Subject: That is why Arthur Weasley is a hero
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Posted on: 2014-02-17 23:57:00 UTC

He isn't blinded by the cultural assumption that the wizards are so much better than the muggles, so he actually attempts to figure out how muggle inventions work!

Honestly, the only thing even approaching an excuse is that wizards are just that much of snobs, even the muggle-borns, after going through Hogwarts, that they don't even consider learning muggle methods. Or the ones that do quietly go back to living hidden among muggles and never have contact with the magical world unless they need supplies.

I have a new headcanon: in ordinary circumstances, many muggleborns get their GED, work muggle jobs, get money changed over at Gringotts when they need to shop in Diagon Alley, teach their children to solve algebra problems and de-gnome the garden, read The Prophet and their local newspapers, send the kids to muggle primary schools so that they'll understand and appreciate muggles (don't go thinking that you're *better* than your grandparents, you're just different, and that's not a bad thing,) and the rest of wizarding society just ignores them. But really, these witches and wizards are better adapted than those that scorn them. They can thrive in both worlds.

The ones that understand muggles don't need to be a more powerful witch or wizard than you, they just need to figure out what the right tools for the job were. They keep a weather eye out for ascendant dark lords, or general anti-muggle sentiment - the muggles in the village are their neighbors, and they (mostly) like them, thank you very much, don't let a lorry hit you on your way out.

When the time comes, they send their children to Hogwarts. They tell them that it's a wonderful place, but that they must always remember where they came from. The parents are huge and blatant nerds, and they remind their kids while standing on platform 9 & 3/4 that with great power comes great responsibility. Sure enough, at Hogwarts these kids are the first to welcome the muggle-borns, the ones who know how to fix a torn robe or spellotape your book back togeher. They pass out their comic books, and wizard-born children freak out over how the pictures don't move. They stay up late telling the other children about computers and classic rock and the first man on the moon, and to eleven year-old students who have never traveled far except by flu powder, side-along apparition, or the Hogwarts train, automobiles and airplanes and video games are a magical and alien world.

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