The multivariable life
One of my favorite childhood stories was about a ruthless innkeeper on a deserted island. Whenever sea-folks sojourn in his hotel, he would bind them to a chair and measure their heights. Those he thinks to be too tall he would cut and butcher, and of those he thinks to be too short he would pry their joints apart until all his guests fit into a certain height that the innkeeper considers to be ideal. The moral of the tale is simple: we cannot expect everyone to be the same, whether physically or psychologically, and it is immoral to twist people into what they are not to satisfy our own standard.