NEETs voluntarily join the lowest point on the totem pole, choose to be less than others in every aspect, and unanimously blame others for their own shortcomings. They feel enlightened and emboldened by completely useless activities and knowledge and have no interest in information they did not come across themselves.
Simultaneously, the NEET lives believing himself to be inferior and superior: he knows that his lack of ethic for participation in society is a negative thing, but he feels smarter than the majority because he has cheated his way out of the challenging parts of life.
The NEET fails to draw any connections between having a “normal” life functioning in society and personal success. He believes his personal success is exclusively tethered to his comfort and pleasure, that to be challenged and overcome through any amount of tribulation is actually a net loss and nothing more than momentary suffering: an interruption of his hedonistic devices.
What annoys me most about NEETs is even when they concede that they should have a job or at least some sort of income, they’re either too good or not good enough for it. McDonald’s? No, I’m too smart to be a burger flipper. Warehouse? No, I’m too weak to lift things all day. Government cheques? No, I’m not going to put that I’m disabled on paper.
NEETs are like incels in that this contrived helplessness and hopelessness is somehow also another source of pleasure or attention-seeking behavior that I can’t wrap my head around. They know as a matter of fact that they are subhuman but they like to show it off like it makes them better than you in a backwards way.