• ashok36@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    The older I get the more I agree with this.

    Like, we won. We did it. We have enough food, we can build enough homes, we can build enough clean energy to fulfill our requirements if we’re halfway smart about it. What the fuck are we doing?

    • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      This is what kills me about modern day living. What the fuck are we doing? Innovations (AI) dont fucking help people anymore. All we’re doing is chasing profits and letting everything else rot. I feel like I’m living in some FromSoft game before the player comes in to clear out all the ancients holding onto the decay.

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        That might just be because conservatives and liberals, have always been those ancients holding back society.

        In 1776 the conservatives were Loyalists, the progressives were Patriots.

        In 1789 the conservatives were Right Wing, the progressives were Left Wing.

        In 1860 the conservatives were Confederates, the progressives were The Union.

        In 1940 the conservatives were The Axis, the progressives were The Allies.

      • reddithalation@sopuli.xyz
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        1 month ago

        Innovations still help people loads, that’s a crazy pessimistic generalization.

        Yes of course the trashy tech bro nonsense isn’t helping you, but what about RNA vaccines during covid? What about all of the medical work and innovation going into cancer treatment? What about all of the work and innovation going into reducing carbon emissions so we don’t ruin our planet? I could go on for a long time.

        Real innovation in mainstream tech may be mostly stagnant and lame, but there will always be useful and helpful innovation.

        • Sanctus@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Of course, there still are helpful innovations. I guess I should say it’s obvious 85% of corporations are just profit chasing and rent seeking at this point. There is no global drive forward anymore. Everything is about squeezing the most profit out of whatever. Our infrastructure alone is proof of that.

    • xenoclast@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      We’ve made farming a capitalist system. It only functions if there’s scarcity. A farmer can’t feed their family or farm their fields without paying bribes to machine companies.

      And politicians vilify “subsidies” to farmers. Our society should be “funding” food production as a basic human right. It would take about 1% of the US military budget to completely socialize food production and feed everyone. It’s disgusting.

      I don’t think capitalism is inherently evil. Just the people in control of the wealth.

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Even worse, we have been producing, and throwing away, so much food that the US by itself could feed the entire world a couple times over. We don’t need to spend more money to fix food production and healthcare, we need to spend less.

        • xenoclast@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Yeah. This is wild. I bet it’s very similar to solar or wind power production. The places where it’s cheap to produce, doesn’t have a lot of need. The places where it’s needed, it’s difficult to get.

          There’s probably a lot of logistical problems that need solving… but that’s easy stuff. Humans can catch fish in the north sea, send it to Malaysia to be cut and frozen and boxed, to be sold to a person in England within a few days…

      • TokenBoomer@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Once anyone understands this , nothing else politically matters. There is no left or right. There is no tankie or liberal.

        There is only rich… and poor.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Can we? So much of our modern standard of living comes from extractionary industry.

      We pollute our waterways with our mining and drilling. We increasingly rely on prison labor for everything from agriculture to fire fighting. We’ve de-industrialized the Rust Belt so we could exploit low wage workers abroad. Our biggest sectors are Finance (which creates nothing material) and Tech (which increasingly focuses on Crypto and LLMs). Our airline industry is failing. Our semiconductor industry is failing. Our steel industry is being sold off to Japan.

      That’s before you get into how natural disasters routinely shut down major urban centers for days or weeks at a time. And how flooding is obliterating enormous chunks of our housing stock. And how our roads and bridges are decades past their expiration date.

      Idk if we’ve won. I get the feeling that we’re all living on borrowed time, and we’ve actually lost big relative to what we could have enjoyed.

      • uis
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        1 month ago

        We increasingly rely on prison labor for everything from agriculture to fire fighting.

        Only USA does. The only country that did similar things was USSR. It was. Now USA the only is.

        Even EU has better standards of living AND not use slave labour of prisoners.

        Our semiconductor industry is failing.

        Assuming you are from USA, your semiconductor industry is just fine.

        • volodya_ilich
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          1 month ago

          The only country that did similar things was USSR.

          The USSR by all accounts decreasingly relied on prison labor after WW2 and Stalinism ended. By the 60s, forced labor was anecdotic, and the conditions of people in the gulag system (which shifted from forced labor during Stalinism to mostly reeducation afterwards) were better than those in normal prisons to the point of prison being a punishment to rebellious gulag workers.

    • Pringles
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      1 month ago

      What made us successful as a species, required us to be ruthless by design.

      • paddirn@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I feel like it was more learning to work together that’s made us so successful compared to other animals. Not having to spend our lives solely dedicated to hunting/growing food for ourselves and our families has allowed people to specialize in other fields. The advancement of science wouldn’t have been possible without people collaborating and working together, though conflict has also played a role as well. Ruthlessness only works for a small number of individuals who exploit the good will of others, but the whole thing falls apart if everybody was always ruthless.

      • volodya_ilich
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        1 month ago

        That’s patently false. Before agriculture, societies were just tribes of at most a hundred individuals, with not much in the way of hierarchy due to the lack of division of labor, essentially a very primitive form of anarcho-communism. Humans are extremely empathetic and there’s plenty of evidence that prehistoric humans took care of people with disabilities or with serious injuries despite them possibly (not necessarily) being a liability for the tribe in terms of food-to-labor ratio.

        • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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          1 month ago

          Tribes that fought each other for hunting grounds

          The taking care of your own when it’s a handful of people doesn’t scale up to millions

          • volodya_ilich
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            1 month ago

            Tribes that fought each other for hunting grounds

            So you agree that by human nature humans can do both good and bad things, and that society is the one that imposes which ones we do?

            The taking care of your own when it’s a handful of people doesn’t scale up to millions

            It kinda does, look at Cuba. Peaceful as it gets, extremely high number of doctors per capita to the point of exporting doctors in times of crisis in other countries, fastest country to vaccinate its population against COVID, guaranteed housing for everyone, really low crime rates and no mafias or drug cartels… You can accuse Cuba of many things, but it proves you can take care of millions of people

              • volodya_ilich
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                1 month ago

                A comment as smart as your username. Why take actual data when you can take personal experience, amirite?

                Edit: my comment was written before links were provided through an edit to the previous comment

                  • volodya_ilich
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                    1 month ago

                    Your source aren’t even related to anything the conversation talked about. You’re bringing an article by a Washington-based think tank to talk about oppression in Cuba, and the economic conditions of an island under an economic blockade. How does that invalidate, or even remotely have anything to do with, my previous points? The conversation was about “taking care of people instead of being violent”. That Cuba manages to do so even in a context of relative poverty, tells us a lot about what humans can do “when talking about millions”

      • Crikeste
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        1 month ago

        Somebody read and agreed with Might is Right…

        What made us successful as a species is our societies and those came as a direct rejection of ‘ruthlessness’. Society is built on cooperation.

        Sure, we’re still bloodthirsty monsters. But that will be our downfall.

    • DarkCloud@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      It’s the problem of “political deactivation” it’s in part a cultural issue, in part a byproduct of capitalism.

      9-5 jobs kill a lot of political activism. Inculcation into cultural traumas that make the system seem unchangeable by “the little people”… These are the ingredients for “political deactivation”.

      People want to stay an alert and informed member of society, but that doesn’t necessarily result in activism or change. In fact sometimes it makes people less likely to try to change things.

      • uis
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        1 month ago

        9-5 jobs kill a lot of political activism. Inculcation into cultural traumas that make the system seem unchangeable by “the little people”… These are the ingredients for “political deactivation”.

        Welcome to 1916 Russia, when all non-Imperialists(not only Bolsheviks) were saying, that 6-day work week prevents prevents people from becoming citizens. Next step would be mandatory education.

    • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      What the fuck are we doing?

      A mortgage (not rent!) for a 3 bedroom house is $1,400. Live somewhere cheaper, you don’t need to live in/near a city.

      If you do, that’s fine, just recognize that is something you are choosing to pay for.

      • yrmp@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Damn dude. Why didn’t I think about that? All I have to do is work 80 hours a week at the gas station, send my kids to substandard schools, not buy decent food, not have access to public transit, not have access to decent medical care, not have any cultural options, be white since rural areas are not kind to people of color, drive 40+ minutes to anything worth driving to, not have municipal water or sewage or possibly trash pickup, etc.

        Why do I keep wanting to live in places with services and good quality of life in a capitalist country where I make 3x the median wage and still can’t buy a house? Silly me.

        In case you didn’t pick up on it, I’ve lived in rural areas previously, and I’d rather rent for the rest of my life than ever do that again.

      • intensely_human
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        1 month ago

        I don’t really understand how you don’t understand that buying a house requires cash on hand.

        • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Closing costs can be rolled into the mortgage and PMI drastically reduces how much is required for a downpayment.

          Rents are also much cheaper in these areas too, which makes it much easier to save up for a PMI lowered downpayment.

      • volodya_ilich
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        1 month ago

        This mofo saying that living in a city (56% of humans, 4.4bn people, live in cities) should be a luxury.