• Freeman@lemmy.pub
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    1 year ago

    Exposing children to social media.

    Putting your kids on social media publicly.

    The kids that grew up with it will probably see the harm caused and not want to pass that on.

  • Vaggumon@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    May not be widely accepted, but it is accepted in a good chunk of the world.

    • Being a Bigot
    • Being Racist
    • Being Sexist
    • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I don’t see any of those things changing. I’ve read too many history books and they’re traits of our species, not minor blips.

        • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          They won’t.

          The traits you describe are as old as the human race itself, and even with the vast knowledge we now possess, they’re still endemic to the human experience. They’re built into our DNA.

    • KnumbKnuts@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Bigotry is still active, just different groups. Racism is definitely still active, just different groups (look up stats on violence against Asians or their chances of getting into the Ivy Leagues). Human nature is so strong, I admire and doubt your optimism.

      Sexism being actively obsolete in 20 years is possible and would be a good start.

      • Vaggumon@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yes, I know they are still active, that’s kind of the point I was making. I’m saying if things go as they look to be, then hopefully they won’t be in 20 or so years. If they are just as active as they are now, or even more so, then hopefully asteroid 2044 takes care of the planet once and for all.

  • justhach@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    How much sedentary time we spend in front of screens. We already know it is ruining our eyes and our sleep cycles.

    • scrotumnipples@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I think it depends more on what you’re doing on those screens. I regularly download books from my local library to read on my phone. People used to read paper books, newspapers, and magazines all the time. Same shit, different means of consumption.

  • 0x01@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    In 10 years

    • Selling high strength magnets without regulation
    • Petroleum cars

    In 100 years?

    • Eating meat
    • Natural gas stoves
    • Oil/Natural gas furnaces
    • Anonymous online communities
    • Not wearing a sort of body-camera in most professions

    In 1000 years?

    • Religion, mysticism, paranormal beliefs
    • An inversion of religious moralism, I think things that are thought of as evil will have to become the norm, genetic modification, cloning, etc.
    • Eating food in general
    • Vegoon@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      In 100 years?

      Eating meat
      Natural gas stoves
      Oil/Natural gas furnaces
      

      This sounds like a solid +6°C plan if it takes 100 years

      • 0x01@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        It’s all a devious plan by the canadians so they can have warmer beaches

      • filister@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yes, I agree on this with you, like cars are extremely inefficient way of transportation, especially considering how overcrowded our cities are and the general trend of making bigger and bigger cars that take even more space on the streets, on the parkings, etc.

      • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Nope.

        It’s insane to me how the fuckcars movement went from “we should have walkable cities and more public transport” to “ban all cars”.

        The stupidity of not realizing that farmers, plumbers, electricians, etc. need cars to keep modern society working is baffling to me. Not to mention that they fully expect people to go grocery shopping every single day, or it never crosses their mind because they have no idea what it takes to feed a large family.

        • eyy@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          It’s insane to me how the fuckcars movement went from “we should have walkable cities and more public transport” to “ban all cars”.

          have you read the sidebar of the fuckcars communities?

          From Wiki (emphasis mine):

          The car-free movement is a broad, informal, emergent network of individuals and organizations, including social activists, urban planners, transportation engineers, environmentalists and others, brought together by a shared belief that large and/or high-speed motorized vehicles (cars, trucks, tractor units, motorcycles, etc.)[1] are too dominant in most modern cities. The goal of the movement is to create places where motorized vehicle use is greatly reduced or eliminated, by converting road and parking space to other public uses and rebuilding compact urban environments where most destinations are within easy reach by other means, including walking, cycling, public transport, personal transporters, and mobility as a service.

          From Reddit (emphasis mine):

          Discussion about the harmful effects of car dominance on communities, environment, safety, and public health. Aspiration towards more sustainable and effective alternatives like mass transit and improved pedestrian and cycling infrastructure.

          From lemmy (emphasis mine):

          An place to discuss problems of car centric infrastructure or how it hurts us all. Let’s explore the bad world of Cars!

          Equating the fuckcars movement to “ban all cars” is like equating climate change to “ban all oil”.

          Not to mention that they fully expect people to go grocery shopping every single day, or it never crosses their mind because they have no idea what it takes to feed a large family.

          My aunt feeds a family of five. She does not own a car, nor does she do grocery shopping every day. You know what’s the answer? You had it right - “we should have walkable cities and more public transport”.

          • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            have you read the sidebar of the fuckcars communities?

            Yes, and I’ve also seen the posts and comments. Which is more representative of the actual community.

            • eyy@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              I see posts and comments talking about how rail isn’t better, bike lanes aren’t more widespread, how too many parking lots is an issue… I don’t see anyone saying cars should be banned outright.

        • jetsetdorito@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Should have added a winky face. We can’t ban cars, but definitely need to use cars less. Mostly a joke about how the current state of EVs is just green washing.

          • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            That’s fair.

            I was mostly venting my frustration over those silly posts anway. Since as long as humans have physical bodies, we will at times need individual transportation. And they sometimes act like literally everything in life can be done through public transport and excpeting people to bring home a couch on the bus.

        • Takatakatakatakatak@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          These people live in a tiny little bubble, but the glass is dirty and they can’t see outside. They probably have zero idea where their food comes from and how far it had to travel to make it to their wholefoods, or how different the lives of the people that grow it are to their own.

  • Jordan Lund@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    20 years ago was 2003… any idea what was socially acceptable then that isn’t now?

    Not much, really. 20 years isn’t a lot of time.

    Think 50 years, or 100 years.

  • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Meat eating is a possibility. I don’t see it being universal, but veganism is on the ride and it makes sense to a lot of people.

    • Countess425@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s just not sustainable. Lab-grown meat is here, it just needs to get to scale, get a bit cheaper and boom. Farming and killing animals for food will be obsolete.

    • pinwurm@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      When the quality and cost of labgrown meat matches the real thing - we’ll see the tables turn. Especially if they’re able to produce various *cuts^ and styles.

      • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Even beyond that, I wouldn’t underestimate the power of cultural change. From what I can tell, drugs, sex and clearly defined gender identities are all on the decline in the younger generations in the west. I’m not sure there’s any good or clear external force pushing this. I think it’s just change. When it comes to eating meat, it’s pretty easy to start thinking through why you don’t need to do it as much as the typical western diet does, which feels pretty ripe for some form of merely cultural change.

  • scottywh@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I think basically every single top level comment has zero understanding of what a short time 20 years actually is.

    I also expect almost everything that is acceptable today will also still be in 20 years, including nearly every example suggested in this discussion.

    The world simply does not change that fast as a general rule.

    • SlothMama@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Completely disagree, but if you haven’t been around for at least a couple of sets of twenty years I can see why you would think this.

      Someone else gave a great set of things that were different, but really, twenty years ago was almost completely different in nearly every dimension of life I can remember.

      In 2003 not only was gay marriage not legal, gay sex and relationships were illegal where I live, and was punishable by prison time.

      In 2003 most of the country wasn’t online, pagers were more common than cell phones, and 3DFX VooDoo graphics cards were still a thing.

      In 2003 I used to smoke inside my community college’s cafeteria, where people ate because it was the designated smoking area.

      In 2003 minimum wage was $5.15 nationwide, and gas was just a little over a dollar.

      In 2003 people didn’t use laptops in school and electronics were confiscated on site, sometimes teachers would ‘lose’ them and you never got it back, and somehow that was an expected outcome - I lost a laser pointer that way.

      In 2003 casual homophobia was mainstream, all your friends, and probably you would be making gay jokes, and transphobia was not a concept. I thought transgender people were the same thing as intersex, I didn’t know gender transition was possible.

      American society was post 9/11 and highly patriotic, even liberal people were unusually patriotic, and politics were probably the most ‘neutral’ that I’ve ever seen, it was nothing like they are now, but in general things trended towards cultural conservatism.

      I remember being an outcast because I didn’t believe in God, and people would casually tell me I was going to go to Hell.

      Nah, 20 years is an entirely different cultural paradigm.

      • SpaceBar@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        23 years ago offices buildings were not locked. No doors were locked. Zero. You didn’t need a badge to be in the building. Now in most places you swipe through every single door and you need a badge on a lanyard.

      • scottywh@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I don’t know how old you are but I lived through a completely different experience than you…

        I’d been selling and repairing computers for 6+ years by 2003 and had been in the workforce many years before that. I can assure you people were definitely using laptops in schools (as I sold them to them)… Maybe not as ubiquitously as they do now but it was already quite common.

        I think we’ll just have to agree to disagree on how much things have changed since then … Now, if you want to go back 30 or 40 years then I can definitely agree we’ve seen some significant changes.

        Hell, the first time I flew out of the country I didn’t even need photo ID much less a passport.

        • Laticauda@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Bro out of that entire list the only one you could contradict was computers, which I definitely don’t remember being widespread 20 years ago, and they were certainly nothing like the computers of today in terms of experience. What about, y’know, the whole gay marriage thing? Seems like a pretty dramatic change you’ve just brushed over.

        • drphungky@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          In 2005 at a top 50 liberal arts school, I was the only person in almost every class I was in using a laptop to take notes. Huge 200 person lectures there were definitely a few, and in later years I still remember being crazy jealous of a woman who had a laptop with a stylus for drawing econ graphs - one set of classes I wrote manually in - but she was a rarity. My notes were always highly sought after for sharing because I’d have 4 pages typed instead of 2 scrawled and not keeping up.

        • Angerona@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Most schools didn’t have Wifi in 2003, so it’s not clear what “using laptops” would’ve been. There were computer labs, sure (mostly desktops).

          Colleges had ethernet jacks in every desk in improved/modern classrooms (and nothing outside of those). The use of laptops in college was already common, in school - not yet.

          Cell phones were already common, but smartphones - not at all. Palm phones were the epitome of “smart phone” - and getting data on/off them was a pain. Many plans still didn’t include unlimited calling. Verizon was innovative with offering unlimited calls to a preselect group of numbers.

          Not sure what your point is about having sold and repaired computers for 6+ years before 2003. Sure, computers had been sold for far longer than that. But we are talking about what was (and wasn’t) commonplace.

          • scottywh@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m not sure what point you’re trying to make.

            WiFi is in no way necessary to take notes, write papers, etcetera.

            College is certainly included in the definition of “school” so that seems a silly separation to try and make.

            Cell phones and smart phones in particular are irrelevant to anything I said.

            Do you have a point or are you just trying to disagree with me?

            • SlothMama@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              My point is that my experience in my life, to now, across two decades, was drastically different. People still didn’t bring a laptop to the community college I went to that year either, I had never seen or heard of it as a practice until later.

              I returned back to school about five years later and laptops in classes was common.

              We somehow seem to have had drastically different experiences she perspectives from a broadly large geographic region.

              For additional perspective my typing class in 1999 used an actual typewriter, not a computer, so socioeconomic factors of my own high school experience and the area I grew up may have actually been that different and potentially atypical to even surrounding areas, it’s hard to tell.

          • scottywh@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            In case it still doesn’t occur to you, I pointed out that I’d been in the computer business for a number of years already by then to illustrate that I’d already been selling laptops for years to people who intended to use them in school prior to 2003.

        • SlothMama@lemmy.world
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          I was in high school in the nineties and no one had a laptop in class, then when I went into community college, things like online classes were a novelty, with a handful of offerings and a large computer lab because most people didn’t have Internet access at home, so you would do your online work there, or at home and bring it to school to upload on a floppy disk.

          This was my regional reality, southeast US, but was very much the experience of tens of thousands up until the period of time, 2003, that you’re referring to.

          Up until then it was only rich people that had Internet access at home, and most of the people I knew would often lose their lights and phones from their parents not being able to pay for utilities.

          Some of my experience is skewed towards poverty because that was the social circle I had, but I still never had the impression that the masses actually had Internet or even laptops at home. Most people did have an offline computer, usually five to eight years old though.

          • scottywh@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Dude… I wasn’t rich and it most certainly wasn’t “only rich people” that had internet at home.

            Hell, I personally had both cable and DSL in my house from 2000-2003 so my wife downloading wouldn’t cause latency issues with my gaming.

            I also lived in the southeastern US at the time.

    • eyy@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I think basically every single top level comment has zero understanding of what a short time 20 years actually is.

      I also expect almost everything that is acceptable today will also still be in 20 years, including nearly every example suggested in this discussion.

      The world simply does not change that fast as a general rule.

      In 2003, you could still smoke indoors in many states/countries who have since made it illegal.

      In 2003, cannabis and homosexuality was illegal in many more countries than it is now.

      In 2003, there were many more TV shows/movies with ingrained sexism than there are now.

      In 2003, having hundreds of “online friends” meant you were a social recluse who only spent time on IRC/MSN messenger.

      In 2003, if you met a significant other online, you came up with an elaborate story to hide it.

      In 2003, most people had a paper map of the streets folded up in their glove compartment.

      In 2003, people still remembered phone numbers, phones all had removable batteries, every phone company had a different OS/charging cable, and no phone had a screen >6 inches big.

      (cheating a little here, but I would be remiss not to mention this) In 2000, it wasn’t illegal to bring a full water bottle into a plane.

      • scottywh@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Thanks, but I remember things from 20 years ago and this is an exaggeration in many ways… Or perhaps I should say multiple exaggerations.

        Things were far more noticeably different 40+ years ago (which I also remember).

        Oh, and for what it’s worth, it’s still not illegal to bring a full water bottle on a plane. You just can’t bring one through security so you have to buy it in the airport after the checkpoints.

        • eyy@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Thanks, but I remember things from 20 years ago and this is an exaggeration in many ways… Or perhaps I should say multiple exaggerations.

          I remember things from 20 years ago too. Absolutely none of what I said was an exaggeration. Many of these are facts which you can google.

          Things were far more noticeably different 40+ years ago (which I also remember).

          Sure. Things were way more different 60+ years ago, way way more different 80+ years ago, and way way way more different 100+ years ago. That’s not the point though.

          Oh, and for what it’s worth, it’s still not illegal to bring a full water bottle on a plane. You just can’t bring one through security so you have to buy it in the airport after the checkpoints.

          Ok, you got me there. I should have said:

          (cheating a little here, but I would be remiss not to mention this) In 2000, it wasn’t illegal to bring a full water bottle past airport security.

            • eyy@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              You said “The world simply does not change that fast as a general rule”. I presented a few facts, you called them “multiple exaggerations”. There’s nothing to agree or disagree here - these are facts. You can google laws on homosexuality, cannabis, smoking, and airport security. You can search for when Google Maps was invented. Hell, if you were alive 20 years ago you should just know this.

              Maybe you got me confused with another poster - i’m not saying that the past 20 years was the most drastic change in human history. All I’m saying is that there have been significant changes in the last 20 years.

              Anyway, it doesn’t really matter what you think, so this is my last reply here.

    • starman@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      20 years is a lot of time for change, looking at the speed of how the world is changing now, and looks like it will be faster

    • drphungky@lemmy.world
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      I know it’s just conventional wisdom, but among those who look back and forward and think about this stuff, it’s been common conventional wisdom for a century that 20 years is an exceedingly long time for change.

      I like Bill Gates’ quote the best, “People often overestimate what will happen in the next two years and underestimate what will happen in ten.”

      https://quoteinvestigator.com/2019/01/03/estimate/

      • scottywh@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Technological change is far different than social change in terms of what’s accepted and what isn’t.

        Most of the people commenting to me have gotten caught up in that.

        Most of the things people are pointing out in terms of social change in acceptance are things like gay marriage, smoking, and cannabis legalization.

        What they fail to understand is that attitudes on many of those social issues can be somewhat cyclical and that the drastic changes they are seeing may be more surface level than as deep as they think.

        Consider the overturn of Roe v Wade to understand how some of the shorter term “changes” in what’s socially acceptable may be subject to revert back in the future.

        There are absolutely a shit ton of people whose attitudes towards and acceptance of these things have not changed at all in 20 years.

        Anyways, I’m not planning on replying to any more comments on this topic at this point.

        It’s been done to death.

    • Laticauda@lemmy.world
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      I think that you are the one who has zero understanding of how fast culture can change. There are a LOT of things that were considered acceptable 20 years ago but aren’t today.

        • Laticauda@lemmy.world
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          Well being gay isn’t illegal in a bunch of countries, for one. Kind of a big cultural change. Can’t smoke indoors like in planes or in restaurants, those are just a couple of the most obvious off the top of my head, but they’re far from the only examples.

    • jerkface@lemmy.ca
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      I remember 20 years ago. I remember 40 years ago. It changes pretty fucking fast and it gets faster every year.

    • dtc@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I agree, but we should also remember that time is relative. In under 100 years we went from “holy shit our balsa wood plane flew 250 feet” to “one small step for man”.

      • SlothMama@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Completely disagree, but if you haven’t been around for at least a couple of sets of twenty years I can see why you would think this.

        Someone else gave a great set of things that were different, but really, twenty years ago was almost completely different in nearly every dimension of life I can remember.

        In 2003 not only was gay marriage not legal, gay sex and relationships were illegal where I live, and was punishable by prison time.

        In 2003 most of the country wasn’t online, pagers were more common than cell phones, and 3DFX VooDoo graphics cards were still a thing.

        In 2003 I used to smoke inside my community college’s cafeteria, where people ate because it was the designated smoking area.

        In 2003 minimum wage was $5.15 nationwide, and gas was just a little over a dollar.

        In 2003 people didn’t use laptops in school and electronics were confiscated on site, sometimes teachers would ‘lose’ them and you never got it back, and somehow that was an expected outcome - I lost a laser pointer that way.

        In 2003 casual homophobia was mainstream, all your friends, and probably you would be making gay jokes, and transphobia was not a concept. I thought transgender people were the same thing as intersex, I didn’t know gender transition was possible.

        American society was post 9/11 and highly patriotic, even liberal people were unusually patriotic, and politics were probably the most ‘neutral’ that I’ve ever seen, it was nothing like they are now, but in general things trended towards cultural conservatism.

        I remember being an outcast because I didn’t believe in God, and people would casually tell me I was going to go to Hell.

        Nah, 20 years is an entirely different cultural paradigm.

    • TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      a lot of the shit in here is just ignorant. I believe a lot will change, but not the shit people are posting. religion?? come on

      • scottywh@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        What do you expect to change with regards to acceptance of religion in the next 20 years?

        • TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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          I don’t think much is going to change about religion. People have been religious for … all of human history and beyond? And they still are. And that comes with all the add-ons: sacrifice and care, bigotry and tribalism, manipulation and lies, false hope and real strength. People will still prostrate before Mecca in 2043 and some people will still mistrust them for it. Swindlers and conmen will still wear the face of spirituality to claim moneyfamepower.

          Maybe the one thing that might change, maybe, is homophobia becoming less common in the Abrahamic religions. Maybe. I hope.

          How long until the US has its first openly atheist president? There’s elections in 2024, 28, 32, 36, 40, and 44. Up to six new people, or as few as three. The first catholic president was in the 60s and it took 60 more years to elect another, and it still came up as an issue. I don’t know if that much can change about religion in only 20 years.

  • aesopjah@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Just spitballing, but potentially:

    • undeclared AI usage for photos, video, code, etc
    • driving old beater cars or even nicer old ones like corvettes
    • Being outside during the peak of the day’s heat
    • Black AOC@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      I’d sooner drive an old beater over even an EV with fifteen million computers that I can’t hope to service myself tbh, and motherfuck getting gouged by the Firestone or god forbid, manufacturer mechanic shops for them to do it. Until coast to coast, America’s cities are walkable, you won’t catch me in a computer’d out car.

  • mysoulishome@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I really hope making fun of gender pronouns isn’t acceptable in 20 years. My name is Ted Cruz and my pronounce are U.S.A.

    Not just super lame boomer jokes but shitting on people who feel invisible and pronouns help them feel recognized as a full person.

    • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Now I second this. As a(n aspiring) comedian, I already feel like jokes about pronouns are only playable in rural shitty areas. Nowhere in the cities does that kind of “silly gay people” humor play. because humor is about punching up, and lgbt individuals are nowhere near being a full accepted part of the human experience. we won’t have full acceptance of lgbt people in 20 years, but hey, pronoun jokes will definitely be reserved for shitty old people.

      • mysoulishome@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Thank you for not doing them even if you possibly could get away with it at some shows. Larry the Cable Guy is a millionaire but you know his grandchildren are going to be ashamed of him as they go to college using money made by telling jokes about trans people in bathrooms. It’s easy but it’s wrong and we all know it.