After watching this man, the oddest thing to me is the comments on YouTube. Most commenters saying something like, "He's not weird, he's just gay" and "The interviewer is so mean" and "I'd like to give him a hug" and "It's society that made him the way he is" and "It's his father who made him the way he is" and "No one gave him the chance to play the piano."
According to this man's nephew, the subject didn't know how to play the piano (he's fantasizing in this video), he was asexual, his family was extremely patient with him despite all of the chaos he caused in their lives. He ultimately killed himself.
According to this man's nephew, the subject didn't know how to play the piano (he's fantasizing in this video), he was asexual, his family was extremely patient with him despite all of the chaos he caused in their lives. He ultimately killed himself.
Immediately upon viewing, I was creeped out, thinking this was something from a horror film. And then I read the majority of the YouTube comments saying this guy was completely normal...
There's an AI concept, based on a biological concept, that I heard about earlier but couldn't find the name of online just now: The gist is: A species (like us humans) is hard-wired to innately reject what seems too unusual for the survival of the species.
I was born in 1965, pre-Internet, and this subject in the video was utterly horrifying to me. And the psychiatrist interviewing him seemed utterly patient and professional. But for Millennials raised on creating their own false identities online, the psychotic was somehow sympathetic and the rational interviewer somehow a "bad guy." This is the psychotic world that Millennials (and leftists in general) want to live in.
As a member of the human species, I protest.
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