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6 comments

[–] E-werd 1 points (+1|-0) Edited

With everybody in the same class in junior high school it gave unpopular kids the opportunity to hang around with popular ones for the first time. And with all of the homophobia created by AIDS everyone wanted to be mature.

What?

Then, with many moving away or going to different high schools, when I entered grade 9 people flipped out. For example, after tolerating a redhead for a year, kids would start high school and fly into a rage and have contempt for a skinny boy with dark hair and freckles.

What?

I'm concerned for you.

What it says is:

A) "With everybody in the same class in junior high school it gave unpopular kids the opportunity to hang around with popular ones for the first time. And with all of the homophobia created by AIDS everyone wanted to be mature."

B) "Then, with many moving away or going to different high schools, when I entered grade 9 people flipped out. For example, after tolerating a redhead for a year, kids would start high school and fly into a rage and have contempt for a skinny boy with dark hair and freckles."

Is the reason your here because your not allowed on Reddit?

[–] E-werd 1 points (+1|-0)

The thoughts don't connect, man. What does AIDS have to do with maturity? What does that statement have to do with unpopular kids getting to hang out with popular kids? What does that even have to do with X-Files--because of a shared interest?

Like, if these things do indeed connect then you're assuming everybody else is part of the conversation that you're keeping in your head.

I'm afraid that all of those things do connect.

If you don't believe that AIDS created a lot of homophobia and that had an effect on everyone's thinking, I just cannot help you.

Everyone at one time or another was homophobic.