Thanks to all for the tips. I have an emergency visit to the dentist in an hour. Truly awful night.
I wrote earlier about the way in which boundaries have become fuzzier. As legislation in personal areas has permitted freedoms, with consequential behavioural change, legislation has tightened in areas that are metaphorical of that loosening.
It is the same I think with tackling discrimination. As soon as a number of groups are adequately protected, the instinct for discrimination shifts. It is then gingers or whatever. Makes you think that it is discrimination as behaviour that needs addressing perhaps more than who or what is being discriminated against.
I also think that as social welfare has drifted - the onset of the tougher nation state - everyday folk are required to be nastier in their work roles. Often this makes them uncomfortable. Hence the need to create huge numbers of nasties that are not them - ie the portrayal in society of everyone as a potential rapist, murderer, mugger etc as a defence mechanism. This then leads to cameras and so on. Again, the legislation deals with metaphor, not the realities which are generally milder.
I haven't exactly lived abroad but I have spent 26 weeks of my life sort of living in Geneva. 13 trips to the UN, each lasting a fortnight.
I wrote earlier about the way in which boundaries have become fuzzier. As legislation in personal areas has permitted freedoms, with consequential behavioural change, legislation has tightened in areas that are metaphorical of that loosening.
It is the same I think with tackling discrimination. As soon as a number of groups are adequately protected, the instinct for discrimination shifts. It is then gingers or whatever. Makes you think that it is discrimination as behaviour that needs addressing perhaps more than who or what is being discriminated against.
I also think that as social welfare has drifted - the onset of the tougher nation state - everyday folk are required to be nastier in their work roles. Often this makes them uncomfortable. Hence the need to create huge numbers of nasties that are not them - ie the portrayal in society of everyone as a potential rapist, murderer, mugger etc as a defence mechanism. This then leads to cameras and so on. Again, the legislation deals with metaphor, not the realities which are generally milder.
I haven't exactly lived abroad but I have spent 26 weeks of my life sort of living in Geneva. 13 trips to the UN, each lasting a fortnight.
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