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But the hairstyle…
>>1
Are you treating me like a disabled person?! 👉
It’s a mismatched checkpoint where they wear clothes for the time being but are indifferent about their hair.
>>3
Even without saying “disabled person,” there are sometimes ordinary people like that too…
>>4
It’s me.
I am a person with disabilities, so I want society to be considerate.
I wish Ms. Suzaki was my mom.
>>5
Mr. Suzaki, don’t you think you’re about to break down? Are you okay?
>>5
If Dr. Suzaki were my mom, I wouldn’t have been born with that kind of intelligence…
Grandma basically does things halfway, doesn’t she?
That’s why children end up with incomplete chromosomes, I suppose.
It’s mainly Grandma’s fault, but considering the times, it’s probably impossible.
If Grandpa didn’t die, that would be too sinful.
They do half-hearted grandmother-like things, but as parents, they don’t get involved, which probably leads to parenting fatigue, but from the outside, it just looks like a failure of multi-pet care.
I wonder if this guy’s intelligence is higher than Mii-chan’s.
>>9
It’s about how to view contraceptive failure.
>>10
It’s not a failure; I’m doing it with the intent to create.
>>9
Mom can’t read either, so it’s about the same, right?
>>9
Do you know the saying “Fifty steps, a hundred steps”?
I won’t say that grandma is blameless, but I honestly think it’s admirable that she raised two problem children by herself as a single woman after getting divorced in that era.
>>12
It’s admirable, but your child is unfit to live in society, so we should see if they can accept receiving support.
>>15
In the first place, it’s questionable whether such support exists in this era, and even if it does, we don’t have the proper tools to be aware of it.
If Mii-chan had received proper education, she might have been able to read kanji at the level of early elementary school.
It seems impossible because it looks like LD.
Somehow your way of speaking sounds more normal than Mii-chan’s, Mom.
>>16
Well, it’s simply that I’m getting older and my parents are healthy too…
>>16
Mom was raised by a typical grandmother.
Mii-chan is Mii-chan’s mom, but…
Mii-chan’s mom probably hasn’t missed four years out of six in elementary school.
Mii-chan’s intelligence level has ended at the level of an elementary school graduate…
Know shame!
It’s okay not to go to school because I can cover it by teaching at home.
At Mii-chan’s house, there is no way I would teach even a millimeter…
Isn’t big brother coming out?
>>24
He’s probably a facility type guy.
It’s an old woman who is concerned about public perception at this late stage.
It’s already widely known that they are children of incest, so it’s far too late.
>>26
Even so, it’s something you worry about.
If you let me stay in the same space as my older brother, the number of kids will increase…
I want to give birth to a new life as proof of my existence before Mii-chan dies.
>>29
Yamada can write the second part about becoming a guardian.
My parents are the worst.
My grandmother is the worst.
School is the worst.
What’s going on?
It’s an environment where it wouldn’t be surprising if my grandmother committed suicide.
It’s those with a half-baked intelligence that can also use the internet, which increases the number of victims.
It would be unbearable to accept it, especially since it involves sibling incest and the children being treated as disabled.
>>35
I was hitting Mii-chan who doesn’t seem to go as I want her to.
If you don’t try to be saved, then there’s nothing left but for you to die as you are.
That is what freedom is.
After reading this story, I feel like Mi-chan’s family is more a victim of bad luck than anyone being at fault.
Nonetheless, it’s horrifying…
>>38
Thinning is necessary, isn’t it?
>>38
In reality, on top of the bad luck of the encounter, the mistakes in each person’s choices and their overwhelming capacities keep piling up, and in the end, it feels like it’s Mii-chan who has to pay the price for it all.
It’s a child whose body has just gotten bigger, like Mama.
I guess they have exceptionally low intelligence.
>>39
I think there’s quite a type of auntie here.
Big brother, you don’t have any lines yet, right?
>>40
Isn’t it big brother who’s going to have grandma drive?
>>40
I’m saying “I’m home,” but there aren’t any lines that show my personality…
There is no need to deliberately thin it out.
If you don’t have the ability to survive, then you’ll just die on your own, you know.
I died.
If a child can only read at the level of a Hiragana picture book, it’s normal to consider that both parents may have intellectual disabilities.
>>48
It might be a learning disability…
The more I read, the more I wonder why we need to support these guys with our taxes.
>>49
It’s because if I don’t keep them, they’ll just stand around.
You can tell just by looking at Mii-chan, right?
>>52
If that means dying in the wild, then maybe that’s fine.
Even wild animals abandon the weak ones…
>>54
I don’t mind dying in the wild.
Simply standing around would likely worsen public safety.
>>54
Humans are different from wild animals…
>>54
Humans are all animals living in human society without exception, and they are different from wild animals.
>>60
Hmm… but isn’t there already no capacity to accommodate things that don’t contribute to productivity or the workforce in today’s society?
>>52
If you trace it back to the root, it means there is a problem with the person buying…
>>49
If we don’t nurture them, they’ll have no choice but to resort to crime as a means of survival.
Also, it will be a society where I could be discarded when I become weak due to an accident or something.
I hope people with disabilities read this and feel encouraged.
I think it would be difficult to determine whether there was an intellectual disability even in times when midwives were twisting babies.
I wonder if they were waiting for death to come naturally by letting things happen freely to a certain extent.
>>59
It seems that in our countryside, they would take you to the mountains and leave you there abandoned.
There is something like a memorial monument standing at the temple.
The Eugenic Protection Law was the right thing…
I don’t want to have a disability because I like it, but the pain of having a disability is truly painful.
The type of disability that becomes clear as one grows up is what is commonly referred to as being possessed by a fox.
In the past, it would have been sending someone to a sitting confinement.
A certain percentage of AV actresses are like this.
Like the one who gets forced to drink cockroach smoothie.
In the end, it’s just a matter of whether to protect them or keep them in prison.
In that case, it would be better for them to be able to work at least to some extent in a workshop.
Will a law be made to dispose of disabled people?
It would be nice if everyone could remain healthy until they die…
>>68
At least it’s impossible to have an intellectual disability from birth.
Ohtake can achieve that much because he doesn’t have an intellectual disability.
If it’s crime to survive, that’s still the better option.
When abandoned anger turns towards society, it can lead to major incidents that adorn the front page of newspapers.
A safety net is necessary.
I understand that supporting people with intellectual disabilities doesn’t provide any benefits, so it’s a waste of tax money.
But if someone who can no longer live like that starts wielding a knife, it would be a serious problem.
>>70
So the idea is that it would be better to kill them before that happens, right?
>>74
Well, if you say something like that, then it makes me want to say you’re an intellectual disabled person, so just die…
>>81
You’re just escaping from the discussion.
It’s not someone who talks about ethics or anything like that.
>>86
There’s no point in debating with someone who says we should kill people with intellectual disabilities in extreme terms…
How about prioritizing organ donation when someone needs a transplant instead of relying on taxpayer support?
The concept of survival of the fittest originally refers to leaving behind superior genes for the sake of natural selection.
By advocating for humanitarianism and actively protecting genes that are unfit for survival, we promote our own degradation as a species.
>>72
Evolutionary theory from 100 years ago without the concepts of sexual selection or group selection.
Whether or not I have a disability, I cannot straightforwardly accept the idea of killing my child just because they have a disability. Humans are not capable of that.
>>73
I guess I just don’t like it normally…
I can’t take care of it.
>>73
In the past, it was done by midwives.
Stillbirth handling
>>80
It seems quite severe to be able to distinguish something at an age when a baby is only a few months old.
>>80
There are still people who believe the nonsensical remarks from the jar.
A family whose karma is so deep that I can only wish for their complete destruction in the disaster.
There was a policy where they would give money to such people to get them neutered, but it is now becoming a problem.
Even when deciding to discard disabled individuals, determining the line at which it is acceptable to do so is too difficult.
>>78
I don’t know when I’ll touch that line.
Therefore, there is support for creating a society where a variety of lifestyles can be lived as widely as possible.
Even if Uematsu-style thought is spilled out, it just ends up being gruesome…
>>79
In other words, the standard is that severely disabled individuals are isolated in remote facilities where even Uematsu cannot enter, and they are in a worse situation than Uematsu.
Even when you grow old, you have to keep taking care of them.
Even if a normal child is born, when they reach an age where they can take care of their own children…
A safety net is really necessary.
On one hand, I seriously understand it.
When you’re actually on the scene, you think every day, “I wonder if these guys won’t die.”
“Write on that shitty notebook you have, ‘Don’t talk to yourself while working’…”
Don’t talk about the number of containers as if it’s infinite!!
I wonder if I’ll accept my death if I become a target for murder, like this nameless person.
>>87
At least I am not inherently intellectually disabled or anything like that.
>>90
It doesn’t seem to be a provocation, but it does seem quite suspicious…
>>94
It seems like it’s that kind of thing, you’re really getting into it all by yourself.
>>99
Isn’t it you who’s getting all excited by yourself like that?
>>90
Really?
If you cut off all the lower-tier people, the next lower tier could be you.
>>90
Are you serious?
Don’t you think that you will never become a disabled person in your life?
Disabilities can be acquired not only from birth but also later on.
Measles in adulthood has more severe symptoms.
I think it’s a good thing that discussions like this become more lively thanks to this manga.
That’s a somewhat strange anonymous.
I truly think that the people working in facilities for those with intellectual disabilities are saints.
I truly respect you, not as a sarcastic remark.
I can’t do it. I’ll definitely get irritated and look down on or despise them.
If anything, even if you’re healthy now, it’s entirely possible to become disabled later on.
Without welfare, society will become a stifling one where people live in fear of when they might find themselves in such a situation and be discarded.
Whether there is actual harm or not, I think Mii-chan feels the same way that she doesn’t have any disabilities.
They’re trying to rack up agreement with “Yeah,” but it’s too unnatural, isn’t it?
If I were to acquire an intellectual disability later in life, wouldn’t my current self’s personality already have departed to heaven?
>>103
I don’t know because I’ve never been there.
It’s similar with dementia, but to what extent do we maintain our own continuity…?
>>103
Even if you think so now, and even if others see it that way, the person’s consciousness is actually continuous. Can you really endure it?
I don’t know how I’ll think about my strange behavior later when I’m intoxicated or half-asleep, but at that moment, I’m completely serious, right?
>>103
In other words, there are plenty of examples that you only realize after becoming an adult…
Mii-chan was told by her grandmother to leave with a bankbook that had 1 million yen, so if that hasn’t changed, it means her entire family didn’t perish in the earthquake.
At least on a rundown bulletin board like this, not being able to respond properly means you’re below average, right?
It’s scary to imagine not being the person you are now.
I want to enter the grave before I become senile.
>>112
Let’s go to Canada!
>>116
In that case, I’ll have to start by preparing and hiring an interpreter…
I think intellectual disabilities and physical disabilities are fundamentally different things.
The former will die on its own without the government taking direct action.
>>113
For some reason, there are many people with severe conditions who have shorter lifespans.
A friend also left us before turning 40.
>>117
I don’t know if I’m using my energy to live in a different place or what.
>>121
Since the blueprint of the brain is bugged, the blueprints of other parts must be bugged too.
Die.
>>117
The former can’t manage moderation.
Of course, I can’t maintain a balanced diet, and I can’t get adequate exercise either.
When it becomes severe, the sense of seasonal clothing becomes completely out of whack, and it becomes difficult to maintain cleanliness.
I can’t rely on a doctor even if I become ill.
>>123
It has an unpleasant persuasiveness…
There’s a story about someone not realizing that their tongue was slurred due to a stroke, but I wonder if it’s like that.
I write down the things I shouldn’t do and the things I have to do in my notepad, you know.
In the end, writing in a notebook is done by the crazy person themselves.
I want to write something, but I won’t! Hahaha!
I really wish that bastard would die.
If we exclude individuals with intellectual disabilities, then next we might exclude those with physical disabilities too! And after that, it feels like we could expand to exclude people who wear glasses or those who don’t have children.
Hair is quite literally the foundation of a clean image.
Even with a buzz cut, if I don’t shave it properly once a week, it becomes patchy and feels unclean.
We have various issues with thinning out on purpose.
It’s just right to not stop moving towards death on your own.
It’s dangerous to unilaterally determine that someone has an intellectual problem, as it can sometimes be influenced by a discrepancy with societal structures.
>>126
There may be suitable jobs for people with disabilities, but there are fewer jobs that they can adapt to.
Let’s go to the facility together!
Those who are prone to impulse buying find that it is the only thing that satisfies their brain’s dopamine.
Shopping is the only pleasure for the person, even though family and others try to stop them.
Instead of saving, I even spend my monthly food expenses on buying toys.
>>127
Even healthy people can have shopping addiction, so I can’t say I don’t understand how they feel…
>>129
Even if you say it’s dependence, for example, you would probably keep the things you bought, right?
What’s severe is that I bought something last month, sold it the next month, and then went shopping again.
The thing that was sold is being sold to buy what I want to buy…
>>133
Scary…
I’m not afraid to say this, but due to my job, I often meet people with developmental disabilities.
There are strangely many people who like trains, military, and special effects.
>>130
It’s also military.
I wonder what draws me in.
>>132
Without fear of misunderstanding, I’ll also say that there are many dinosaur lovers too.
>>132
I don’t understand.
I guess I honestly like things that are heroic and move around a lot.
It may just be the people I’ve met, but there seems to be a strong tendency to prefer Vietnam over modern warfare.
>>130
I’ve heard this a lot and I can feel it, but I wonder if anyone has done research on it.
>>136
I don’t know about military enthusiasts and tokusatsu fans, but train lovers probably like it because of their tendency to prefer regularity.
>>130
Is there no gender difference in this?
Many boys originally like that kind of thing, but girls, as expected, have fewer who are inclined towards it since childhood.
A society that kills inferior people is just too scary, right?
I don’t know when I’ll fit into that frame.
>>131
Welfare is not just for those who are disadvantaged; it is also for ordinary people, as you never know when you might become one of them.
People like this naturally develop their personality based on their environment, but the process of how that formation occurs isn’t easily visible to others.
The only outcome that remains is the worst impression.
Military stuff is understandable; it looks cool when you watch movies.
I like Gundam and V too, but it seems like you’re just increasingly building illegal content that I don’t like.
>>143
What happened all of a sudden…?
>>143
For a moment, I wondered why the V Gundam was called out specifically…
>>149
Indeed, at that time, Director Tomino was suffering.
>>149
Well, there are disabled people on the forum who just can’t help but love V Gundam…
Isn’t it just that they like childish things because their inner self hasn’t grown up close enough to a child’s level?
>>146
Don’t shoot, you’ll hit someone.
I’m genuinely scared that there’s a suspicion my dad can’t even speak a language.
Also, Mu-chan is quite the light…
Even now, a preference for the Vietnam War is rare.
Isn’t it that girls end up liking to dress up after all?
Anyone who likes V Gundam is crazy.
I get the impression that there are a lot of beauty enthusiasts, both men and women, around me.
It’s quite helpful.
I thought that maybe special effects shows have a certain template and little variation, which makes them feel soothing.
Not everyone I like thinks the same way, though.
Special effects, how should I put it, sometimes there’s a connection between dots…
Whether the type of person who freezes time when they were a child simply likes it or it’s a functional issue can’t really be determined without looking at each individual properly.
>>158
This is really true.
I totally fell in love with Fish-kun when I was a child and have been studying him ever since.
When I went to a special effects event, there was someone sitting nearby who looked like that.
I feel like it applies that children with autism often like trains.
There are some people who are going crazy because they can’t tolerate the trend of being unkind to disabled individuals.
I don’t think such an era will come unless the lives of healthy individuals are stable.
>>163
Disabled people easily threaten the lives of able-bodied individuals, you know.
My homeroom teacher for a year was garbage, but I feel like I had decent people around me, right, Mii-chan?
Well, my family luck was the worst…
>>164
Even after becoming an adult, I was able to meet the store manager and Yamada.
Whether the two people are decent human beings or not is beside the point.
I have to study how to ride the train, so does that mean I become interested in it as is?
Does the F91V gun-adhesion disabled person come here too?
I wonder if only those who have hobbies suitable for just talking endlessly about trivial knowledge will surface.
It’s not just that trains are reliable, but seriously, there are a lot of crazy things in that area…
It’s amazing to have had a teacher in the 90s who incorporated such cutting-edge knowledge…
>>171
It’s fiction.
>>171
I wonder if the reason they knew about things at this level back then was because they were passionate about education or because they graduated from a high-level university.
It’s hard to say anything about the fact that development has a military otaku and dinosaur otaku because it’s not easily visible.
The types of people that Mii-chan attracts are way too problematic compared to Mii-chan herself.
Isn’t this Mii-chan’s actual highest educational background preschool or something?
Mii-chan’s being born in the countryside wasn’t good either.
I thought so, but maybe it was similar in Tokyo in the 90s too?
Believing that someone is labeling others with unfounded prejudice is a step toward a mental illness.
Watching the past arc makes it clear that it was already over when I shook off Mu-chan, my lifelong friend.
>>178
Muu-chan was waiting at the usual standing area all that time after that…
>>178
The irony that it’s better to be as heavy as Muu-chan.
Is it true… is Mr. Yamada a real person?
The answer to that question is suddenly revealed at the climax of the story.
Among people with disabilities, those who have lost their limits can directly cause harm, but the ones who are most threatening are the failed activists, those worthless individuals…
As long as we eliminate the inherently aggressive individuals, coexistence should be possible.
Mii-chan says that she is not a disabled person!