• andros_rex@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Also Graeber’s Debt.

      So many of Graeber’s ideas are right on the dot. Those two books helped me understand economics better than fucking Milton Friedman ever could.

    • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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      17 hours ago

      I’ve heard of this one. Maybe I’ll check it out.

      The downside of reading a lot of depressing non fiction is I increasingly feel like I’m living in a cuckoo clock, and get frustrated with how everyone else seems oblivious and uncaring.

      • punksnotdead@slrpnk.net
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        11 hours ago

        If you want an understanding of the cuckoo clock and how it came to be, I highly recommend you watch the BBC documentary HyperNormalisation.

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/HyperNormalisation

        It argues that following the global economic crises of the 1970s, governments, financiers and technological utopians gave up on trying to shape the complex “real world” and instead established a simpler “fake world” for the benefit of multi-national corporations that is kept stable by neoliberal governments.