• davemeech@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    2016 US elections was a ridiculously sobering moment for realizing that we had not progressed nearly to the extent that I nievely thought.

    • lollygagger@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      This one rings home pretty hard. I’ve definitely viewed the people around me differently since then. And especially since covid as well.

      • davemeech@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Agreed, Covid ties or is a close runner up for me as well in terms of people showing their true colors.

      • DogMuffins@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Yeah but it was the election that was the “event”. At the time i thought it must have been an aberration, it was during the following years I realised it was a symptom of the real problem.

    • atp2112@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Up until that point, I was a naive centrist that thought sane liberalism would win out. That election single-handedly destroyed that view and slammed me hard to the left.

      • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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        1 year ago

        You’re probably in the real center now, my understanding is American center is to the right, and their left is actually closer to center

        • atp2112@lemmy.world
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          I should probably clarify that it slammed me firmly in the Bernie camp, but I’ve drifted even further to the left (broadly libertarian/anarcho-socialism) since then

          • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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            1 year ago

            I’m slightly left of centre, but I am now voting quite far left to try counter the right swing we are most likely going to have with this next election.

    • Nonameuser678@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      I’m not even from the US and honestly it was a sobering moment for me as well. I realised how people like Hitler get into power. Before 2016 I knew it was possible like cognitively but Trump being elected made it feel real in a way it never had before.

    • PrivateNoob@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      Same for my country (Hungary). For the first time almost all off the opposition parties agreed to merge into eachother, then the chosen opposition president almost became the old corrupt guy’s wife (old people voted for them), then the Ukraine már happened where everyone knew Orbán made a ton of contracts with Putin, LITERALLY disses Zelensky but never mentions Putin’s name and Orbán won with a record 2/3 again.

      Hungarian people literally can’t remember about 1956, it seems.

    • DrQuint@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I have thought a lot about the “How do background characters tell if they’re in a story?” thing a lot since.

      The day the alternate timeline stopped being a meme. The day “we’re in too damned interesting times to this not be the end of humanity” became a reality.

      If the world burns, whatever. We have had it coming.

  • corroded@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    COVID-19. People simply refused to do the absolute minimum to stop the spread of the virus. At least in my community, everyone was still socializing with friends and family (without a mask, of course), going out to eat, taking part in recreational activities with other people. Something as simple as “stay away from other people until we get this under control” was too hard for the American public. It certain changed my view of the people around me.

    • ChillPenguin@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      For me it definitely highlighted how many people in American society think they are the main character and fuck everyone else.

    • centof@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      Actions > Talk. They were telling you their true views. People rarely say the quiet part(their views) out loud so it is valuable to be able to translate their actions into their true views.

      When you know how others truly feel, it allows you to decide who is worth listening to. Not to say you shouldn’t listen to people with different views, but instead decide whether they are telling you their beliefs or telling you what they think you want to hear(BSing you) and use that rate how trustworthy they are on the topic.

  • makeasnek@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    The 2008 bank bailouts. Watching our government spend nearly a trillion dollars to bail out some unelected bankers who made some bad decisions and were “too big to fail (true)”. Watching them spend that money on bonuses for their execs, while none of them went to jail. Watching the social response to that (occupy) and then watching a coordinated federal crackdown of those protests across the country. And then watching bailouts happen again and again since then. Meanwhile in Iceland, they overthrew their government over it. The global financial system has deeply rooted flaws, and bailouts are an inevitability in it. We will inevitably, every so often, make another huge wealth transfer like that because so longs as lending exists, particularly private lending, and all banks are interconnected so that if one fails they all fail, there will always be bank runs and bailouts. Even the most well-intentioned bank cannot hedge against all risks and market shocks. And the government will just turn on the money printer every time it happens while you watch your hard-earned money lose its value.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    I might not have been a raging, bleeding-heart, anti-capitalist liberal had Trump not gotten elected in November 2016. Until then I might have considered myself apolitical with no strong political ambitions. Seeing the post-election riots/protests opened up the world to me, his election wasn’t a stupid joke but an injustice on all the people Trump essentially campaigned on fucking over.

    Another crazy moment was the second time I got high on weed. I was super panicked at first, but when I went to bed, all of a sudden abstract art made sense to me as I had visions and felt a connection to their work even if I didn’t know their name. That high had residual effects the next day and I had felt changed somehow.

  • qwertyqwertyqwerty@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I mean this is a pretty big one for most people, but march 2020 COVID lockdowns. My family and I were bunkered down like the family in the movie Signs, just trying to figure out what was going on and keeping each other safe.

    • DogMuffins@discuss.tchncs.de
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      It was a bizarre time. I remember going to the supermarket - it felt like an apocalypse with boxes of stock being torn open by shoppers instead of unpacked by staff. Stuff all over the floors. People pushing / pulling multiple trolleys.

      It made me realise how close we are to chaos.

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      Covid made me realise just how much we live in different versions of reality and how harmful that is during a crisis that requires everyone to be on the same page. At the beginning of the lockdowns I joked about how some people would rather die than comply with basic public health practices…and then it actually fucking happened in real life. Not only that but they took down other people with them. Not such a funny joke anymore.

    • Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      I was an essential worker who had zero time off and the empty streets at all hours were nuts. I am back at a normal job now where people did lock down, and everyone had a mass experience that I did not.

  • spauldo@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    GWB publicly condoning torture.

    I grew up during the tail end of the cold war. Torture was something the Soviets did. We were better than that.

    And sure, I knew the CIA did stuff like that under the table, but it was never OK.

    It’s what got me interested in politics, and why I feel that we shouldn’t try to hide the bad things we’ve done when we teach history. Knowing what we’re capable of is necessary to keep ourselves from repeating the mistakes of the past.

    • centof@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      we ‘shouldn’t’ try to hide the bad things we’ve done when we teach history

      The keyword here is shouldn’t. Most people don’t do lots of things they should.

      Not out of malice but simply laziness, it is a lot easier to just default to the norm and go on. Try comparing what should get done in politics(campaign promises) to what actually gets done in washington. In short what should happen and what actually happens are two different things in a lot of areas.

  • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Covid. I used to think people were basically good and caring, trying to do the right thing. I also used to think that everyone besides me was better at dealing with stress.

    Turned out my life really is so bad that a global pandemic actually reduced my stress level. And when other people are stressed, they use that as an excuse to treat everyone else abominably. People are fundamentally selfish and self-centered. Kindness is at best a veneer for the vast majority.

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      All that follows is simply an opinion. Take everything with a grain of salt. Feel free to discuss.

      Human are social creatures and relationships is a basic human need. Where I am from, the government enforced a curfew and stopped people from having relationships with their loved one. Stories of people dying alone or women giving birth alone.

      When basic needs aren’t met, we revert to survival instincts and try to meet these needs. To me, that explains why people that were seemingly caring turned out to be dicks when their needs weren’t met.

      Shitty people were going to be shitty anyways.

      For people that need less social interactions, it feels like it’s fucking bonkers how people were getting desperate for social interactions and throwing caution to the wind. It felt like they were crazy.

      Just like an hungry man in front of a plentiful buffet, these people tasted social interactions and told themselves never again!

      It was a short time in history where less social people were better off than the rest. After covid brought a lot of tension because social persons clawed back at what was acquired by the less social people.

      And to me, that explains a lot of what we saw and see right now.

      And again, shitty people are gonna be shitty people regardless of the situation, so that observation doesn’t apply to them.

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          I assure you that to someone else, you’ve been a dick without you knowing.

          We judge ourselves by our intentions and the others by their actions. So it’s easy to point at everyone around being a dick without realising that in that moment, that person isn’t necessarily thinking that they are a dick.

          And again, some people are really shitty people regardless of the situation. So it doesn’t apply to them.

          • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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            I’m not taking about accidental or unconscious dickery. I’m talking about deliberately being an ass because you feel you have a right to it.

            • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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              Do you think that the context matters then? Covid or not, these people are gonna be ass.

              If you think that people were fundamentally bad and hiding behind a facade until covid, then I am not sure what there is to discuss.

              I am not sure what you are trying to convey here.

              • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Yes. I think people were fundamentally selfish and self-centered, and the minute they felt inconvenienced, they took it as an excuse to be assholes.

                Before Covid, they didn’t feel the same pressure, so used kindness as social grease to benefit themselves. Covid proved that the average person’s kindness is less a character trait than a cost/benefit analysis.

                • OmegaMouse@feddit.uk
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                  1 year ago

                  I agree with Analogy’s take on this. I don’t think it’s based on ‘needs’. Selfish people are, and have always been selfish regardless of the situation. Stress does exacerbate it of course. And it’s unfortunately the case that we live in a world that doesn’t reward kindness. But despite this there are a lot of people that are kind because they want to be, because it’s rewarding for it’s own sake.

                • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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                  I think where we disagree is that people were merely inconvenienced. Social relationships are a basic human need and there is a lot of ongoing research on the effects of social isolation caused by Covid.

                  And with that said, I don’t think I can change your mind on the covid situation.

                  I hope that you can find people that can and will meet your needs.

    • centof@lemm.eeOP
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      Kindness is at best a veneer for the vast majority.

      I admire your clarity of thought here.

      The pandemic did reduce my stress level temporarily by getting me away from people pleasing behavior but it also made me feel kinda jaded about people for a while.

      I like your username. How did you come up with it if you don’t mind sharing?

      • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Thanks!

        I really love analogies. People make fun of me for it, and I don’t even mind. I used to have friends play a game where one would name a random object, and another a random intangible and I’d have to come up with an analogy to explain the latter using the former.

    • SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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      Let me offer a counterexample. I was in NYC on 9/11. I saw the first tower burning and I saw the second plane hit. I watched incredulously when they fell.

      The entire city froze. It was the first and only time NYC went silent. No cars, no construction, no one yelling. There has to have been at least 5000 people packed into a large crowd outside of Penn station, but no one was shoving or yelling for them to open the doors.

      NY actually stated like that for a while. It was surreal - it felt like a dream. But the city really did come together. People were more kind and helpful to strangers. They were more aware of their neighbors and their needs. People were handing out food and blankets on the streets, trying to get through the massive disruption. I saw no rioting, no crime surge despite the fact that emergency services were completely tied up.

      • AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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        Yes. People react differently to acute vs. chronic stress. I’ve seen it time and again. People are happy to help if it’s short-term. Then they get the feel-goods. But if there’s nothing in it for them, if they feel inconvenienced by ongoing suffering, charity dries up like tears in the Sahara. Very few are willing to be kind even when they don’t get to feel like a hero doing it.

  • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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    Snowden file leaks lead me down the path to privacy and to reading books like Manufacturing Consent by Noam Chomsky. Lead me down the path to degoogling and linux and now decentralized services like Lemmy.

    It seems like every week some article comes out with big tech abusing their rights. This week was Philips hue and last week or so it was a mom getting 2 years in jail because Facebook gave up information about her giving abortion pills to her daughter.

    I am using all these foss services myself and making my friends and family use them and be aware of these events. It’s a slow car crash and if people are apathetic and say “I have nothing to hide” and eventually “I have nothing to say”, soon we’ll be stripped of more rights until it’s too late.

    • centof@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      “The cells of death row are filled with guys who had nothing to hide.” - Kenneth Eade

    • wellDuuh@lemmy.world
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      Snowden trully opened the world’s eyes bruv…

      This sealed the deal for me and went FOSS

      Microsoft using “off-shore” dns, like a druglord or something got me pretty annoyed, swallowed the linux pill whole! Bash scripting and all

  • fubarx@lemmy.ml
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    • 9/11
    • Bush v Gore
    • GWB re-election (despite war, recession, etc.)
    • Trump election
    • COVID

    All chipped away at notions of stability, fairness, and sanity.

    Still have hope, but tend not to believe the hype so much.

  • lolola
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    I’ll throw one out for COVID, but not just the lockdowns or the immediate work changes. It was more about how the deaths kept happening. And happening. And happening. Yet people still failed to take it seriously, even to the point of rebelling against seemingly common-sense safeguards like vaccines, masking, and staying the fuck home.

    In the US, we lived through about 4 years of shenanigans and bullshit and lies from an incompetent federal government leading up to the pandemic. But surely that wouldn’t fly for long. You can lie about the number of people at a rally (because who the fuck cares), you can apparently lie about where a hurricane is projected to go (because it’s jUsT a PrOjEcTiOn or something), but surely you can’t bullshit your way out of a pandemic. Hospitals at capacity. Bodies piling up. Loved ones lost. Visible, real, tangible impacts of poor leadership and poor decisionmaking.

    But, turns out you can. Even in the most dire of circumstances, you can still convince people that reality isn’t real. Or even if it is, it doesn’t really matter and it’s not their problem. And there are enough people out there who will buy into that message that it will ruin things for everyone else.

    Edit: To the original point of the question… I guess I had a little more faith in humanity before all that happened. More faith that real-world consequences would win out against rhetorical bullshit and tribalism.

    • centof@lemm.eeOP
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      reality isn’t real

      It is worth keeping in mind Hanlon’s Razor with this. “Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by neglect.” They are running on emotions and accepting being wrong hurts so they simply don’t accept their emotions.

      • SpiderShoeCult@sopuli.xyz
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        I knew it as “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.”. I think it fits better here, too, when in the face of actual death, people still ignore common sense. Screw neglect, that’s pure, unadulterated, 100% organic, fresh as the driven snow stupidity.

        • centof@lemm.eeOP
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          I prefer this fuller version

          Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by neglect, ignorance or incompetence.

          Stupidity implies it is something that cannot be changed. Usually their behavior could be changed but it is just a hard task to change their behavior that requires the person in question to be willing to change.

  • kense@lmmy.dk
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    Not how I view the world, but how I view USA and “citizens of the free world”.

    In 2016 my girlfriend and I visited New York - for me, first time visiting USA. I had a co-worker who lived in USA for most of her childhood, so I asked her if she had some advice for me to get along with people I met on my way.

    “Never underestimate the stupidity of Americans”.

    I thought that to be rude as I had “talked” with many Americans on Reddit and sure, there were idiots, but that didn’t define a person from USA for me.

    We arrived in New York and took a cab to the hotel. The driver asked us “So, is Donald Trump making headlines in Europe?” (This was during the 2016 election).

    I laughed and told him “Yeah, can you believe people will vote on such a moron”…

    Oh no I didn’t… He was furious, as Donald Trump was the Saviour of USA and he was singlehandedly going to “clean up the swamp” or whatever his catchphrase was… and then he said one of the stupidest things I have ever heard.

    “90% of Muslims are terrorists and if you don’t kill them, they will kill you”…

    I know not all Americans are this dumb, but I learned my lesson… Never underestimate the stupidity of Americans.

    • PrivateNoob@sopuli.xyz
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      It can be applied elsewhere too. Whenever politics come up, it’s wise to initally talk about it in a neutral state.

      • kense@lmmy.dk
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        Well, yes, but where I’m from the topic “Donald Trump” is not a political one, it’s more of a “will you look at that shit show”.

        A lot has changed since 2016 and I will most definitely approach every subject in a neutral state, as I feel like more and more people are getting more stupid by the hour.

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          Ahh I see, then I’m part of the dummy ones it seems.

          Indeed a lot has changed since 2016, but maybe people were always this stupid, although your comment indicates that you’re pretty experienced in life already, so maybe you’re right. I’m only 22.

      • cybersandwich@lemmy.world
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        My London cabby also loved Trump. For some reason he just assumed I would be a fan since I’m from the US.

        Maybe cab drivers are all just fucking morons?

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      My old boss was once asked by a NY taxi driver “So what language do you all speak over there in England?”

      He said French.

  • centof@lemm.eeOP
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    For me it was when I was watching Soul with some friends and eventually came to some emotional realizations. I realized that I only had a superficial understanding of how to communicate. I could discuss ideas in the abstract, but I had trouble with expressing myself emotionally and personally because I was always conditioned to repress how I feel. I guess like 22 in the movie I only saw myself as a casual observer. It took a couple rewatches for me to process the difficult emotions I was feeling into something I could explain but when I did it really helped my overall mental outlook on life.

  • YourFavouriteNPC@feddit.de
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    The whole “the world will end in 2012” hysteria back then. It was my first glimpse into conspiracy theories, which I’ve spent a lot of time learning about ever since. It made me realize that nothing is ever too idiotic to not have an alarming number of people fall for it. It’s why I wasn’t surprised by the rise of the Q-movement or the resistance against the absolute bare minimum of COVID measures because of microchips in vaccines etc. All of that were just yet additional “of course people believe that shit”-moments for me.

    Like Tommy Lee Jones said in Men in Black “A person is smart - people are dumb, panicky, dangerous animals.”

    I haven’t been surprised by how stupid people can be in a long time.

    • PrivateNoob@sopuli.xyz
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      Actually, how did the 2012 thing became such a viral trend? Literally even news sites aired it SEVERAL times here, and I already thought that’s it was a dumb conteo story. (I was 11 then)

      • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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        As someone who was in his late teens then, I don’t think many people really seriously believed that the world was going to end in 2012. It was more of a running joke. I remember that a few days before the 21st of December, someone posted on a forum for students of the university I was then attending that exam results were going to be posted on the 21st; someone else responded “oh, so for some who took this course the world will actually end on that day”.

  • KidsTryThisAtHome@lemm.ee
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    COVID. Really never understood before how little of a shit the U.S. government has for its people. But they straight up let us fucking die while telling teenagers they needed to get back to work for minimum wage so they could get their shit Mcdildos and mochafuckaccinos and add gold spinning rims to their yachts. I can’t wait until these old fucks start dying off, I don’t care what political leanings they claim to have, we need a fuckin overhaul.

  • kingthrillgore@lemmy.ml
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    Trump winning getting carried by the EVs made me a bitter, jaded, hopeless husk. I lost faith in the republic, in america, in people, in common sense…

    I don’t know if I ever truly recovered.

    Come to think of it, i’ve lived through at least two instances where the direct opposition of the public’s will have lead to death, suffering, and the collapse of represenative democracy: Bush v Gore, and the Trump Presidency. Odd how that’s a common trend.