• Jessica
    link
    English
    34 months ago

    I can confidently say we won’t do any of these things until we can kill capitalism and trends towards autocracy.

    So basically never. The appetite of the regular person to revolt is nonexistent, unfortunately.

    • @uriel238
      link
      English
      24 months ago

      Never is a long time. The common people are tiring of what capitalism has wrought and the ongoing drive to force people to do more for less and discard those who are sufficiently useful. Our appetite to revolt may well be fueled by this push. A greater danger is the tendency for successful revolutions to turn into serial dictatorships, each overthrowing the previous one until everyone is dead tired of war. France took around a century to sort itself out from monarchy, and today is still capitalist.

      On the other hand, the climate crisis might drive us to extinction, and if it doesn’t, is estimated (by the few who dare to estimate it) to reduce the population to below 500 million. If we end up migrant tribes again, we might be able to tackle the trends towards feudalism early.

      And the climate crisis is not the only great filter we’re being confronted with. Personally, I don’t hope anymore so much as look soberly at where we are now and try to guess at where we’ll go. And for now the best we can do in the US is hope we can obstruct and delay the steady march towards autocratic fascism until the desperados running the Republican party can’t keep it together anymore.

      I know that’s not inspiring, but if someone is saying something to inspire us, they’re taking us for marks.

      • Jessica
        link
        English
        14 months ago

        Very well said. It’s such a shame to know that there is something better out there, what it looks like isn’t exactly clear, but there is a better way. The workers truly need to unite, for the benefit of us all.