• Obinice@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    For my family, the 2010s were already a big downward trend. Huge global financial crisis and it’s fallout felt to this day, good things going away or getting worse (just look at how Facebook, Twitter, etc became utter crap around 2012), the rapid acceleration of income and class inequality, just so, so much that was slowly going downhill got even worse :-(

    It’s easy to forget that so much happened in the 2010s, even early on. It wasn’t long into that decade that Occupy Wallstreet reminded us that we can’t beat the rich, and that there’s no hope. It crashed and burned so hard, and nobody’s been able to stand up to corpos the same way since.

    For me, hope was lost in the late 2000s. Everything else has just been slow nails in the coffin since then :-(

    • nachom97@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Dang, I felt this one. But good things do come around either through lower expectations or better situations. That old quote always seems apt:

      In the meantime cling tooth and nail to the following rule: Not to give in to adversity, never to trust prosperity, and always take full note of fortune’s habit of behaving just as she pleases, treating her as if she were actually going to do everything it is in her power to do.

    • Experimental Cyborg@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Honestly. Humans are so bad at seeing multi-year trends… myself included. Many essential things have been consistently going to shit over the past decade for sure. Climate change in the same vein, “It’s not that different” “there were always record weather events once in a while” but if you look at a graph of objective scientific data, it’s an exponential line of weather extreme after weather extreme with steadily decreasing intervals between events. But the neighbours insist that “We’ve had summers like this in the 70’s, you youngsters haven’t seen anything. Stop causing a panic!”