I don't think society removes boundaries of norms - I think over time, people come to their own decisions about some of these issues, through observing their parents, friends and relatives. Over time, more and more people reach the same conclusions and cultural norms shift. They realize their beliefs might need modification. It's a gradual shift.
Take the above example of pre-marital sex. It's not the like sixties happened overnight and suddenly everyone started practicing free love. I think over time, men and women observed their parents in unhappy marriages and eventually got up the courage to bring it out in the open in a movement and declare that they were going to have sex outside of marriage. They weren't buying the "you get married and live happily ever after" line anymore. They were not going to find themselves sealed into an unhappy situation that they couldn't get out of. I mean, you wouldn't buy a car without taking it out for a test drive. What if it sputtered and stalled? What if it wouldn't start at all?
Of course, there are problems with that, such as kids without fathers and STD's, but it's not like these issues were non-existent before. As a society we're learning how to take care of those issues. Individuals can take it upon themselves to NOT get knocked up or knock someone up. They can get treated for STD's instead of being ashamed and spreading it on to more people if they're educated about the nature of viruses and bacteria, instead of lying to themselves and to others about what what they're doing.
As far as drugs go, people want to use drugs and the law says certain substances are illegal. So what do people do? They buy acetone, anti-freeze, lantern fuel and drano and cook up some meth. It's much better to have a methhead in a make shift lab with volitile chemicals in some apartment than it is to legalize and regulate drugs.
And as for incest, most cases that I've heard about involve abuse of a younger child, or weaker person (either physically, mentally handicapped, or emotionally disturbed) by an older or dominnat person. I just haven't heard of many consensual incest cases that didn't arise out of some weird circumstance of adoption or separation and I couldn't believe that someone had actually created a thread about whether it was right or wrong. And I was even more surprised when my YUCK response was criticized and the thought of me being brainwashed or misinformed about Incest never crossed my mind.
I was reading about the specific case that prompted the creation of this thread and I began to wonder if this was the beginning of some major cultural shift. What if, in the future, I have to take an alternate route through town to avoid some Incest Rights Movement? Is this little case in Germany the beginning of a cultural movement? What if there are closeted incestual relationships all over the world? I doubt that, but then again, homosexuality was listed as a mental disorder up until 1973.
As progressive as I like to think I am, I am going to have to step back and declare myself misinformed, brainwashed, and narrowminded on this issue of incest and I stand by initial Yuck No reaction. If I can't smoke marijuana, then Patrick Stuebing can't diddle his sister.



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) and we discussed the fifties, and how that decade is perceived and has been portrayed in popular culture. And we discussed what had been going on in the decades leading up to the fifties and how instead of the fifties being the last decade of the golden age and happy days and innocence and gee things are swell, they were actually a transitional period. There wasn't some sudden shift between 1959 and the free love, hippie, late sixties --- it was coming, it was brewing and the cultural shift was underway way long before you saw long-haired hippie boys in bellbottoms. 


Yes, if we looked at our lives we can draw our own conclusions. Some people think that writerws have some greater insight into life than the rest of us. No, it's the same, it's just that they have an ability to write.
