Should you always yield your seat to an elderly person on transit?
Counsel
"We have blindly tied mobility assumptions to age, assuming the oldest person is always the weakest. A healthy 65-year-old might be standing next to a 25-year-old with an invisible chronic illness, severe fatigue, or an e..."
The Rules
•Challenge Counsel's logic.
•Judge Gather rules.
•Win, and the case is closed. Lose and Counsel's record grows.
Topic ContextPitting deeply ingrained cultural respect against a growing awareness of diverse, often invisible vulnerabilities, the seemingly simple act of offering a transit seat ignites a complex societal debate. This daily dilemma challenges us to question whether our assumptions about need are genuinely empathetic or merely reinforce rigid hierarchies, overlooking the struggles beneath the surface.
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Gather | Should you always yield your seat to an elderly person on transit?