Spyke
Kairosreply
lemmy.today

A lot of people became permanently mentally disabled.

49

We had a chance to make some radical societal changes. Working from home became socially acceptable. Commuting disappeared, and the environment noticeably improved. People had more time to take care of themselves and work on hobbies while also still getting their work done.

Then as soon as bans on working in person were lifted, companies decided they had to bring people back to office in order to justify the expense of the office building.

25
criitzreply
reddthat.com

Bidenism didn't change shit. He was just the guy between Trump. In the future it's Trump that will shape this chapter in the history book.

18
fedia.io

Republicans are the gas pedal and Dems are the brake pedal. Bernie was our option to reverse, but his opportunity is past. If we get to vote again, hopefully AOC steps up and the voters get it together

13

Biden changed a lot less there than Hillary Clinton did as the Democratic candidate that pushed out Bernie Sanders for the 2016 election, an election that was very clearly an anti-establishment election and yet the Democrats were stupid enough to go with someone who is about as close to establishment as you can get without nominating someone who has already been president.

6

I would argue the trend started when Nixon did the crime and was outed and Roger Ailes started a war on reality

7
lemmy.ml

If we're talking politically, covid wasn't the turning point.

If we're talking socializing, then covid wasn't the turning point either, however it was sort of a point of no return or something. Not sure how to describe it.

I've seen plenty of romanticizing of pre-covid days from people around the ages of 18-23 today. Back when they still had friends and their life together, and they never really recovered from the isolation at a critical point.

55
Jankatarchreply
lemmy.world

Covid was like that part in adventure movies where characters have to run accross a bridge as it's collapsing and look back then say "that was our only way to return, we have to keep going now"

31

Except instead of hiking their adventurer backpacks up and setting off into the dense jungle in front of them, it's clicking a "forgot password" link and opening a tab with their email while they wait for the new password to log in to zoom or something.

13

“We used to be so fleshpilled. It’s 2050, and all these skinmonglers are still fucking with my moo’.”

A cacophony of approving moos rise from a worn speaker. The faint outline of a smile is illuminated by the gentle red light of a whirring monitor.

23
oceanreply

Yeah but the next step is amalgatronic goo. I’d take meat suit over that any day. It’s one step away from bionic net suit though. Here’s to the 2070s

4
startrek.website

It's not all bad --- remote work policy is now a major topic. You'd be laughed out of any number of job interviews for asking about remote work policy, whereas now it's a completely fair question.

20

My local grocery store is staffed by remote workers at night.

6

The office building where I work kind of looks like one of those abandoned buildings in Chernobyl. Everyone went remote but they were reluctant to fully embrace it so they kept the office except no one ever went in and now everything's just covered in dust.

I don't know why they just don't sell the building lease. Maybe they can't find anyone to buy it.

1

They already do. Like, “remember when fast food places used to have a dollar menu, and you could buy a dozen eggs for two bucks?”

11

Yep, things changed, but it’s more like it’s all mask off now.

Before covid it was all like this, except the majority could pretend things were fine.

Now it’s part of the common zeitgeist that things are not fine.

I like to say that we are now in the endgame.

10

You reached the end

Anon predicts the future | Spyke