• morphballganon@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Things are shittier by design. It’s called planned obsolescence. Things are designed to maximize profits:

    • crappy quality
    • high price
    • bonus of making you buy another one when the first one breaks
  • Mellow@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    People today tend to fixate on the things that are out of their control. Perhaps it’s because we have lost our coping mechanisms. Perhaps it’s because they never learned any. We live in the most technologically advanced point in time we have ever known. Few of us need to go out and till the earth to grow our own food. The majority of us don’t have to physically work as hard as previous generations. Adults and our children find their enjoyment and existential dread by watching tiny screens filled with useless entertainment. Maybe things are fine. We just make shitty choices about what to do with our time, and what we give our attention to.

  • SGG@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Both.

    The top 0.01% are able to exert more and more influence over the world, and are using it to concentrate wealth even more into their own pockets.

    And regular people have access to smartphones that allow them to communicate worldwide instantly. The cost of more basic smartphones has plummeted, so more people have more cameras connected straight to social media.

    But it’s also that some things are genuinely worse. I am fairly sure that there are still more slaves alive today than at any other point in history. However as a percentage I believe it’s lower, it’s just due to the world population being so high.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    I’d say shittier. When I was little, politicians were bad but were at least relatively sane. Now it’s just one big game of Moby Dick.

  • WindyRebel@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Tl;dr: who knows?

    This is an interesting question. I’m sure someone will say yes and use data. My thoughts are I don’t know and we can’t truly know.

    If we’re more aware of the shittiness, then how can we be sure it wasn’t just as shitty before or less shitty than now? Data relies on documentation and documentation has been, and continues to be, reported sporadically or things are unsolved and thus omitted.

  • mwguy@infosec.pub
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    7 months ago

    Probably the latter. Almost nothing that sucked today sucked less 20, 40, 60, 80 etc… years ago. They almost universally sucked more. We’re just more aware.

    For example, cops have always been beating black people; but that wasn’t common knowledge for most until recently.

  • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    You wrote this on what even to recent ancestors of yours would be classified as Clarke Tech, AKA “Indistinguishable From Magic”

    We have some new problems, some old problems, some problems that are getting better and some that are getting worse, that’s just how history works most of the time.

    The significant change vs 20 or 30 years ago is the increased attention focus on those bad things because literally every form of media has at least some form of perverse incentive to fixate on those bad things “if it bleeds it leads”, an idea so old it’s how the western world knows about Vlad the Impaler some also ran count of part of Romania that spent more time as a hostage than he did as a ruler, but who ruled with a hand so bloody that it inspired the creation of one of the three quintessential gothic horrors of English literature.

  • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    If I can use a floor cleaning metaphor:

    The floor was pretty filthy in the 20th century, but a lot of it was swept under the rug so it looked pretty clean at casual glance.

    Thusfar in the 20th century, we threw out the rug and bought a smaller one, did a modest job at cleaning up some of the dirt under it, and there’s a small number of people who deliberately shit on the rug because being decent human beings isn’t a thing they can do.

    And I think that brings us to 2024.

    • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 months ago

      there’s also a fully automatic turbo-vacuum sitting in the closet, which the people who shit on the carpet are actively restricting our access to and trying to make us forget it exists.

  • hperrin@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Some things are slightly shittier, some things are way shittier, and a lot of things are a lot better. What do you mean specifically?

    Politics and the Supreme Court have gotten a lot shittier since 2016 (like a steep decline, rather than the slight decline before). The wealth gap has been getting shittier since the 70s. The housing market is shitty if you’re young or don’t have generational wealth.

    Technology and medicine have gotten way better over the last ~100 years. General consumer safety has gotten way better since the 50s.

    Climate change is killing the planet. Deregulation is making climate change worse. Green energy isn’t coming fast enough.

    Capitalism and specifically the notion that corporations have a duty to the shareholders has made companies and products shittier, but TVs are really cheap, and computers are really fast.

    Robotics has gotten incredibly advanced, as has AI. Whether that’s shitty is pretty much up to opinion. I’d say it’s neutral, and depends on how they’re used.

    Speaking of which, war was already horrifying, and now robots have made it vastly more horrifying. I don’t see any way that’s going to stop.

    Food has become either really nutrient dense and amazing or really calorie dense and horrible, depending on how much money you have.

    Speaking of money, there are a handful of people who have like half of the money. Maybe the guillotine went out of style too soon.

    Video games and movies basically just look indistinguishable from reality now. And deep fakes are about to make it a lot easier to create that kind of realism.

    For the most part, high speed internet access has slowly been getting better and better, both in speed and availability. Surprisingly, it’s stayed about the same percentage of the median income while doing so.

    Streaming services have gotten so shitty it’s unbelievable that they’re still in business. But piracy has been making a comeback, and self hosting pirated content has gotten a lot easier. Physical media is also making a comeback.

    Bigotry has gotten worse as a problem, but not worse in terms of percentage of people who are discriminatory. It’s just that the extreme bigots have basically taken over one of the political parties. (I mean, it basically was the party of bigotry before, but they had the decency to be subtle about it.) The younger generation can hopefully fix that problem as they enter voting age.

    That’s all I can think of for now.

      • shiftymccool@programming.dev
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        7 months ago

        If you’re from the US, you’re going to talk about the US. You want people from other parts of the world to speak for you? No? Then shut up

        • witchergeraltofrivia@lemm.ee
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          7 months ago

          when addressing a global community, writing “US supreme court” or “supreme court in US” instead of just “supreme court” is not a lot to expect and neither is that hard. also your argument is shit.

          • papalonian@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            I think they were just speaking (typing…) conversationally rather than “addressing a global community”. Obviously a comment on an Internet forum is addressing a global community, but it’s not a formal conversation, and as long as you understood the comment I don’t get the need to complain about US defaultism here.

  • jubilationtcornpone@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    Here’s a brief snapshot of US history between 1962-1974, when my parents were school age.

    • Soviet submarine B-59 comes terrifyingly close to starting a nuclear war with the United States (1962). This event was unknown at the time but the threat of nuclear war was very real.
    • The Vietnam War begins (1962).
    • President John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas(1963).
    • Alabama governor George Wallace makes the now famous declaration in his innaugeral address, “…segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever.” (1963).
    • The Harlem [race] riot marks the first of numerous violent race riots across the country (1964).
    • Malcolm X is assassinated in New York City (1965).
    • Martin Luther King is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee (1968).
    • Bobby Kennedy is assassinated in Los Angeles, California after winning the California democratic presidential primary (1968).
    • 4 College students are killed and 9 more wounded after being fired upon by the Ohio National Guard at Kent State University.
    • Richard Nixon becomes the first and only US President to resign after the Watergate scandal (1974).

    And those are just some of the major highlights. Things have been plenty shitty in the past.

  • stoly@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    People tend to be more educated and more empathetic. Violent crime is significantly down to the lowest levels ever, especially compared to the 70s.

    What sucks is that some people are becoming irrelevant: old age, certain political beliefs, certain religious beliefs, etc. They are burning down the house on the way out. Also the house of cards that is the economy that was always going to collapse one day is now collapsing.

    Socially we’re better off. Economically we’re worse off. I suspect that we go back to a mainly urban and more sustainable form of living like prior to the baby boom.

  • johan@feddit.nl
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    7 months ago

    How do you define “things”?

    On a global scale and on average, life for humans is getting significantly better than, say, a century ago. The number of people dying from preventable diseases, war, natural disasters has been steadily going down for a while now.

    Of course there are many more people on earth than there were 100 years ago, so accumulatively there is a lot more suffering now.

    Also, the lives of individual people, the state of certain countries and areas are certainly getting worse.

    As for non-human animals… For most of them the world is getting increasingly less habitable and for those who are raised in an industrial setting for human consumption, living conditions are largely atrocious.

    I think your question is too broad for a single answer. But you might be interested in this now 17 year old (!) TED talk by the late Hans Rosling, which at least partially answers your question: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hVimVzgtD6w

    • Lightborne@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      100 years ago there were more things that just happened to us that we couldn’t do anything about. It’s hard to eradicate a virus when you don’t even know what a virus is.

      Nowadays we are plagued with completely solvable problems. We could eliminate measles, but dumbasses are afraid of vaccines. We could feed everyone, but we got billionaires to maintain. We could stop destroying the earth, but then who will burn all this oil? We could cooperate on a global scale, but then we might have to talk to brown people, ew. We could stop bombing each other, but then how would we prove to our gods that we’re good people?

      So yeah “things” are shittier, because nowadays we have the ability to live in a nearly post-scarcity society but we just don’t wanna.

      • johan@feddit.nl
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        7 months ago

        So yeah “things” are shittier, because nowadays we have the ability to live in a nearly post-scarcity society but we just don’t wanna.

        Humankind could have been living in blissful peace for centuries. We’ve always had the ability to not kill each other or fight for resources. But many people, then and now, don’t want that.

        The way civilizations/empires/countries have operated has largely been competitive. It’s naive to think we’ll all just come together and solve these very complicated problems.

        Saying that people are stupid or racist… I don’t think that barely has anything to do with what prevents all major countries of the world to work together to combat things like disease, climate change, inequality, etc.

        • Lightborne@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          Humankind could have been living in blissful peace for centuries.

          Nah. This is a unique moment in history - access to objective truth has never been so widespread. In theory, it’s a lot easier to lead people to war if you can convince them that their neighbors’ customs and culture are causing your crops to fail or some shit.

          But it turns out that people simply prefer to reject objective truth. So they’ll blame gays for hurricanes and tell people that homelessness is punishment for sin.

          Everything is definitely shittier now.

  • Seraph@kbin.social
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    7 months ago

    Definitely the latter. If I can recommend a book please read it despite it’s title: “Everything is Fucked” by Mark Manson.

    The title is supposed to be a joke as when things get better we still will find even the smallest of problems, everything isn’t fucked it’s our perception. This is human nature. There’s other really interesting observations in the book that I really enjoyed, but that’s the main theme.

  • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I grew up in a realm where there was no internet, or cell phones. I don’t use social media at all and continue to try very hard to tell the people that I care about that it’s bad for you. It’s like trying to convince a smoker to stop smoking (I am an ex-smoker of 30 years). I decry the need for always on always connected, right here, right now, listen to me. We’re not evolved for that. We’re apes, very complex, occasionally fun apes. We need that social and interpersonal and personal interaction.

    As we stray further from the way our ancestors lived, we stray further from who we are as a species. There is a great argument to be made for cooperation but it takes a lot of strenuous effort to happen over distance and time that we struggle with.

    I have lost my train of thought and with great trepidation at your misinterpretation, I bid you adieu good reader.

      • SupraMario@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        It is, but it’s more of an open discussion style forum. Most people view social media as a feed of what all your friends and family are doing post wise, not what’s happening around the world or some meme. But you are correct this place does fall into the category.