Oh for pete's sake, any assumption of any group is a generalization. What's so wrong with that? Stereotypes become so for a reason. They vastly apply to the members of a group. They do not apply to every single member, nor does it exist exclusively in that group, but it's still a stereotype for that group.
Everyone generalizes. Aspies generalize too.
Good thread idea, OP.
Shallowness.
They're more preoccupied with peer acceptance than in following their own way in every aspect.
Wait, those are negative, but are they really weaknesses? hmm...
They can't see the (really) big picture at all. Example: About 20 years ago my mother bought some refill soap. It had just a cap, the pump was to be taken from an empty soap. She said it was cheaper than the soap with the pump. "Yes, and more environmentally friendly," I said.
"How?" she asked.
I pointed out that the pump consisted of more plastic than the cap.
She laughed and said that she didn't think that little piece of plastic made any difference. Mentally I
in response. "No," I said. "That little piece of plastic doesn't make any difference. But that little piece of plastic less in every soap we use in a year, plus every soap bottle everyone use during a year, those make a difference!"
She looked at me as if she suddenly had an epiphany. It hadn't even occurred to her. While I can't help but think like that.
Only care about short term goals. This is a particularly huge problem/weakness in politics. What the world needs at this criitical point isn't short term solutions from one election to the next, it's long term solutions with sustainable answers.
Power play comes into this category as well.
Being too conformist. Lots of people live their life as they are expected to and on their death bed they regret things like prioritizing job over family. At least some of them know they're selling out. A colleague of my mother needed a heart attack to realize that she needed to fulfill her dream of going back to her birthplace. She had wanted to move to her mother's house I think it was, but hadn't found a good opportunity. Now she wanted to live the life she wanted and move and take the chance.
NTs are very poorly equipped to deal with people that are different than them, even more so than aspies are (I think this is very normal for everyone though). Even if you're the majority, it still puts you at a disadvantage when you can't deal with someone. (Of course this is an even greater disadvantage to us who suffer for it, but...)
I think NTs have a big weakness in their mind in how they handle something unprecedented, more so than us. Without anything familiar to lean on and without anyone to tell them how to act, they're lost. I think we on the other hand are so used to being out of our element that we could more easily deal with it.
This isn't really based on anything in particular, just assumption on my part.
I'll add more as I think of them.