Fill in the blank, and you've got one of the most annoying phrases I've ever heard. Now, in particular, I mean "I can't do something around here because of the area I live in." I see this most often with my transsexual friends (I'm active in GLBT stuff, 'k?) who will say "I wish I could dress as a girl, but I can't do that around here." I see it sometimes in BDSM communities (I have varied interests, why can't I?) with phrases like "I want to wear a collar, but I can't do that here." I see it plenty of other places, but primarily in the "fringe" or "abdnormal-yet-mostly-normal" where something is perfectly legal and safe, but unusual, and socially "weird".
The thing that gets me most, that a lot of people don't understand - or outright deny, is that we live in an age where you are not socially responsible to anyone you don't want to be. At least that's true of USA and any other civilized country, can't speak for African tribe communities. Which is the crux of the argument. In the old world of society, it ultimately came down to witch hunts. If you were an abnormal, or socially awkward, or something that put you apart from others, there could and usually would be direct physical action. If you enjoyed watching and studying the moon, then someone might think you're strange, and if they're aggressive enough and smart enough, then they could say that you're trying to use witchcraft to change the sky, and you'd get burned at the stake or exiled or something. Just as an example, of course, I can't really relate to any -real- incidents but you get the idea. Historically, if you were strange and someone didn't like that, then they could actually do something about it.
Today, not so much. You can study the moon and talk to and claim that it talks back and invited you for tea. If someone things you're strange, then bullocks to them, you can keep talking with your moon! It would take something as serious as treason or terrorism to get any legal action performed. And (as I most often hear) crossdressing/being transsexual is neither treasonous nor terror-inducing. Well, some people might be terrified, but that's not the intent at least. If you're crossdressing and claiming to be a celebrity, that might get you in trouble, but now you're in a whole other field of debate.
The thing that so many people don't seem to grasp is... you are not accountable to anyone in today's world, at least not socially. You're financially accountable to your bank and taxes, and you're legally accountable to the police and the judge, but you're socially accountable to no one, unless you desire it. If you hold yourself accountable to your church, then that's your choice and is not forced. If you leave your church, nothing bad will happen. Well, bad things may happen, like if you're currently employed by the church, but again that's another issue entirely. The issue is, that Mr. Random Joe on the street doesn't matter. If you want to wear a slave collar and the fast food employee gives you a funny look, nothing is going to happen. The average citizen that so many "non-normals" seem terrified of actually have no sway over your life, unless you allow them.
I just had a talk/argument with a transsexual friend of mine, pre-hormones, who said something along the lines of "I was thinking about going into town tomorrow, dressed, but this really isn't a good state to try that in..." My response basically came down to 1: she does pass as female and the point as moot, and 2: even if she didn't pass, then it wouldn't matter. She's going out in daylight in secure places (ie, not the bad part of town) and if anyone gives her a strange look, that would be the extent of their reaction. I just get so frustrated when people hold themselves back because they're afraid that people who don't matter in the least will care about their choice of happiness.
Discuss.