Is the US a dystopia?

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Is this guy teaching people to drive aggressively or teaching them to not drive aggressively? A course teaching the latter is typically called a defensive driving course? This is calling your CPR class "Let People Die" training.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Thursday, 31 October 2024 18:15 (one year ago)

The aggressive driving course focuses on drivers learning how to manage their anger and anxiety on the road.

good luck usa (Kim Kimberly), Thursday, 31 October 2024 18:21 (one year ago)

iirc the US State Department teaches an “aggressive driving” course to help foreign service officers at the wheel get out of trouble, it’s informally referred to as “crash bang training”

trm (tombotomod), Thursday, 31 October 2024 19:21 (one year ago)

https://www.criplomats.com/?p=5223

trm (tombotomod), Thursday, 31 October 2024 19:23 (one year ago)

https://inthesetimes.com/article/waffle-house-hurricanes-workers-union

xyzzzz__, Friday, 1 November 2024 16:45 (one year ago)

https://gizmodo.com/san-francisco-startup-sees-huge-demand-for-sleeping-pods-that-cost-700-a-month-2000520007

dmt taking comedian podcaster (sleeve), Monday, 4 November 2024 21:36 (one year ago)

Shows like HBO’s Silicon Valley have glamorized these types of living situations.

Did it though? Did it?

pplains, Monday, 4 November 2024 21:52 (one year ago)

ain't nothin new about a flophouse

budo jeru, Monday, 4 November 2024 21:57 (one year ago)

I feel like we may need a whole new thread for the coming dystopia now Project 2025 is taking over.

e.g. : for-profit prison company shares are soaring in preparation of the massive detention centers they're expecting to build. Hooray! https://fortune.com/2024/11/07/president-donald-trump-election-immigration-border-detention-ice-geo-group-corecivic/

StanM, Friday, 8 November 2024 10:35 (one year ago)

Don't see anything strikingly new there.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 8 November 2024 10:45 (one year ago)

It doesn't have to be new, ramping up current dystopian elements still counts as dystopia.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 8 November 2024 10:48 (one year ago)

No, nothing new but it's going to be the new norm maybe?

StanM, Friday, 8 November 2024 10:51 (one year ago)

Mean to say that if this was a shift then maybe its a reason for a new thread.

Agree its a ramp up.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 8 November 2024 11:37 (one year ago)

I don’t really see how Solnit is anything but a reactionary. “We used to do this, but now everything is ruined”— it’s just a liberal rather than rightwing reaction, but it’s still inadequate and paltry.

Her column immediately after the election was one of the most embarrassing things I have ever began reading, I couldn’t even finish it.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 17 November 2024 13:24 (one year ago)

the curious thing is that despite being more connected to each other than ever before - in terms of news, events, protests, crimes, strategies, insights, data, music, art, film etc - we appear to be more divided than ever

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 17 November 2024 13:35 (one year ago)

that said i fully believe s.f. is a dystopia

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 17 November 2024 13:36 (one year ago)

the curious thing is that despite being more connected to each other than ever before - in terms of news, events, protests, crimes, strategies, insights, data, music, art, film etc - we appear to be more divided than ever

Immediate access to everyone else's thoughts taking away the comforting falsehood that mostly we all want the same things maybe?

Daniel_Rf, Sunday, 17 November 2024 13:42 (one year ago)

"A lot of people seem to move through the streets as though they’re somehow both hostile and boring, and they are more boring now that people around us are less engaged and more enterprises are outlets of corporate chains such as Starbucks and Walgreens, so there’s nothing distinctive or local and no one lasting to get to know."

awww, they should join a book club! it gets rough when you hit your 60s. its lonely out there. i already feel it and i'm only 56. also: Hostile Boredom is the title of my late-80s Philly diary.

also, writers are notoriously boring on the street and they just stare at people hoping they will do something interesting.

also, san fran disconnectedness just makes me think of sad hippies:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U45CzgrLE9s

scott seward, Sunday, 17 November 2024 15:29 (one year ago)

i'd like to know what young people in san fran think of life there. and not just the children of the ruling class. all kinds of young people. do they hate it? do they love it? i almost moved there in the early 90s. a friend wanted me to come there. but i chickened out. i had too many records and books. Tales of the City on PBS almost made me go! that show really got to me. even then i had another friend there who said that if i came i would have to have some $$$ because it was not cheap. so, i went back to philly. plenty of money for cheesesteaks.

scott seward, Sunday, 17 November 2024 15:36 (one year ago)

i have a younger friend (32ish) who moved to the Bay Area a couple years ago and eagerly wants out. Expensive, tech-bro-y, etc. But some of it is also east coast/west coast culture clash - they are very direct and have had a hard time forming strong bonds with folks who style they perceived as elliptical, indirect, noncommittal etc.

the last visible dot (Doctor Casino), Sunday, 17 November 2024 15:48 (one year ago)

I am glad I no longer live in the Bay even tho I miss parts of it terribly— mostly my friends and the access to the outdoors.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 17 November 2024 17:41 (one year ago)

Solnit green is people

(That doesn't actually mean anything; I've just wanted to have an opportunity to post it.)

Rumspringsteen (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 17 November 2024 17:52 (one year ago)

I don’t really see how Solnit is anything but a reactionary. “We used to do this, but now everything is ruined”— it’s just a liberal rather than rightwing reaction, but it’s still inadequate and paltry.

Her column immediately after the election was one of the most embarrassing things I have ever began reading, I couldn’t even finish it.

She produces absolutely cringe-inducing pieces fairly regularly. I'm not even sure the truly horrendous one I read is the same as the one you refer to here.

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 18:16 (one year ago)

The headline of the one I am referencing: "Our mistake was to think we lived in a better country than we do."

How anyone with any sense of US history could write such trash with a straight face is beyond my ken. She sucks.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 17 November 2024 20:56 (one year ago)

That is absolutely bizarre because check out her published article on the day of the election.

https://lithub.com/rebecca-solnit-we-the-people-can-make-a-better-future-for-all/

Such a weird series of thoughts, but most especially the idea that we should celebrate (far) right wing people voting based on their ideals because the American dream or something.

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 20:58 (one year ago)

libs gonna lib, always incoherent and failing upwards. beyond any sense that this person is considered a major public intellectual, she is a total moron afaic

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:08 (one year ago)

Agree.

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:09 (one year ago)

I don't know that US history is all that lively a determiner of how most people feel about the quality of their neighbors, but just observing how the US Congress has become a garbage heap and looking at the tight presidential polls during the election itself, there was plenty of current evidence of how utterly degraded and corrupted our political process is. You'd have to be pretty blind to miss it.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:09 (one year ago)

The headline of the one I am referencing: "Our mistake was to think we lived in a better country than we do."

How anyone with any sense of US history could write such trash with a straight face is beyond my ken. She sucks.

I have no opinion on Rebecca Solnit (other than that I liked her famous essay about mansplaining from a million years ago), but I think this headline expresses a common sentiment felt by a lot of Americans who are well-informed but tend toward optimism, who believe that "the moral arc of the universe is long but bends toward justice."

You, of course, have always known that the majority of Americans are stupid, cruel people and the country's leaders are morally bankrupt criminals worthy of the highest contempt, so naturally you will find this sentiment hopelessly naive. But not all of us are as enlightened as you.

jaymc, Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:14 (one year ago)

You attribute scorn to my position when that is only a small part of it.

I actually don’t believe that most Americans are cruel people, but I do believe that the anti-intellectualism and propaganda shoved down the throats of US students in history classrooms from Kindergarten onwards is a real problem we need to talk about. Long story short, I think that a lot of people in this country are stupid, but I also don’t really believe that is their fault a lot of the time, given the social and educational environment they are subjected to.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:25 (one year ago)

"Americans who are well-informed but tend toward optimism, who believe that "the moral arc of the universe is long but bends toward justice.""

Please be more informed.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:36 (one year ago)

There's no need for that snark.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:47 (one year ago)

yeah, we're better then this. it's not who we are. #Biden4ever

scott seward, Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:49 (one year ago)

I'm immune to optimism/pessimism stuff. I now live in a newly red county where a majority of the Hispanic minorities voted for fascism. All I've ever known is work. So what I've always taken out of the MLK arc-of-the-universe stuff is "We bend it, it doesn't happen by itself." The second part is white lib nimby shit.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 17 November 2024 21:55 (one year ago)

fuck this is true. being well-informed makes anyone a well-informed ilx shitposter. i ain’t talking about me, obv.

sparkling hebroic couplet (Hunt3r), Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:11 (one year ago)

I think what I object to is the implication that people who are optimistic (and who may at times feel disillusioned because of their optimism) are necessarily stupid.

I haven't read Solnit's book Hope in the Dark, but this summary suggests that her attitude is a deliberate choice and not borne of ignorance:

"In it, she makes a radical case for hope as a commitment to act in a world whose future remains uncertain and unknowable. Drawing on her decades of activism and a wide reading of environmental, cultural, and political history, Solnit argued that radicals have a long, neglected history of transformative victories, that the positive consequences of our acts are not always immediately seen, directly knowable, or even measurable, and that pessimism and despair rest on an unwarranted confidence about what is going to happen next."

https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/791-hope-in-the-dark

jaymc, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:17 (one year ago)

Don't think optimism is the issue, more naivety and soft jargon in the intersection of self-help and faintly left leaning politics.

I suggest reading the article above.

Also while there are obviously interesting discussions about energy and positivity as a driver for political change, "radical hope" in the way explained there has become a kind of cliché that academics or people on the border of academia and journalism repeat or explain in a vapid sort of way.

People can be motivated by all sorts of emotions.

It is also weird that this discussion began with two almost entirely contradictory articles.

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:29 (one year ago)

I'll confess that "radical hope" as term and concept has never made sense to me; it sounds vaguely liberationist theology.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:32 (one year ago)

One must imagine Sisyphus happy, is all I know.

Daniel_Rf, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:35 (one year ago)

We will have to just agree to disagree here. Her disgraceful comments about radical anarchist tactics in 2011 and the general tenor of her observations and ideological positions is loathsome liberal pablum, imho, and friends and I regularly discuss whether she is a psy-op.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:36 (one year ago)

I will concede that I don't know her work well enough, and this thread is the first criticism of it I have encountered.

jaymc, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:38 (one year ago)

I mean is there any word that won't be placed after "radical" in the popular political thought arena? I've honestly seen it creeping into food discourse. If you type it into a book store website you'll find about a hundred results.

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:40 (one year ago)

radical hemorrhoids

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:41 (one year ago)

https://www.domusweb.it/en/news/2012/05/15/radical-sitting.html

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:42 (one year ago)

https://www.domusweb.it/en/news/2012/05/15/radical-shitting.html

papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:46 (one year ago)

I will concede that I don't know her work well enough, and this thread is the first criticism of it I have encountered.

This was inarticulate: What I meant is that I have always had generally positive feelings about Solnit based on the little of her work that I have read, and what I've gleaned about her reputation; I hadn't realized she was someone who was critically maligned. I have learned something from this thread and will make sure to be distrustful of her work in the future.

jaymc, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:48 (one year ago)

I feel I've only seen criticisms in the last couple of years really. Fairly wide range of them also, by which I mean not a united voice perhaps.

LocalGarda, Sunday, 17 November 2024 22:51 (one year ago)

I'm immune to optimism/pessimism stuff. I now live in a newly red county where a majority of the Hispanic minorities voted for fascism. All I've ever known is work. So what I've always taken out of the MLK arc-of-the-universe stuff is "We bend it, it doesn't happen by itself." The second part is white lib nimby shit.

― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn)

i wouldn't say i'm immune to optimism/pessimism. i like to think i'm jaded, but it's a shell, really, and i'm just as easily shocked as anyone. shocked by myself, more than anything.

it was just yesterday that it hit me what "deportation" is, in the fascist mind, a euphemism for. how the hell can i make sense of that? how can i make sense of democracy knowing that a not-insignificant percentage of people would willingly vote for their own extermination? i know that one can be blind to one's own personal self-interest, but there is something shocking about that, even though i've personally been there myself, even though i've wished, at one time or another, for omnicide.

a great deal of my light reading is about atrocities. i call it light reading because it's mostly popular history - _when paris went dark_, _bloodlands_, etc. but i do read it critically. i was reading the chapter about the city of paris' role in the holocaust, some of the things rosbottom says. i read him as being implicitly critical of how _positive_ and _upbeat_ a lot of the jewish writing of that time is, some suggestion that they were deluding themselves. and then, at the same time, there are offhand mentions of the tremendous spike in suicides. nobody ever looks at the people who killed themselves as being a symptom. neither the ones who killed themselves in 1940 or the ones who killed themselves in 1980, the ones who "survived". i have a hard time thinking of something like that as being the sort of thing one "survives". one lives through it and one is changed by it, and if one is lucky, one doesn't live long enough to see one's children do the exact same shit to other people that was done to them.

maybe it's "pessimistic" for me to believe, as i do, that the only thing that stands in between a lot of people and, well, being genocided, is donald trump's own total incompetence. i'd really like to believe that "humanity" wouldn't let that happen. people here? people here would oppose it, just as many in paris opposed it, just as many fought hard for the humanity and dignity of the people they knew. do any of us have the power to prevent the people in power doing something like what was done at the Vel' d'Hiv'? not really, no. it wasn't the germans out there on the streets conducting that roundup. it was the french police.

as much as i would like to... exculpate the 50% of voters who did this, as much i know that whatever happens, they will _out of necessity_ one day be forgiven... they don't deserve it. what they've done is clear to many of us. everyone of these people, along with the washington post refusing to endorse a candidate, disney refusing to broadcast an already-completed episode of a kids show on the grounds that it stands up for trans rights...

if you asked me a year ago, i would've said that america is unquestionably a dystopia. today, well, i don't know what the word "dystopia" is supposed to mean. we live at the whims of genocidaires, now more than ever.

and i'm isolated. i'm isolated and precarious and afraid. everyone i know is isolated and precarious and afraid. and i fucking hate it. i don't know how much time i have left. i want at least to be able to fucking enjoy the time i have. and i'm not, not really.

Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 18 November 2024 00:49 (one year ago)

"I think what I object to is the implication that people who are optimistic (and who may at times feel disillusioned because of their optimism) are necessarily stupid."

Is your optimism "warranted" after the worst people win elections, after seeing the near extinction of a people, after climate catastrophes. All made by us.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 18 November 2024 08:08 (one year ago)


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