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  3. Do you feel sad for people born today?

Do you feel sad for people born today?

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  • A [email protected]

    Username checks out.

    eviledgelord@sh.itjust.worksE This user is from outside of this forum
    eviledgelord@sh.itjust.worksE This user is from outside of this forum
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    wrote last edited by
    #45

    I guess it's "evil" and "edgy" to care for the future of unborn children. You learn something new everyday 😂

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    1
    • M [email protected]

      Everyone here knows the solution; Eat the rich.

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      wrote last edited by
      #46

      Ahh a french cutlery enjoyer

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      0
      • Z [email protected]

        Today, people have the money to buy a new microwave every time the old one breaks. Things were a lot more expensive then, and electronic repair was a viable industry because of it.

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        wrote last edited by
        #47

        I can't remember ever actually buying a microwave in the first place.

        Then again, I'm not normal, I know how to diagnose, repair, overhaul and even Frankenstein microwave ovens, so if one ever goes out, I'll just keep an eye out by nearby dumpsters for scrap parts microwaves and rebuild whichever of the two is in better condition...

        I hate living in such a wasteful society, I'm all about the right to repair!

        J 1 Reply Last reply
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        • B [email protected]

          I personally cringe when I hear a friend js having a kid. All I can think of is how bad theyre going to have it. Hell id definitely have been better off being born 20 years earlier, but these new kids are REALLY screwed unless they have super rich parents.

          "Nothing new under the sun" I suppose!

          user224@lemmy.sdf.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
          user224@lemmy.sdf.orgU This user is from outside of this forum
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          wrote last edited by
          #48

          Not specifically today, just generally born. Some things are worse, some better.
          It's just that it's impossible for anyone to consent to being born. And not many people can say that they're living happily.

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          • B [email protected]

            I personally cringe when I hear a friend js having a kid. All I can think of is how bad theyre going to have it. Hell id definitely have been better off being born 20 years earlier, but these new kids are REALLY screwed unless they have super rich parents.

            "Nothing new under the sun" I suppose!

            H This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote last edited by
            #49

            Yup. I smile and give lip service while thinking how I would never want to do that to a child. Im really lucky because if I did a fifth year of college to pick up a second major and did a year in a PhD program and worked in my industry that did not make enough for two or three years. This set me back just enough that by the time the kid question came up it was in the mid aughts and it was a no not now and looking around not ever. Did not take many more years to become no way, no how, not in this reality. If I had done a more lucrative major and started working right out of college there is a massive chance I might have kids who I would not have been able to help pay for college and desperately trying to make sure I did not turn into a burden on them.

            S 1 Reply Last reply
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            • R [email protected]

              You are born in the very very very best stretch the human race has ever known.

              We have solutions for almost every problem which exists today.

              Wars are at an historical low point.

              Chances are good you've never been even experienced war first hand.

              Housing is expensive, yes. But chances are you're reading this on a couch or bed in a home, heated (or cooled), with a working stove, light at night and a fridge with edibles in it. And lets not talk about your immediate almost unrestricted access to all of human knowledge.

              That would be unbelievable, impossible even during 99.9% of human history. (Or somewhere near this figure)

              You should stop doomscrolling and start reading the real human history.

              All of human knowledge at your fingertips. And this is what you chose to distill from it.

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              wrote last edited by [email protected]
              #50

              reading real history is work though. just like working out and eating well.

              doomscrolling is like the equivalent of sitting you your ass and eating junk food/delivery and satiating that lizard brain to the exclusion of their higher functions and potentials.

              majority of people are going to choose the latter as much as they can.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • F [email protected]

                All ye who enter abandon all hope

                Seriously, you people are a bunch of cake eaters. "The future is scary and things are getting worse." It's always been scary, you've just been privileged enough for it not to be.

                All I can think of is how bad theyre going to have it.

                Bro, people have it bad NOW. Life is and has always been suffering and struggle. Get out of your online bubble and go see some shit. Anyone here who says their life outlook looks bleak would have said the exact same shit 30 years ago or even 100 years ago.

                Life is suffering no matter when.

                T This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote last edited by [email protected]
                #51

                Seriously. I regularly meet people who make top 5% incomes, like 250K+. They living in luxury condos, have had their entire life paved out for them by welathy parents, and will never have any real problems or struggles in their lives.

                What do they talk about every time? How poor they are. How everything is so hard. How they struggle so much with daily tasks. How their job is so awful. Why can't they just go be on a yacht somewhere forever? How their friend/boss/parent is mean and not giving them more stuff, etc. etc. Why isn't their life perfect and wonderful life they were promised? Why aren't they famous and rich like some other person they met once? Oh, and how the govt is evil because it taxes them too much and it's not fair that their multi-million dollar inheritance might be taxed too so they might only inherent $20 million, not $28 million, the horror and unfairness of it all!

                And the millionaires/billionaires... all feel this same way too. Hence why they are all building apocalypse estates in New Zealand and bunkers in old missile silos and whining about how the mean government taxing them is so unfair.

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                • O [email protected]

                  30 years ago, if your microwave went out, half the time it might have just been the fuse, which you could buy a pack of really cheap at the local Radio Shack.

                  Today, what the fuck is a fuse? They want you to chuck that old microwave and buy a new one that connects to the internet...

                  T This user is from outside of this forum
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                  wrote last edited by [email protected]
                  #52

                  a new microwave is like $20-50 dude. And no, it has no internet.

                  O 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • marighost@piefed.socialM [email protected]

                    Asbestos and lead paint everywhere, yummers 🤤🤤🤤

                    S This user is from outside of this forum
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                    wrote last edited by
                    #53

                    That's just complaining at a high level. Think about the gens before and after

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                    1
                    • R [email protected]

                      You are born in the very very very best stretch the human race has ever known.

                      We have solutions for almost every problem which exists today.

                      Wars are at an historical low point.

                      Chances are good you've never been even experienced war first hand.

                      Housing is expensive, yes. But chances are you're reading this on a couch or bed in a home, heated (or cooled), with a working stove, light at night and a fridge with edibles in it. And lets not talk about your immediate almost unrestricted access to all of human knowledge.

                      That would be unbelievable, impossible even during 99.9% of human history. (Or somewhere near this figure)

                      You should stop doomscrolling and start reading the real human history.

                      All of human knowledge at your fingertips. And this is what you chose to distill from it.

                      L This user is from outside of this forum
                      L This user is from outside of this forum
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                      wrote last edited by [email protected]
                      #54

                      I think you're missing the point.

                      Dying of disease because there simply isn't a cure is a tragedy, but dying of disease because the cure is too expensive, not because of material and resource limitations but because some shithead just wants to be rich, when in reality we could produce enough for everyone - is a farce beyond comprehension.

                      We escaped the wolves and I sure am glad for it, but we have senselessly created new wolves just to throw people to them.

                      Don't get me wrong, I'm not making an appeal to nature, or using the noble savage fallacy, nor am I reactionary moron who thinks everyone went to Galas or that in the past I'd be admiring the decorative architecture rather than be the slave making it, I'm a huge simp for science and technology, but I also can see that the world is headed in a very dark direction compared to the 2010s.

                      As a minority in both legislation and in practice my rights and safety have been actively eroded since the 90s and things were quite literally just better back then for basically everyone.

                      I struggle to think what exactly would be worse for your average Westerner being born earlier in actual human scales of time, like e.g. the 1990s.

                      The boomers around me don't even understand that you don't just "get" a job for existing, and my parents can't imagine having a degree and worrying about making rent or skipping on heating or meals in a "first world country" like the UK, and they grew up in the fucking soviet union and not exactly during it's heyday.

                      Living in wartime is awful. Living while wishing for things to be fixed, or even for any kind of hope, even if it means death in war, isn't that much better.

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                      12
                      • T [email protected]

                        a new microwave is like $20-50 dude. And no, it has no internet.

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #55

                        I've never bought one, I always repair them. Spare parts are pretty easy to find near dumpsters, given how often people just throw them away..

                        T 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • F [email protected]

                          I'm sorry, but you are wildly naive. You've seen 22 years of this planet. You have no idea how good you and your potential offspring actually have it.

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                          wrote last edited by
                          #56

                          So how old must one be to not have you pull an ad-hominem instead of addressing the points being made?

                          Have you maybe considered that it's precisely the fact that you are older and have seen more of the world actually somewhat functioning that gives you this impression that on the whole things are fine, not to mention material advantages, and it is in fact - your credibility, that should be in question?

                          F 1 Reply Last reply
                          12
                          • marighost@piefed.socialM [email protected]

                            Asbestos and lead paint everywhere, yummers 🤤🤤🤤

                            L This user is from outside of this forum
                            L This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote last edited by [email protected]
                            #57

                            We don't know what our asbestos and lead paint will be, and so we don't worry about it. Neither did they, and it wasn't a problem for them. They're a problem for us, though.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • sanctus@lemmy.worldS [email protected]

                              If we dont pass the torch only the rich will. Is that a world we want to fortify? I'd rather not. Someone has to oppose them. Thats our and our children's fight as the world begins to wane.

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                              wrote last edited by [email protected]
                              #58

                              And we're fighting this fight by breeding more wageslaves for the capitalists?

                              I don't mean to be as dramatic as this comes off, but I don't understand this logic. You don't work extra hard when you want to stick it to the rich, you don't work at all, i.e. go on strike. People not having kids would make sense as a strike of sorts.

                              sanctus@lemmy.worldS 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • B [email protected]

                                I personally cringe when I hear a friend js having a kid. All I can think of is how bad theyre going to have it. Hell id definitely have been better off being born 20 years earlier, but these new kids are REALLY screwed unless they have super rich parents.

                                "Nothing new under the sun" I suppose!

                                58008@lemmy.world5 This user is from outside of this forum
                                58008@lemmy.world5 This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote last edited by
                                #59

                                Honestly, I don't. I came up in the '80s, wasn't diagnosed with autism until 2022. My life would have been so different if I had known about it when I was a child, and if autism was as well-understood as it is today so that I had the support I needed. Kids today who have issue like that are identified much earlier and helped more. The steady march of knowledge and science is almost always a good thing. So, the present and the future are always the place to be for most people most of the time. Of course a Gazan isn't feeling the giddy excitement of scientific discovery at this moment, but for the human species as a whole, things have never been better. There is always someone suffering immense, unimaginable hardship. The human project is overwhelmingly not that.

                                Every generation has existential concerns, too. Climate change and the rise of fascism is on the cards right now. When I was a kid and adolescent in the '80s and '90s, I was in the middle of the N. Irish 'Troubles'. Before that, people had the Cold War to worry about. Before that, WWII and WWI. But things are always better than they were 'yesterday' if you take stock of everyone as a whole and not just those suffering the worst in any given moment.

                                If you took the average kid born today in an average society, and transplanted them into the 1970s with the same socioeconomic starting point, it would be tantamount to gross child abuse given the vast ocean of stuff they could have had, but now will never have (in their childhood, at least). And I'm not even talking about technology and the internet; just the treatment of children by the state and schools alone would be night-and-day different. Kids are individuals today, in the '70s you were your parents' property and didn't develop a sense-of-self worth respecting until you were old enough to get drunk.

                                I still wouldn't bring a kid into existence, but for those that are here already, 2025 is the best time to be born. Like if I were my parents, I would not have had me while the country was tearing itself apart with bombings and shootings every day. But I'm glad I was born when I was and not when my parents were kids.

                                F 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • Z [email protected]

                                  Remember the hole in the ozone layer? Or the nuclear threat, some people were sure that the world was going to end before 1984. Then the aids epidemic. And 9/11, my god, nobody was safe anymore! And then the Yellostone caldera, that thing is going to erupt any time now!

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                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #60

                                  The hole in the ozone layer is a great case study in effective amelioration of an anthropogenic climate problem. People got whipped up into a frenzy and politicians listened both to them and to the scientists. We switched refrigerants and have continued research and development to the point that heat pumps are now good enough to work in the winter in most places, using refrigerant blends. The ozone layer is well on its way to recovery. The overall response was excellent, and the Montreal Protocol was likely the most successful international agreement ever. That’s a stark contrast to our modern climate denialism and the vilification of science.

                                  The nuclear threat is still real, but mutually assured destruction turns out to have been a pretty effective deterrent. But hey, maybe nuclear winter is the answer to global warming.

                                  I don’t think anyone saw AIDS or 9/11 as an existential threat. I agree that there have always been things to dread, but you’re just building a strawman.

                                  Dread about uncontrollable geologic forces is natural, but it’s not what I’m talking about. Yellowstone could erupt, sure. Many other geologic disasters could also occur, and humans would be along for a short ride of doom. That’s just life, and that’s okay.

                                  But it’s especially depressing to watch the slow-motion failure of our social species to be able to communicate and organize effectively enough to stop a climate problem of our own making. It’s technologically preventable, but not socially. And at this point, I argue that it’s morally wrong to create children without realistic hope for a better future.

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                                  • H [email protected]

                                    Yup. I smile and give lip service while thinking how I would never want to do that to a child. Im really lucky because if I did a fifth year of college to pick up a second major and did a year in a PhD program and worked in my industry that did not make enough for two or three years. This set me back just enough that by the time the kid question came up it was in the mid aughts and it was a no not now and looking around not ever. Did not take many more years to become no way, no how, not in this reality. If I had done a more lucrative major and started working right out of college there is a massive chance I might have kids who I would not have been able to help pay for college and desperately trying to make sure I did not turn into a burden on them.

                                    S This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #61

                                    And the fact that these economic conditions are imposed on the working majority is the real crime.

                                    Owner class are parasites and get your ivermectin out.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • R [email protected]

                                      You are born in the very very very best stretch the human race has ever known.

                                      We have solutions for almost every problem which exists today.

                                      Wars are at an historical low point.

                                      Chances are good you've never been even experienced war first hand.

                                      Housing is expensive, yes. But chances are you're reading this on a couch or bed in a home, heated (or cooled), with a working stove, light at night and a fridge with edibles in it. And lets not talk about your immediate almost unrestricted access to all of human knowledge.

                                      That would be unbelievable, impossible even during 99.9% of human history. (Or somewhere near this figure)

                                      You should stop doomscrolling and start reading the real human history.

                                      All of human knowledge at your fingertips. And this is what you chose to distill from it.

                                      S This user is from outside of this forum
                                      S This user is from outside of this forum
                                      [email protected]
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #62

                                      Wars are at an historical low point.

                                      Factually incorrect statement.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      3
                                      • 58008@lemmy.world5 [email protected]

                                        Honestly, I don't. I came up in the '80s, wasn't diagnosed with autism until 2022. My life would have been so different if I had known about it when I was a child, and if autism was as well-understood as it is today so that I had the support I needed. Kids today who have issue like that are identified much earlier and helped more. The steady march of knowledge and science is almost always a good thing. So, the present and the future are always the place to be for most people most of the time. Of course a Gazan isn't feeling the giddy excitement of scientific discovery at this moment, but for the human species as a whole, things have never been better. There is always someone suffering immense, unimaginable hardship. The human project is overwhelmingly not that.

                                        Every generation has existential concerns, too. Climate change and the rise of fascism is on the cards right now. When I was a kid and adolescent in the '80s and '90s, I was in the middle of the N. Irish 'Troubles'. Before that, people had the Cold War to worry about. Before that, WWII and WWI. But things are always better than they were 'yesterday' if you take stock of everyone as a whole and not just those suffering the worst in any given moment.

                                        If you took the average kid born today in an average society, and transplanted them into the 1970s with the same socioeconomic starting point, it would be tantamount to gross child abuse given the vast ocean of stuff they could have had, but now will never have (in their childhood, at least). And I'm not even talking about technology and the internet; just the treatment of children by the state and schools alone would be night-and-day different. Kids are individuals today, in the '70s you were your parents' property and didn't develop a sense-of-self worth respecting until you were old enough to get drunk.

                                        I still wouldn't bring a kid into existence, but for those that are here already, 2025 is the best time to be born. Like if I were my parents, I would not have had me while the country was tearing itself apart with bombings and shootings every day. But I'm glad I was born when I was and not when my parents were kids.

                                        F This user is from outside of this forum
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                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #63

                                        IMO climate change is kind of a different beast than hardships from the past.

                                        D B 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • S This user is from outside of this forum
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                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #64

                                          Even a cursory search shows the statement to be factual. Pick one

                                          S U 2 Replies Last reply
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