asbestosman wrote:RenegadeOfPhunk wrote:It's probably to do with the idea that our mind determines - more or less - who we 'really' are.
I would think there's more to it than that. I find, for example, that there isn't as big a taboo attached to other emotional or mental conditions such as depression, schizophrenia, or alzheimer's.
Hmm - yeah. I see what ya saying.
Specifically with alzheimer's, it usually only comes on in old age, so the person 'afflicted' will have had a decent chance of having a "normal" (whatever the hell that's supposed to mean) life most of the time. That may take an edge off the sense of sympathy when compared to other conditions.
But yeah - I see your point on the other two.
If I were to make the joke:
"Schizophrenia beats being alone"
Would anybody be offended by that...?
But then again, is there an inherent required negative for the above joke to 'work'? I'm not sure that this is even about the conditions involved - isn't it also about the nature of the joke itself...?
The joke this thread is about had the structure: 'Even though you've won X, you're still Y'.
This implies that Y is effectively 'losing'.
Does it matter what condition / person / group gets placed into Y? No matter what you placed into Y (and whatever is appropiate to place into X), isn't the end result inherently offensive to 'Y', and anybody who feels badly on behalf of 'Y'?