Acharya Prashant explains that the reluctance to accept the LGBTQ community stems from a general human tendency to not accept anyone who is not like oneself. He states that people are unwilling to accept anything that is a little out of the way because it is perceived as a threat to their own way of living. People know their way of life does not have much substance, so any deviation becomes an object of suspicion. He clarifies that he is explaining the psychological reason for this reluctance, which is a deep-seated immersion in one particular way of living. The speaker describes this as a pre-defined "script" that most people follow: being born, given a name and religion, going to school and college, getting a job, getting married, having kids, and buying a house. He points out that almost everyone is moving on the same track, and as a result, people are not tolerant of even small deviations. He challenges the audience by asking if they would tolerate someone who refuses to be educated, get a job, or get married, especially a woman. He asserts that anything outside this established script is met with great resistance. The reason for this resistance, Acharya Prashant posits, is that "the script is false." Because it is false, it is insecure and must be protected from any challenge, whereas the truth is not so insecure. He uses the analogy of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall" to illustrate how people have become like assembly-line products, all conforming to the same pattern. He argues that while this uniformity might be acceptable for inanimate objects, it is not right for conscious beings. The problem is more generic than just the queer community; it is about a deep-seated conformity, and the only solution is to educate.