this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2025
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[–] DeuceMcInaugh@piefed.social 47 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

We’re in an ever stranger situation than our predecessors, I think, for having all this information in our pockets instantly

[–] TrickDacy@lemmy.world 21 points 13 hours ago

Bingo. If humans were logical, having access to all this data would probably do more good than harm. Instead, people all flood into social media streams that show them they are correct to be racists, believe lies, or to care about nothing that truly matters.

[–] PaupersSerenade@sh.itjust.works 28 points 16 hours ago

Rarely does history dwell on the individual, especially when you cover hundreds of years in a class. I will say that I was taught about the leading factors of WW2 far more than WW1. A lot of it dwelt on a people suffering from the weight of reparations stacked upon the general weight of losing a war. I don’t say this to justify either timeframes decline to fascism, but to draw a parallel.

In my opinion and personal experience the general population of the US has so much less power (purchasing and otherwise) and they’re mad. They want to be mad at something tangible and fascist direct it toward minorities.

[–] ameancow@lemmy.world 24 points 8 hours ago (2 children)

Sometimes I stop everything I'm doing as a comfortable person with a job and income and food and a home and it hits me that there is a genocide happening in this moment and children being murdered with state-sponsored weapons, and it's crippling.

I am not a young person, I have seen some shit in my decades. But it still hurts like hell every time I think about the suffering we're still allowing as a species and that feeling and sensitivity to the knowledge has only gotten worse as I've gotten older. Greater awareness leads to greater pain because you start to see the whole picture; what we are as a species, what we can and cannot do, and how much sorrow and misery we put each other through needlessly.

[–] treesapx@lemmy.world 11 points 5 hours ago

This is what really hit me reading Mark Twain's autobiography when he started describing the atrocities by the US government against Native Americans.

His autobiography was dictated to a stenographer which he then edited later. This way it has the feeling of a simple discussion with Twain, and because of this the discussion of tragedy as a current event, just as you and I would chat over a coffee, really hits home how little we've changed.

[–] agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 hours ago

I often come across as cold and unsympathetic, severe and uncompassionate.

That's because I'm extremely empathetic, toward all life. I don't even kill bugs. But I know too much. I'm aware of mass suffering around the world, needless and preventable.

I'll give myself little spaces of time to just sit and think about everything, and it just turns into ugly weeping. You can't function like that. The only way I can get through my day is by turning that dial waaaay down outside of my designated mourning time.

[–] Juice@midwest.social 21 points 8 hours ago

When I was in high school I read a play called "Rhinoceros" about a small town where people kept turning into rhinos except the main character, who was kind of a John Nada worker type. He just watched friend after friend transformed into these wild destructive beasts, while the rest of the townspeople told the main character he was over reacting, paranoid, over thinking things. Then that townsperson or friend would turn into a rhino and go on a rampage.

I didn't understand it in 1996. But in the last 5 years or so I was thinking about it, looked it up to see what it was about and reread it. Apparently, its about people turning into fascists, and I was like ooooohhhhhh yeah that's dead on.

I also read lots of history but there is something about cultural work, maybe especially fictional, that let's us explore social and cultural themes within our own hearts and minds in a way that actually affords a better understanding of history. I used to get a little irritated by people quoting Margaret Atwood and George Orwell in political discussion, like engage with actual political history and theory, but now I realize you can read like 3-4 absolute doorstop books about the history of Russia from like 1850-1935, or you can read Animal Farm in a day and get the gist. The gist isn't good enough for some organizing and political work, but its a good enough principled foundation for the vast majority of people, esp young people. I just wish Orwell got to the part where Napoleon slaughters all the pigs who helped him take control of the farm in the first place.

[–] DarkFuture@lemmy.world 15 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

I've come to the realization that I'm going to live in a society that continues to destabilize for the rest of my life because a high enough percentage of the population is so unrealistically stupid that it can't do anything other than continue to destabilize. There's going to be no guarantee that I'll be comfortable or even safe in my old age and I'll probably work until I die.

With that in mind, I'm coping by coasting. I'm putting less into my job. I'm taking it less seriously. I'm not doing my best on purpose. Why would I give everything I can to help a failing, idiotic society? I'm locked in. I have to work in a form of wage slavery in order to survive. But I'll be damned if I give it my all. The system doesn't deserve my all. I'm slowly learning to let go in all the ways I can so that all this shithole society can get out of me is my bare minimum, which is all it deserves.

[–] AcidiclyBasicGlitch@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

This comment made me feel slightly better.

There are certain things that I refuse to let myself check out from because I know I morally I need to do them. That moral aspect is what makes it even possible to kind of snap out of the fog and focus.

But then there are also things where I am finding it increasingly harder to keep pretending for even 5 minutes that this is normal. In many ways, it feels immoral to pretend, and at times it kind of seems like my mind and body just flat out refuses to allow me to put aside reality and give it my all to focus on what I am supposed to be doing.

I feel like that's an important distinction. When I feel like I really need to do something, I suddenly become much more clear headed and can sustain focus. When it comes to what I'm supposed to do, that is a different story entirely.

Like going through the motions for the mundane things is about all anyone can expect for now, because it's more insane to pretend that any of this is just part of a sane and normal life than it is to at least acknowledge the fire surrounding us.

I know there are some people that are still pretending, and they get mad and frustrated that others aren't. Sometimes I feel bad about it, but your comment has me wondering if maybe we need to reach that point where nobody can just keep pretending. Maybe once everybody can stop focusing on what we're supposed to be doing if we pretend it still matters, we can all finally focus on what we need to be doing to make it matter again.

[–] Kolanaki@pawb.social 12 points 17 hours ago

The kinds of things I was into always had a dude who was constantly hungry. That kinda makes it easy to relate to. No matter what crazy world ending shit was going on in the fiction, my dude still has to eat.

[–] betterdeadthanreddit@lemmy.world 9 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (1 children)

I take it as a perspective-adjusting tool. Big stuff makes it into those textbooks and the people who lived through it did all the little day-to-day things as well as they could on the side. They made it -- some, anyway, but enough for us to be here today -- and now it's our turn to embrace the suck until we can hand that off to the next poor bastards.

[–] SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org 1 points 9 hours ago

I am not embracing shit

[–] unconsequential@slrpnk.net 8 points 16 hours ago

Like, you have to figure out what to eat every day. WTH.

[–] vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works 8 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

During the great turmoil of the early 1900s, as war broiled but did not burn my ancestor died of his alcoholism on Skid Row in LA. The truth of history is that it's 99 percent mundanity but with bright spots of activity in certain locations.

[–] Juice@midwest.social 10 points 8 hours ago

"There are decades where nothing happens, and there are weeks when decades happen"

[–] DagwoodIII@piefed.social 4 points 10 hours ago

[off topic?]

"The Zoo Station" by David Downing. It's a novel set in pre-WW2 Germany. the hero is an English reporter living in Berlin. The author does a good job of covering both the problems of being a low level spy, and a guy who has to deal with a son and things like getting his clothes cleaned.

[–] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 hours ago

I feel this so hard.

[–] Jhuskindle@lemmy.world 2 points 2 hours ago

It didn't prepare me for how many people would be in denial or look around and think it's overblown....

[–] AntiBullyRanger@ani.social 2 points 16 hours ago

Someone definitively skipped the Trojan War alright.

[–] teslasaur@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

How would anyone know prepare you? This period is unprecedented in the entire history of the human race. The rate at which technology is changing is making our monkey brains fly off the handle.

We were not evolved for dealing with this much stimulae and attention grabbing. It is realistically and unfortunately taking a toll of collective empathy, world wide. The only thing to do, for your own sake, is to take a digital brake. Go and do things that makes you happy for a while. I've luckily never fallen for the alure of the 140 character brainrot, but it is infuriatingly obvious that others have.

[–] HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world 1 points 43 minutes ago

hey for those of us who have always been a little insane but adaptable, the outside world is just a little more like our inside world.