• @whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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    518 days ago

    And they continue to forget it’s all a numbers game and we outnumber them by a magnitude. Tl’dr they’re fucked.

    • Eyedust
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      918 days ago

      But that’s where complacency and escapism becomes a large tool against the numbers. Its much too hard to get up and revolt when their favorite show is going to be on at 8 or X streaming service got a new movie. Only a fraction get up to protest when the rest sit back back and mumble under their breaths to their screens.

      We need a major fuckup to get them off their couches, you know, something like policing the internet, or crashing the market and causing disgusting inflation rates. Oh wait. Its a shame that we’ve waited until things got this bad.

      • @whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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        318 days ago

        Agree. People were so concerned about 1984 that they didn’t see Brave New World creeping up on us.

        How you crack the complacency is beyond me.

        • Eyedust
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          218 days ago

          Cracking the code is:

          if (complacency > annoyances) {
            sleep();
          } else {
            riot();
          }
          
      • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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        117 days ago

        People are the worst. Agriculture was a mistake. If I have a time machine I’d go back and kick that fucker tiktaalik back into the ocean.

        • @Djinn_Indigo@lemm.ee
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          317 days ago

          I’m sure you’re joking, but actually I’m reading a very interesting book about this topic called “The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity.”

          It’s really concerned with freedom, and disputes the idea that the lack thereof is inherently tied to agriculture.

          • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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            17 days ago

            Agriculture made more humans. More humans is always trouble.

            (But it is a really incredible book, as are all of Graeber’s work. If you like it you should read Debt: The First 5,000 Years)