Spaulding wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
are you daft?
2008 was an existential crises for almost all of us. Older people had no ability to recover their retirement. It was our Great Depression and I think it has affected our habits to this day.
and we are still living in a post 9/11 world
You can make an argument the Bush II administration has had the most lasting impact on this country since FDR or Kennedy/Johnson.
I would agree post 9/11 has been damaging obviously I'm not for the Patriot Act. The response to Covid alone is far worse and will damage this country forever...businesses, schools, kids, medical field, health, trust it's all gone. Throw in the fabulous plan for climate change and I think we are really fucked. We at least had a country, I don't know that we have that anymore. I don't think the future is good either. I think it will be much worse than 2008 and I don't know that they can stop it if they wanted to which they don't. It's possible there will be a housing crisis as bad, along with food crisis, energy crisis, and financial/stock market crisis. They might trot out another health crisis too. You might think you have enough money and your social credit will be good enough but I can't see you living like that as the norm and if you do is that really the life you want to be living?
I can't remember what book it was in but there was a quote that was something like "For some reason people like to hear the world is going to end." You could pick any newspaper in any city during any time over the last 250 years of the USA and you're likely to find something similar to the above. The world, economy, country, city, etc. is going to shit. Look things aren't linear, nobody is saying that, but history proves out that the trajectory of humanity has consistently improved. This is true, essentially, for everyone everywhere. Sure, I'd rather live in the United States today than Saudi Arabia, but I'd rather live in Saudi Arabia in 2022 than 1900.
But that delicious pessimism is irresistible. We are all prone to give into the narrative of negativity, but statistically zero percent of catastrophic predictions throughout the course of history have proven to be true, if for no other reason than pessimism gets way more ink, than optimism or stoicism.