Smoku wrote:About the Emi + Rin living together, yes, it's a decision from th higher-ups. They thought it's good for them to compensate for one-another, seem making a room with all the limbs.
Little did they know that the girls can do everything solo.
kosherbacon wrote:IIRC, it was a decision by the housing department.
That is just a joke Emi makes. In reality it's just a (funny) coincidence.
I get the feeling that the world of KS, specifically Yamaku, hasn't really transfered from its basic concept to what it should be, or maybe what we envision the school to be. Perhaps this is a serious flaw in the story so far, a lack of exposition.
Many, possibly a majority of the students definitely don't really need help with their daily life. Roughly a third of the student base are blind, and a bit less than that deaf/deafmute. Now, being either is inconvenient to say the least, but both blind and deaf people can operate in daily life, albeit with various levels of difficulty. Blind people set various "cues" in their daily environment to navigate around more efficiently, and are less likely to wander outside of their "comfort zone". Same for deaf, they tend to be less likely to get in contact with non-deaf people, and have to find a way to communicate when they deal with non-deafs (rudimentary signing, learing to read and write, read lips, learning to speak etc). So while it's not
necessary for them to be at the school, the enviroment is one that greatly improves their quality of life by offering plenty of peers to blend in with, and also can step in when actual help is needed (and yes, it is needed at times). In fact, all five of the heroines fit this category, as none of them are true "cripples", unable to get through a day without depending on assistance. Yamaku does not enable these disabled kids to go to a high school (most of them could go to a normal school), it's just specifically designed to support the special nature of its students.
There is a balance to be found: the students of Yamaku are not pitiful cripples who have been gathered in one place to be forgotten, nor are they normal people with lovable character quirks that happen to be things like a lack of limbs or sight. They are disabled, and that makes their lives harder than that of others, but those lives can still be pretty balanced and full.
<Aura> would you squeeze a warm PVC bottle between your thighs and call it "manaka-chan"
<Suriko> I would do it if it wouldn't be so hard to explain to my parents