal people and I don't judge them because it wasn't their fault. And even if their disability gets in the way of communication, I am patient to overcome it.
I have never heard of people like this, where they refuse to improve on themselves and make a virtue out of it, outside of the US. It seems to be a more broader issue with the US, where absolutely everything has to be extremely soft and cushiony for absolutely everyone without any exception, which leads to shit like morbidly obese people saying they're "plus sized", and calling anyone that tells them to lose weight "fatshamers", while they can barely walk and they will die prematurely.
Perhaps it worsened in the US with the slow and steady erosion of old values to turn everything upside down (which is also slowly seeping into Europe), and maybe it was an underlying issue in the American society long before that. Needless to say it's very interesting and the "Deaf" community is yet another example of it.
A bunch of people who decide to base their whole personality on a personal fault they should actively work towards correcting, as that's the only thing they have, and in America there is this odd consensus that it's absolutely fine and they don't get marginalized as a fringe group that's not being taken seriously.
As someone from the center of Europe with impeccable hearing, I personally know two people with hearing impairment. An old classmate who would constantly crack jokes about being deaf despite the loss only being partial, and we would crack the same jokes at them and we would all have a good laugh, and a family member whose hearing has been impaired since birth (breech birth), to the point where their speech is also impaired, where I need to speak loud and clear and then I have to take a second to understand what they're saying.
Both of them got dealt a shitty hand in life, both of them managed to overcome their disabilities to move forward in life, and both are doing well as functioning members of society despite their hearing impairment. And I accept them both, they're completely normal people and I don't judge them because it wasn't their fault. And even if their disability gets in the way of communication, I am patient to overcome it.
I have never heard of people like this, where they refuse to improve on themselves and make a virtue out of it, outside of the US. It seems to be a more broader issue with the US, where absolutely everything has to be extremely soft and cushiony for absolutely everyone without any exception, which leads to shit like morbidly obese people saying they're "plus sized", and calling anyone that tells them to lose weight "fatshamers", while they can barely walk and they will die prematurely.
Perhaps it worsened in the US with the slow and steady erosion of old values to turn everything upside down (which is also slowly seeping into Europe), and maybe it was an underlying issue in the American society long before that. Needless to say it's very interesting and the "Deaf" community is yet another example of it.
A bunch of people who decide to base their whole personality on a personal fault they should actively work towards correcting, as that's the only thing they have, and in America there is this odd consensus that it's absolutely fine and they don't get marginalized as a fringe group that's not being taken seriously.