The 90s to me was all about anti-establishment; it was anarchy, not PC. PC was an expression of the state, of religiosity... an oppression by the powers that be.

Saying and expressing the things that were deemed "inappropriate" by the censors--the powers that be--was how we rebelled; it was how we raged against the machine.

For the most part, being non-PC wasn't about hate. It a was a generation in rebellion, humanity against the regime.

If it wasn't cool as a human to do or say something, it was generally recognized and understood, that that wasn't counter-culture, that was hate (or rampant igorance), and hate's not cool.

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I was too involved in myself and all my doom in the 90s to be much aware of the wider world tbh. Being PC/non PC wouldn’t have even occurred to me.

But there was music, there was always music.

90s (to me) were hanging out in book stores collecting stationary supplies and stickers, recording stuff off the radio onto cassette tapes

and a lot of nintendo