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12 votes
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The nuclear family was a mistake
14 votes -
Denmark marks Schleswig reunification – 100 years since the people in the region of Schleswig voted either to remain with Germany or to join Denmark
6 votes -
I worry for my teenage boys – the beauty standards for young men are out of control
28 votes -
Mysterious disappearance of Greenland's medieval Norse society in the 15th century came after walruses were hunted almost to extinction, researchers have said
4 votes -
C.S. Lewis - The Inner Ring
6 votes -
The Christian withdrawal experiment
9 votes -
I'd like to talk about the world these days, care to join in?
Hey, friends. I'd like to take a few minutes of your time to talk and converse. Please, feel free to join in. I'm not trying to make any points or whatnot, but I need to get this out of my head....
Hey, friends. I'd like to take a few minutes of your time to talk and converse. Please, feel free to join in. I'm not trying to make any points or whatnot, but I need to get this out of my head.
It doesn't take a rocket surgeon to see that there is a lot going on these days. I know that there's always a lot going on, but it just seems to be on my mind a lot more than it used to. I'm unsure if it's because things out there actually are heating up, if the current news cycle is finally paying some attention, if I'm just more interested/aware as I get older, or if it's some combination of these. Regardless, it just seems like there's so much to think about.
To begin, there's the domestic stuff. We have an inevitable recession coming our way sooner than later (recessions being a feature of our application of Capitalism, after all), and, of course, the mess in the other Washington. I'm doing my best to keep up with the impeachment, while not letting it really "get to me". As I get older, I find that I care more and more about the wellbeing of my country, and the utter shame that is this current administration makes me genuinely concerned for the health of our nation and the people in it. I cannot help but think to myself that I am watching the arguably most significant political crisis since Watergate unfolding before me - live, in real-time. It's wild, as you know that you live through history in the making, but you never really think that you're going to live through something of this caliber.
While I'm hopeful that our own brush with populism will turn out OK (our 3 branch government is remarkably robust), I still worry about us and the other countries that are dealing with it now too. We have Bolsonaro and Duerte, Brexit and Trump. We have the mess in Bolivia, and frankly I still don't exactly have my head wrapped fully around what the hell is actually going on there. We have the trickery of Putin and his loyal cronies. Even populism aside, we have the unrest and violence in Lebanon, Syria, Chile and Iran. And of course, let's not forget our friends in Hong Kong.
I look at the HK situation and feel extra helpless. I was 7 when Tiananmen Square happened, and I kinda remember it. I certainly remember tank man on the news, but that was about it. I see what's going on in Hong Kong and I cannot get past the feeling that they're literally fighting a losing battle for their lives. I can't imagine how they'll survive this without getting steamrolled, unless a foreign power steps in. You know that'll alter the course of the 21st century. I mean, hell. Even if things turn out rosy, this is still probably one of the most significant events of this century. And here I am, watching it in real-time again.
This isn't even touching on the literal concentration camps that China is running for the Uighur Muslims. Shit, even my own country is running camps for children right now. How TF does this even happen? By the time half of us even find out, these camps have already been up and running for a good while. What can you even do?
Then there is a the ever-looming specter that haunts us and feels inescapable: global warming. I don't think I need to elaborate on this one, just a quick peek at the fires and floods, droughts and melting glaciers says it all. Again, we're along for this ride in an enormous mechanism that individually we are wholly powerless against. I sincerely hope that we do manage to engineer our way out of the worst of climate change, but I am honestly not hopeful that we will limit our emissions enough to keep us under the 4° warming that we're seemingly on the trajectory for. I sure won't be alive in 2100, but my youngest nibblings just might - or at least their kids will be. What kind of world are we leaving for them?
How will these things affect and feed off each other? Will we look at the period between WWII and the early 21st century as one of unusual peace and prosperity?
This stuff keeps me up at night, and sometimes it feels like doing your best is just a vain exercise in futility. I know it's not, in that everyone doing their best would make huge changes, and that no matter what happens, I can go to my grave in good conscience knowing that I did what I could. Still, some days it all feels like too much, you know?
Anyway, thank you for listening to me, and letting me talk. There's a few people in my life that share the same concerns, but it's hard to find anyone to talk to about the breadth of all this shit that there is to worry about.
So, anonymous strangers on the internet, how are you feeling about the world situation these days?
21 votes -
Rich robbers: Why do wealthy people shoplift?
10 votes -
Avoid News - Towards a Healthy News Diet [pdf, 2010]
8 votes -
Can tattoos make you healthier?
3 votes -
Women in Norway have the best quality of life according to the latest Women, Peace and Security Index
6 votes -
Financial Bubbles are the Gnostic Heresy: The Voegelin-Minsky Synthesis
5 votes -
How Airbnb is silently changing Himalayan villages
5 votes -
Why you never see your friends anymore
12 votes -
Where do you get your sense of community and belonging from?
I watched this talk with David Brooks and I was blown away. It was an eloquent talk with strong words on how we need to find our sense of community again at a variety of levels (local to...
I watched this talk with David Brooks and I was blown away. It was an eloquent talk with strong words on how we need to find our sense of community again at a variety of levels (local to national).
So I'm curious, what communities are you involved in? If you don't have a sense of belonging, where would you like to belong?
I suppose online communities would count, but I think the point is to have away-from-keyboard interactions because of the additional layers of intimacy.
19 votes -
A high income is a badge of success in many countries, but in Sweden a deep-rooted cultural code called Jantelagen stops many from talking about it
8 votes -
We are in the midst of a mental health crisis – advice about jogging and self-care is not enough
10 votes -
Journey into wokeness: A conversation between Sam Harris and Caitlin Flanagan
4 votes -
“Free time” has been corrupted into “recovery time”: spells of lethargy between periods of work that merely prepare us for the resumption of labor
40 votes -
Norway Sámi community fights for survival as temperatures rise
6 votes -
How ‘safety first’ ethos is destabilizing US society
6 votes -
Rethinking the good city: Vallejo’s bold vision
4 votes -
What explains US mass shootings? International comparisons suggest an answer
22 votes -
How watermelon's reputation got tangled in racism
12 votes -
Are today’s young readers turning on The Catcher in the Rye?
9 votes -
Queer people of color reflect on being told to “go back”
8 votes -
"Cymru am byth!" – How speaking Welsh became cool
12 votes -
How apartheid killed Johannesburg's cycling culture
11 votes -
What are good, modern right-wing values anyways?
I'm in too much of a left-wing echo chamber, to the point where anything conservative or right wing appears to be 'evil' or not necessarily purely right-wing. For example, conservatives generally...
I'm in too much of a left-wing echo chamber, to the point where anything conservative or right wing appears to be 'evil' or not necessarily purely right-wing. For example, conservatives generally promote family values and the family as the foundational unit of a society. But this too often gets grouped together with same/opposite sex marriage arguments. Another point is small government, but that often manifests in deregulation in areas where regulation is now necessary (e.g. environment).
So, what does it mean to be an ethical right-winger today and in the next decade?
40 votes -
'If not I, then who?’: Armed with the internet, Russia’s young people want to remake their world
10 votes -
In what ways is the world better now than it was ten years ago?
I could use some optimism and positive reframing right now, and I'm sure I'm not the only one. As such, I want to know about some good things! Progress and such! In my question, I asked about "the...
I could use some optimism and positive reframing right now, and I'm sure I'm not the only one. As such, I want to know about some good things! Progress and such!
In my question, I asked about "the world" but I am really interested in any example, no matter how global or local. It also doesn't have to be explicitly human-focused, so feel free to gush about the improvements in, say, a programming language you love, or the tabletop gaming ruleset you use. I'm interested in positive examples of all types.
20 votes -
Community can offer a cure to our technology addictions
5 votes -
The American Dream is killing us
14 votes -
In Alaska, climate change is showing increasing signs of disrupting everyday life
12 votes -
South Korean women 'escape the corset' and reject their country's beauty ideals
11 votes -
The loneliness epidemic
15 votes -
Women suffer needless pain because almost everything is designed for men
18 votes -
Moral circle expansion: How humanity’s idea of who deserves moral concern has grown — and will keep growing
9 votes -
The Baraboo Nazi prom photo shocked the world. The city’s response shocked its residents.
14 votes -
Do you think a collapse is coming?
Can be any kind, social, political, environmental, economic etc etc. I'm thinking more on a worldwide scale rather than just one local area, the topic's been on my mind recently.
29 votes -
Excommunicate me from the church of social justice
18 votes -
This is what the life of an incel looks like
32 votes -
"Deep Adaptation": A paper that predicts an inevitable near-term social collapse due to climate change
26 votes -
Kipple field notes
3 votes -
How debt kills
9 votes -
There’s a vanishing resource we’re not talking about - humans are losing our cultural diversity even faster than we’re destroying the planet
27 votes -
Black mecca or most unequal US city: Will the real Atlanta please stand up?
7 votes -
How do you define your masculinity/femininity?
In lieu of the recent Gillette ad, and seeing as the conversation around it has stirred the pot quite a bit, I wanted to propose a conversation where we start from the very beginning: Without yet...
In lieu of the recent Gillette ad, and seeing as the conversation around it has stirred the pot quite a bit, I wanted to propose a conversation where we start from the very beginning:
Without yet talking about subsets, variants, or interpretations of masculinity/femininity (toxic or otherwise). How do you define it for yourself: what makes you masculine or feminine, or what parts of you would you describe as such, do you feel that those things go as universal descriptors or are they specific to your case?
There may also be some deeper questions in here about where you think you gained this conception (your family? your immediate circle of contacts? Role models?) or who you think best embodies your ideal definition of your gender.
23 votes -
Who owns the internet? (What Big Tech’s monopoly powers mean for our culture.)
11 votes