Are we the bad guys in life, as well as in film?

I've been wanting to write this for about three years pretty much ever since I joined the forum, but thought it might be a bit triggering for some.

Now I'm on moderation I guess, IS the time to do it, because if I say anything that is wrongspeak, then at least it might get filtered before I upset anyone.

This thought was triggered many, many years ago when my child was not in her thirties, and we were watching a cartoon and the villain of the piece started to talk about his frustrating life and upbringing etc. and I recognised my own circumstances!  All the things that cartoon villain (and many more screen villains before him) described had been a part of my upbringing, and I'd felt the urge to crush, kill, destroy just like they report, but in my case I found that sort of thing to be really unsatisfying and not the life I wanted to lead lead (or role I wanted to pay?) So evil villainly became a part of my character rather than the whole thing.  

Now to be honest, there are some people here, who lack my ineffably sunny disposition ( Oh that's funny! One of my best..) and may actually be bad guys, but would they know it? Certainly my experience is some of the worst things I've done, I was quite convinced were righteous at the time...

Then there's the way N.T's react to us and then interact with us.

Do THEY see us as the good guys?.

I find this unsettling to contemplate, but today as I read some current events that are happening in the states, where much is being made of the perpetrators Autism diagnosis, and see the discussion starting to happen in "mainstream" (by my standards) media I think we ought to ask oursleves some searching questions about the nature of Autism and have asome answers ready for anyone who ask before we get further marginalised as a group.  

Parents
  • Everyone has these urges, most have difficult circumstances. 

    I make zero mistakes now after enough research. What makes the NT is that they fully repress and intentionally misrepresent expressions as a mode of being. By the MBTi standards, it's the ENTJ that makes the super-villain and the ENFP that is the fragile, reckless, impassioned baddie. 

    Can you convince a mob to burn half a village of women? No. The Autist might have a type of intensity of a lone villain, but it's the sociopaths one needs to be careful of, and by definition, and those can read the masses.

  • I make zero mistakes now after enough research.

    May I be facile before revealing my genuine confusion?

    Congratualtions, JuniperFromGallifrey, I never ever thought I see my imaginary political party finally find a member. Welcome to the "Always Right Party" so far, (subject to checking the veracity of the above statement) you are our sole, fully Qualified member! Awesome!

    O.K. In the real world I don't think you meant that in such a blanket way as I read it, and since actually I've never seen you be really wrong, I'd like to ask for a bit of clarifcation as to what you meant. 

    *Edit* Please. Although I'm supposed to be fairly bright, I really am lost with that sentence.

Reply
  • I make zero mistakes now after enough research.

    May I be facile before revealing my genuine confusion?

    Congratualtions, JuniperFromGallifrey, I never ever thought I see my imaginary political party finally find a member. Welcome to the "Always Right Party" so far, (subject to checking the veracity of the above statement) you are our sole, fully Qualified member! Awesome!

    O.K. In the real world I don't think you meant that in such a blanket way as I read it, and since actually I've never seen you be really wrong, I'd like to ask for a bit of clarifcation as to what you meant. 

    *Edit* Please. Although I'm supposed to be fairly bright, I really am lost with that sentence.

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