If so, why?

  • @[email protected]
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    675 months ago

    Socialism doesn’t just seem like a good idea, it’s pretty much the only possible future that doesn’t end up with 99% of humanity suffering horribly.

    The idea of everyone being able to work to make the means to survive has a rapidly approaching shelf life, most companies won’t employ humans over whatever tech is on the horizon as soon as it’s cheaper. The areas that remain habitable due to climate change will shrink

    I do not know why this isn’t treated as a more pressing issue

    • @[email protected]
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      215 months ago

      “Am I talking like the god damn riddler?” when my simple statement is somehow wildly misunderstood

    • ayaya
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      95 months ago

      This happens to me constantly. Just the other day I asked some friends for something and then they sent the literal exact opposite of that thing. Pretend I asked for blue with red stripes they gave me green with yellow polka dots. And it wasn’t just one person it was three separate people who all decided that made sense for some reason.

      I was extremely specific too, even more than usual because I know people constantly misinterpret me. I made extra sure to not use any language with vague meanings and it still happened anyway. It’s like we live in alternate realities where words have completely different meanings.

      It makes me not want to talk to people at all.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      75 months ago

      I don’t know anything about what is between my ears and your brains, but even so, I love you.

  • @[email protected]
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    215 months ago

    I only recenlty learned I have had undiagnosed autism my whole life (in my thirties now), and being able to recontextualise that I literally did have an - on average - different way of experiencing reality, with some filters missing, some intuitive normalities just not developing, and my brain focusing in a different way, that’s helping me a whole lot. Finally I don’t have to gaslight myself into thinking I am just lacking will and strength of character to fit into this world, as that’s what my socialisation had been instilling into me.

    With having been obsessed with history and philosophy from a young age, I am also often not able to understand that the vast majority of people actually lives in a world where those things are at best superficially engaged with. Personally, at least at this moment of time, I think that is genuinely dangerous, because, oh boy, looking at the current material situation of the world and taking historical situations to estimate the possible consequences, things are not looking good. I firmly believe we need a globalised, socialist/communist mode of production and more short term, an international political infrastructure to organise the challenges ahead, but I fear it will only come about after things will be getting worse for quite some time, still.

    • Rimu
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      35 months ago

      You might enjoy the book “Climate Leviathan”. It’s about all that and draws on a lot of history and philosophy.

      • @[email protected]
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        35 months ago

        That does indeed look right up my alley, thank you very much <3.

        I’d also recommend “The Ecological Rift: Capitalism’s War on the Earth” to anyone interested, for probably a bit more polemic piece that, from what I see from “Climate Leviathan”'s description, probably roughly argues around similar dynamics.

  • @[email protected]
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    115 months ago

    Even when I’m by myself, I often get the feeling like I’m in a “bubble,” and everything I’m looking at outside of myself is some other reality different from my own. It’s not a positive or a negative feeling, just kind of weird.

    So to answer your question: Yes.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    A conspiracy is a plan carried out by a group, usually clandestinely and usually to the detriment of others, and they are very common (fake electors scheme, Northwoods, sea spray).

    But most people “don’t believe” in conspiracies, which means they 1) don’t believe in people making plans and carrying them out, and they 2) don’t believe in objective, historical fact.

    To live in the world and refuse to acknowledge how it operates and how other people operate must be very confusing.

  • @[email protected]
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    95 months ago

    Yes because I can’t comprehend how anyone else think or feel. I can empathize, but I cannot fully understand how they think or feel because I transpose my thoughts and feelings to what others perceive and think.

    I am stuck in my head with my thinking and my feelings, but I will never know what it feels to not be me.

    I’m fine with that, but it boggles my mind sometimes.

  • Guadin
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    85 months ago

    I see a lot of people have big meta thoughts and feelings. But mine is relatively small. I find that I live in a different reality since a lot of co-experienced events are remembered differently by the others. Let’s say a work meeting, when I think that it was a nice calm and friendly meetig others are heated and steaming by all the insults. The same with emails and other communications Also with a sportmatches. For instance when I really enjoyed a match and thought both teams did a nice job of performing, the media paints a vastly different picture where one team was really awful and performed well belowed standards.

    So my perception of reality seems really of from the rest of the population.

  • Hanrahan
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    5 months ago

    Yes, we live in a world were many serious people with serious credetrials can’t see lasting. and people go to a Taylor Swift concert or a Football game

    “I see no way out of revolutionary changes to how we live today … it is too late for non-radical futures” - Professor Kevin Anderson

    https://social.rebellion.global/@ScientistRebellion/110235597189756736

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/may/07/un-expert-human-rights-climate-crisis-economy

    Outgoing special rapporteur David Boyd says ‘there’s something wrong with our brains that we can’t understand how grave this is’

    I am a stranger in a strange land

  • @[email protected]
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    75 months ago

    I didn’t but then they killed harambe and now its like I fell through a crack in reality and entered a shitty distopian novel.

  • Bear
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    65 months ago

    Yes. Everyone lives in the same objective reality of course but everyone experiences a unique subjective reality. Everyone has specific thoughts and feelings that nobody else has ever had. Some people are more unique than others depending on their age, environment, and life choices.

  • @[email protected]
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    65 months ago

    Yeah, asd/adhd does that to you when you see how other people function “normally” and how your hangups are wildly more uncontrollable over trivial things. Then you get the adhd on top of that. Focus is a highly ambivalent and fickle creature. Good times. The brain being the reality we each experience, I think people with neurodivergence actually do experience a different reality than normative people do.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    Pppfff heck yeah.

    Pretty good example is my lifestyle.

    I travel perpetually. I saved money for several years, invested it, budget the interest, and don’t work unless I want to.

    For years, when my lifestyle comes up, people often say something like “I wish I could do that” or “I’ve always wanted to travel”. After I say “you definitely can”, they ask me how they can do it.

    When I explain how simple and cheap it is to work less/travel, they 1) get angry or 2) dismissive.

    Their stated goals haven’t changed, they still claim to want to travel and stop working, but after hearing that they can do it at any point, they shut down or say “well, maybe one day…”, which means that after years of living a lifestyle they’re dissatisfied with, they’re going to choose to continue their confining lifestyle.

    Usually in real life they insist they “could never”, but online they seem more comfortable condemning any quick or simple solution to working too much and being depressed/poor/trapped in their life.

    Other travelers I meet say the same thing, that they can only travel for a limited time, but the allienation is more stark with people who I know more personally.

    I’ll go traveling, and each time I visit old friends hear the same “wow, what, how?”, then “must be nice” and “I could never” stuff I’ve heard year after a year from the same people.

    I haven’t brought up my lifestyle on my own initiative in years because I’ve experienced over and over how upset people become when they realize that they can take control of their lives at any point and are choosing not to.

    • Rikudou_Sage
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      35 months ago

      So any advice on how to do it? Sounds intriguing. Not that I’d want to have that lifestyle, but still curious.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        There are tons of ways, teaching English overseas, trick out an RV and add solar, digital nomad, it really depends on the interests of the person.

        The nice thing is that many options take almost no training or prep time.

        They’re right there to take advantage of.

        What do you mean you wouldn’t want to have that lifestyle, traveling or not working?

        • Rikudou_Sage
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          25 months ago

          Both, tbh. I’m not a workaholic, but I really like my work, so I’d get bored if I didn’t work. And I have a pretty sweet work-life balance.

          Travelling I like of course, but not too often, I have a really expensive mattress to help alleviate my chronic back pain and sleeping somewhere else is not a pleasant experience. So doing it once in a while is fine, doing it regularly would suck.

          And last but not least, lately I like my peace and quiet, constant travelling would not go well with that.

          • @[email protected]
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            35 months ago

            It isn’t that you stop working, it’s that you stop working on things you don’t want to work on.

            You work only on things you want to work on.

            Traveling is all about peace and quiet for me, but I hear similar preconceived anxieties pretty often.

            Maybe 5 days ago or something, a friend called me up, said they wish they could travel, and asked me to walk them through it again.

            I told them how to get a visa (One page online application form, five minutes tops), and they said traveling just sounds so tiring and they can’t do it right now.

            Tiring?

            Hang out, do whatever you want or relax, go eat sometimes.

            Not an exhausting lifestyle, but a lot of my friends with day jobs imagine that their lunch breaks are more recuperative than having a lunch break all day.

            Bonkers.

            • Rikudou_Sage
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              25 months ago

              I wouldn’t really call chronic back pain a preconceived anxiety, but you do you.

              Just accept that your lifestyle isn’t good for everyone. You found something that works well for you, congrats! Doesn’t mean you found some huge secret on how to make everyone’s life better.

              • @[email protected]
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                5 months ago

                The preconceived notion that travelling is tiring.

                Why do you think my lifestyle is good for everyone?

                I did find this huge secret, and people don’t like knowing how easily they can/could have achieved their goals.

                They go on the attack as soon as they realize they’ve been wasting time.

                • Rikudou_Sage
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                  15 months ago

                  I mean, I’ve travelled a bit and it is tiring. For me. It might not be for you, but really, your experience is not other people’s experience.

    • SolacefromSilence
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      25 months ago

      I’ve come to understand that when people say, “I wish I could do that” or “I could live a life like that”… they’re just admiring a thing that is mildly interesting or fashionable.

      Most people hear “you can do it too” as a challenge to their current choices and not an invitation to a happier life. I don’t take it personal…

      As for how you’re living, I find it really inspiring! I’ve tried to work out how I can make some changes and it’s great to hear that others are doing it well.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        Definitely. If they say something non-specific like " that sounds great" or " I wish I could do that", I don’t pursue the topic at all.

        It’s more after we have a conversation including “Do you think I could do that too? How? Can you help me do it?” And I have to provide specific answers or show them and then receive the brunt of their ire or dismissal.

        It is so satisfying when I do help someone achieve their goals, though, that if I am asked specific questions I usually help, even if nine out of 10 people will balk at the opportunity once they can see it in front of them.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      25 months ago

      I would never stop working. I enjoy what I do and I find it fulfilling. Nevertheless. I love you.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        That’s cool. You can still work when you want to, I do.

        Do you build?

        I rarely receive that response, and I think when I have it’s exclusively from someone who builds houses or something like that.