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30 votes
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Parental union dissolution and the gender revolution – how divorce is boosting gender equality in Sweden
13 votes -
I am sick of "providing feedback"
The ongoing attempts to measure everything has gone way too far. Every app constantly has pop-ups asking if you're enjoying the app. It's not just phone apps and websites though, it's everywhere....
The ongoing attempts to measure everything has gone way too far. Every app constantly has pop-ups asking if you're enjoying the app.
It's not just phone apps and websites though, it's everywhere.
Went to an escape room, "Y'all take tips?" "No sir, but if you leave a 5 star review on Google or yelp and mention my name then I will get a bonus!"
Went too the dermatologist, now I'm getting both emails and texts asking for a review.
Sent flowers to an uncle who lost a pet. Got an email and a letter in the mail asking for feedback.
Theaters, restaurants, barbers, hospitals, support tickets, waste hauling, clothes shopping... A million people collecting feedback that goes into some black hole probably only used to punish some poor kid on the front line of customer service.
I'm sick of it, it's worse than the tipping culture fiasco.
99 votes -
The great deterioration of local community was a major driver of the loss of the play-based childhood
26 votes -
The land that doesn’t need Ozempic
40 votes -
Unlocking the mystery of Paris' most secret underground society
14 votes -
AI, automation, and inequality — how do we reach utopia?
Ok, not utopia per se but a post-scarcity-ish economy where people have their basic needs—food, shelter, healthcare—met virtually automatically. A world where, sure, maybe you have to earn money...
Ok, not utopia per se but a post-scarcity-ish economy where people have their basic needs—food, shelter, healthcare—met virtually automatically. A world where, sure, maybe you have to earn money for certain very scarce luxuries like a tropical island trip, jewelry, nightly wagyu steak dinners, or a penthouse overlooking Central Park, but you get enough basic income to eat healthily and decently every day, have a modest but comfortable home, and not stress out about going to the hospital — and then you can choose if you want to work to earn money to buy additional luxuries or just spend your time to do sports, make art or music, pursue an academic interest, counsel or mentor others in your community, or devote yourself to nature conservation.
I want to get this conversation rolling regularly because it's evident that we're on a cusp of a new economic era — one where AI and automation could free us from a lot of menial physical and intellectual labor and the pretense that everyone has to work to earn their continued existence. It's evident that not everyone has to work. If anything, our economy could be more efficient if incompetent or unmotivated folks just stayed at home and got out of other people's way. I think we all know someone who stays in a job because they need it but are actually a net negative on the organization.
It's an open-ended topic, and there's a lot to talk about in this series—like, how would we distribute the fruits of automation? How would we politically achieve those mechanisms of distribution? What does partially automated healthcare look like?—but I think it'd be good to first talk about current economic inefficiencies that should and could be automated away.
25 votes -
Sweden has a global reputation for championing high taxes and social equality, but it has become a European hotspot for the super rich
19 votes -
Inuuteq Storch – who is the first Kaalaleq/Inuit artist to have a solo exhibition at the Venice Biennale – aims to capture ‘the Greenlandic everyday’
9 votes -
How Chinese students experience America
23 votes -
Vancouver’s new mega-development is big, ambitious and undeniably Indigenous
49 votes -
Why the world cannot afford the rich
43 votes -
Northern Sámi, a language spoken in the Arctic, has more than 300 words for snow and a special word for "frightened reindeer" – can it survive in a warmer world?
19 votes -
Denmark's tough laws on begging hit Roma women with few other options – the Roma minority are heavily discriminated against across Europe
21 votes -
Russia is burning up its future
21 votes -
How football made the working class in the UK
2 votes -
Finland used to have one of the highest suicide rates in the world – how the country halved it and saved countless lives
28 votes -
Why are there such profound differences in conceptions of masculinity between Denmark and America?
15 votes -
Seismic City by Joanna Dyl: an economic class and political history of the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake
5 votes -
Loneliness results from an isolating society, not individual failures to pursue connection
45 votes -
Why American cities are squalid
29 votes -
Why are antidepressants so popular in Iceland? | Mindset
6 votes -
Why Germany is rich but Germans are poor and angry
35 votes -
Why don't we help each other?
There was a brief mention of the Amish and their self-sufficiency in the Capitalism topic that got me thinking, so I thought that I'd share my thoughts and start another discussion. My...
There was a brief mention of the Amish and their self-sufficiency in the Capitalism topic that got me thinking, so I thought that I'd share my thoughts and start another discussion.
My understanding of the Amish way of life - as someone who is probably thousands of miles away from them - is that they are not really self-sufficient insomuch as they are insular. They don't like to rely on the government, but they heavily rely on their community.
A lot of us here are leftists - some might even go so far as to call themselves socialists or communists. But for the most part we are advocating for government to provide support, and often it's the federal government rather than their local governments. For those of you who do, my question for you is this: why aren't you trying to help out the locals. And I don't just mean your city, I mean your neighborhood or even just your block.
I'm not talking about things like homeless shelters or nonprofits, I'm talking about mutual aid societies. People are complex; they don't just need things, they need people. They need assurance, motivation, and love. These are things that the government does not provide. The US Surgeon General state we are having a lonliness epidemic right now, and that it's majorly affecting people's health. We've had conversations about the lack of a third place but an even bigger problem is the death of our community hubs. It might be a good thing that people are getting less religious, but losing the church was a much bigger hit than people give credit.
We've had many comments in the past deriding "slacktivism". When you throw your voice into the void, you have no real power. But if you put your voice into your town hall, you have tremendous power. Giving money to the government is like having one billionth of a difference to a great many people, but helping out a person in your community is a huge impact in their life which might be the one thing they need to stop them from falling off a cliff. I don't think you'll find anything more socially gratifying.
I titled this "why don't you", but I'm also very much interested in hearing from people who do community work why they do and how they manage to fit it into their lives.
72 votes -
Queen Margrethe II is the first Danish monarch to abdicate in 900 years – but it is just a sign of the times
17 votes -
Russia’s fabled war ally ‘General Frost’ turns on Moscow
16 votes -
Iceland keeps feeding its tourist boom. Will it push locals out? – about six times as many visitors as residents came to the tiny island last year
8 votes -
Fascinating publication by and for hikikomori (Japanese language)
17 votes -
After 800 years, volcanic activity has returned to Reykjanes – Andri Snær Magnason reflects on the Icelandic relationship with volcanoes
12 votes -
Life begins at forty: The biological and cultural roots of the midlife crisis
10 votes -
New lives in the city: How Taleban have experienced life in Kabul
14 votes -
Links forged half a century ago with Gaza City mean that support for Palestine goes well beyond gesture politics in Tromsø, Norway
8 votes -
A man plagiarized my work: Women, money, and the nation
19 votes -
The world-first Danish strategy to encourage plant-based foods may contain a lesson for other nations looking to cut back on meat – build new demand first
9 votes -
Dutch hit drama ‘Mocro Maffia’ - the brutal, fast-paced TV show has soared to success but critics say it reinforces associations between ethnic minorities and crime
5 votes -
The internet is worse than ever – now what?
28 votes -
China tried to keep kids off social media. Now the elderly are hooked.
27 votes -
Population decline in Japan has led to more than 8000 public school closures since 2002
59 votes -
How meltdowns brought professional advocacy groups to a standstill at a critical moment (2022)
19 votes -
Residents of Luleå, Sweden welcome new campaign encouraging them to say hello to each other during dark winter months
12 votes -
The Russians snitching on colleagues and strangers
18 votes -
Let us return to natural time
40 votes -
The limits of our digital social connections
I don’t think it’s just social media that is making us so unhappy these days. Even texting has lost its power to communicate and connect us. My parents lost one of their best friends to old age...
I don’t think it’s just social media that is making us so unhappy these days. Even texting has lost its power to communicate and connect us.
My parents lost one of their best friends to old age yesterday and none of us can seem to find the right thing to say. It’s all just near misses and misinterpretation of intentions.
When texting first started a generation ago, it seemed a miraculous way to share all kinds of details we never could before. But now it only seems to emphasize what we won’t ever understand about each other.
The bloom is off the rose and our screens no longer seem to make us happy the way they used to.
17 votes -
What are some of the worst things about living in Sweden?
26 votes -
Fika, four-week-holidays and zero overtime – Sweden's stunningly healthy work culture
38 votes -
How Denmark destroyed Greenland: Brief history of Denmark's colonialism in Greenland
17 votes -
Social media algorithms can be redesigned to bridge divides — here’s how
18 votes -
Denmark leads the Women Peace and Security Index 2023/24, scoring more than three times higher than Afghanistan at the bottom of the scale
14 votes -
A vast northern European project is underway to combat isolation by promoting inclusion – we take a look at the results in Norway
9 votes -
The Silk Road: Eight goods traded along the ancient network
7 votes