Lately I’ve had a really hard time finding pleasure in anything.

The world is such a depressing inhumane shit show at the moment. And I’m tired of being gaslit by every government from my local borough administration all the way to the federal government.

Capitalism and fascism had taken a hold on the world’s nations the likes of which we have never seen in the history of humankind.

And the worst part is I feel people have been indoctrinated to as point where we’re never gong to collectively get out of it. I don’t even think a violent revolution is possible because people are too fucking dumb to notice what’s wrong.

And the “fuck you, I got mine” attitude that capitalism has brought has ruined any chance of salvation. Empathy and solidarity are ridiculed as being some woke mind virus.

The world’s climate is beyond fucked. There’s wars and crimes against humanity being perpetrated by the Epstein class in our name. We keep electing wolves in sheep’s clothing who win our votes on fake promises to help us then turn against us and double down on policies that make life more difficult and increase our level of misery. Unless you’re a billionaire CEO or a politician, your life is absolutely worthless. You’re nothing more than a low value resource. And you don’t have freedom. Neither of speech or otherwise. Not as long as what you say or do goes against what the elites want.

We’re fucked. I don’t foresee any future worth living in.

  • Northerner@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    It’s not as bad as certain media would have you believe.

    Don’t get me wrong, I am far, far from entertained by the shit-show south of us and by the very serious issues that exist worldwide. As a whole though, I think there is room for optimism. Not blind faith and not “damn, we are doing so great!” but optimism. People are still capable of amazing things and while things do seem dark and the narrative paints every challenge as unwinnable, remember that this the intention of groups that want things broken. Them saying so doesn’t make it so however.

    I’m an old cynic but shit’s still not as bad as it seems.

  • jimmy90@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    is it possible your world view isn’t correct?

    this would of course count as gas-lighting to you right?

    you might be in a cult

  • eightpix@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Social, political, and economic collapse — slow and silent though it may be — is a grinding affair. More supports propping up business as usual and more masks for the orphan-crushing machine that is “progress” make the process more palatable, acceptable, and forgettable.

    Those orphaned parts of society, those being crushed, were once institutions. They are replaced with commodities. As Trevor Noah recently said, we are being forced to “buy back the village.” Homes, carers, community events and spaces are all commodities now. Or, they are online where the data can be mined.

    So, what to do? Fantasize about a future without an orphan-crushing machine. Complain online to an audience who already agrees. Recede from the world and watch it burn. I dont want a world that looks like Terry Gilliam’s Brazil. It doesnt end well for Sam Lowry.

    I have done/am doing all of these things. They’re the options available. I’m also teaching a high school class that fights against this dismay in the next generation. I’m pushing them to be made of sterner stuff. It’s not going well. There are a few who are building with me. There are a few more who seem like they were born giving in to the inevitable dreck. So, teaching keeps me going. Maybe, one day, I’ll do something else.

    I have a misguided belief that I will survive this churn and be the chronicle of the misanthropic present. No benefits in that post-apocalyptic role.

    I content myself to think that there is light and hope and strength in the places where people suffer the most. In Gaza, in Guatemala, in Ukraine, in Bangladesh, and in Congo; there are people who are good to each other, who support each other, and who treat each other with kindness.

    If my problems are rising food and living costs where they have no food and no place to live, I can bear this for a while longer. If my problems are environmental, political, and social malaise and corruption, I have a power to act they can’t exercise — so I must.

    The job of humanity is not pleasure — it is pain favouring own purposes. We find small jewels of pleasure along the way. If we’re lucky, we find others who share their strengths with us and we can enjoy our jewels together. Maybe that’s why I’m here, writing this, now.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    22 hours ago

    Hmm. Do you want to be argued with on the details that aren’t actually that bad, do you want to hear some lifestyle advice, or is it enough to hear that someone read this, you have been heard, and while we’re alone, we’re alone together?

  • bluejade@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I feel this. But also, you aren’t the only one in your community feeling like this. And you aren’t wrong, there is a lot of horror out there. But there are also a -lot- of people who give a shit, and we need to talk to each other more, face to face. We need to be building movements locally and having more of a shared understanding.

    I want you to organize a barbecue with your neighbors, start a club, join a band, listen to the middle aged poet at open mic, whatever it is, and start listening to people around you. You have more in common with them than you think, and as a group, you can level each other out, enjoy life, and maybe even help steer the boat away from the iceberg, just a lil bit 🤏

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Live locally and try your best to ignore the constant flood of information/disinformation from that internet beast that has put a chokehold on the truth and exists to get hate-clicks for money. I find that helping others gives me a good feeling of belonging to something human and not just be bandied about by “tech bros” and their overlords, who have no values that compare to the rest of society.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    We keep electing wolves in sheep’s clothing who win our votes on fake promises to help us then turn against us and double down on policies that make life more difficult and increase our level of misery.

    You’re expecting a perfect candidate. This is not how politics works. You need to reject the worst party at every turn until they’re dead, and the window shifts a little more toward “dispensing collected resources as per the wishes of the people” kind of management. It’s not gonna happen overnight.

    But if you’re suggesting it’s all fucked regardless of whom we elect, then I suspect you’re in one of those areas who get gaslit a LOT and are used to politicians immediately going back on everything after the election. Lougheed wasn’t the first and he definitely wasn’t the last. I bet you don’t have a coastline.

    Right now, voting is more “harm reduction” than “great strides”, even if the latter’s required. We’re just not getting that kind of leader, so our choice is between “harm reduction” and “faux-ristocracy”.

    At least we can protest the one we got over the idiot idea of the week.

    • ZombieCyborgFromOuterSpace@piefed.caOP
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      13 hours ago

      The only candidate I have faith in is Avi Lewis and the NDP.

      But the media keeps manipulating public opinion against them. In fact the media has a huge part to play in all of this. Never have the masses been so thoroughly manipulated.

  • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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    18 hours ago

    I feel the same way all the time. I don’t have a real solution but something that helps me cope is having friends who support me and vice-versa. We hang out pretty much every weekend and try do fun things. If someone needs help there’s almost always one or more of us who’re happy to head out and assist however we can. It doesn’t help with the broader societal problems but it does give me something nice to think about looking forward to whatever we have coming up and knowing there are people who care about me and have my back. Together we can just try and make the best of it.

  • Vinylraupe@lemmy.zip
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    23 hours ago

    I guess it was much worse in the past. It’s just that nowadays you get a lot of information.

          • eightpix@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            No, no. For those living there, then (70s NY, 90s Rus): urban poor, no food, irregular living situations, no representation, being used as pawns in politicking, or, worse being picked up, picked off, or trafficked in rival gangs — and, even then, I’m sure of how much worse it can get than that.

            Could throw in crack cocaine, Krokodil, or methamphetamines. I’ll stipulate to the impacts of Fentanyl.

            But, really, we’re not at urban decay or complete institutional failures. Not yet. Hospitals are open. Police are being paid. I’ve been a few places and seen instances where hospitals close and police go unpaid.

            As for '01 or '08 wholesale corruption of governments globally, I’d stipulate to the scale of it in North America being greater. I’d also stipulate to the precipice of total collapse being more profound; the social safety net is more threadbare and society’s capacity for compassion, care, and camaraderie is abysmal.

            What comes next, globally, is what I described for decaying 70s NY and post-Soviet 90s Rus. Urban decay.

            Maybe you’re seeing Port-au-Prince or Kinshasa or Sanaa or the Af-Pak border region as your metric. Dangerous places.

            Maybe Sadr City or Homs, open warfare.

            Maybe Guatemala Ixil triangle in the early 80s or Srebrenica in the 90s, forgotten genocides.

            See, Im not talking about things being that bad now. They’re just on that road.

            We have time, inclination, and the freedom to speak openly. Maybe things will change if/when Bill C-22 passes. Hope not.

  • Levi@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    I relate man, the environmental doom stuff just makes everything feel so hopeless.

  • tomiant@piefed.social
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    19 hours ago

    Now hear you here, you hear? You are being very negative I think, and feeling bad about how bad shit is. And I wanted to let you know that yeah I came to basically the more or less same conclusion over decades and you are right we’re not going to make it everything is fucked and we are past the point of no return, and we are all going to die either violently or in pain and despair and the best we have to hope for is for it to be as quick as possible, besides that no notes.

  • Rat_in_a_hat@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Some things that helped me:

    • online isn’t reality
    • getting organized with a few people and volunteers helps a lot. It doesn’t need to be protests or direct action, something simple like mutual aid, food drives, meeting people can really flip the switch
    • focusing on the good that does exist, because it’s there, whether it’s something small amongst friends or little victories here and there.

    My therapist also says 2 things - 1) if it’s too big of a problem, break it down to manageable things. 2) if it’s too big that you can’t do anything about, then it’s better to focus your attention on things you can change.

    Also, the world was always shit, and waaayyy worse. We’re just blasted by how bad it is 24/7.

    • baines@piefed.social
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      1 day ago

      ask your therapist about wet bulb temps, curious how he thinks the past was way worse when shits about to be unlivable, therapists are just doing their jobs sure but the climate scientists are day drinking and skipping kids

      regardless definitely not looking forward to the return of the gilded age and i’m unsure how it having been worse before makes this ok now

      shits fucked yo

      • Rat_in_a_hat@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        Lol, that last part was me, not my therapist. It doesn’t make things ok now nor did I ever say so, it was in response to OP saying that things are looking worse than ever with right-wing governments etc.

        But xenophobia, racism, sexism, conservativism, and overall fascism (all the shitty isms) was the norm and by far the majority - it’s considered extreme these days for a reason.

    • anon6789@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Volunteering in person has brought me so much joy these last 2 years.

      The news almost exclusively tells us about the bad people in the world. But there are a ton of good people out there undoing the stuff the baddies are doing. I get to actively make a cause I care about that much more successful, and I’m around a bunch of other people with that same passion and care and concerns as me.

      You can pick something political if you want to be that kind of change, but I picked an activity for the local environment, I’m a wildlife rehab volunteer. Being surrounded by cute animals and awesome people one day a week is a real boost for me.

    • tacosanonymous@mander.xyz
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      1 day ago

      It happens to me all the time and I have to take a break from everything for a month or two to reset. This diagram, and others like it, is a way to change your focus.

  • Optional@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I hear ya. Lookit - step one, log off. Step two, get a good book or a project of some kind that doesn’t need any internet.

    Step three: a very good beverage. I recommend a good root beer, but anything you like will work.

    Finally, enjoy the beverage. It’s good. Good exists all over, it’s just not in feeds. Simple joys, y’know. Take ‘em. They’re everywhere.

    • VieuxQueb@lemmy.ca
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      15 hours ago

      The solution is to ignore the state of things and buy stuff ? I hope you have the money to stay happy, I know I don’t !

    • tomiant@piefed.social
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      19 hours ago

      Yeah root beer. That’s the one to take the edge off. Whenever’l I get back from the battlefield I pour myself a nice stiff little dram of root beer, and then another, to feel reasonable, and then one more and the rest of the bottle and tell the sergeant to prioritize those shipments over any other orders they may have received, will receive, or are currently receiving, even if it costs us the war.

      The cost benefit has already been calculated, it’s nominal, don’t worry about it.

        • Reannlegge@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          Search out ways to DIY your own carbonator, and recipes for cream soda. Stick it to the duopoly of big pop!

          • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            23 hours ago

            I think SodaStream is based in Israel, and more specifically, the occupied West Bank.

            Just for some extra info for anyone thinking of doing this. Avoid the Zionist shit heads

            • Reannlegge@lemmy.ca
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              20 hours ago

              Yes I have heard that as well, as to why I suggested build your own. I have a soda stream already, I just wish I was into the whole DIY stuff prior to getting one over a decade ago.

              Every so often I think of getting the things to DIY one because using a wine making store for CO2 would be much less expensive and ethically more responsible than getting my bottles replaced at the discounted price for returning the used ones. I have not refilled a bottle since finding out about the SodaStream and Israel thing though.

          • gramie@lemmy.ca
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            1 day ago

            There’s a Canadian company called indigo that produces machines that can use SodaStream equipment. They also sell their own, so you can avoid SodaStream completely. Even better, they are significantly cheaper!

            • SreudianFlip@sh.itjust.works
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              1 day ago

              Lately Indigo supply got spotty—HomeHardware franchise is the only one carrying them in the local village, but they access the national supplier network so I don’t know why. People were gaming when shipments were arriving at the hardware store and being disappointed. Avoiding giving sodastream any money because of the boycott is apparently something people know about.

              But also Indigo takes the canisters back. And is cheaper.

              • gramie@lemmy.ca
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                22 hours ago

                We live on the border of Quebec and Ontario. For some reason, Giant Tiger in Quebec carries Indigo, but in Ontario they’ve never heard of it.

  • pangolinean_ambler@slrpnk.net
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    1 day ago

    This was so me the past 5 years; doom spirally, no hope, escapism. It took the government black-bagging my neighbors during their commutes to kick me out of it. No one from up-top is going to help, but if you look to your real-world neighbors, I’d be surprised if you didn’t find a bounty empathy and solidarity beneath the layers of fear and desperation. Over here, things are extreme, but Canada and the UK are disturbingly close to joining Nazi Bell End Land too.

    Ironically, this year has been the most hope I’ve felt in decades. Thousands over here have realized you don’t need to wait for someone to give you orders to start acting; you can… just do it. Grass-root networks are tracking our vulnerable, getting them legal counsel, and raising mutual aid funds for their families; neighbors are going out of their way to form new bonds, potlucks are becoming common; I live in an area with a lot of local farms and backyard gardens–we’re starting to collaborate and may be able to become a food independent neighborhood; potential pathway to become energy independent with solar and microgrids as well; there’s an ongoing campaign to curtail landlord abuses with a long-term goal of tenant owned properties; people showing up in mass to town halls and actually succeeding in getting our mayors to act; mass adoption of encrypted communication; and FOSS is gradually normalizing.

    There’s a lot of hope out there, just don’t expect to see it broadcast. Shout out to all the mothers out there; you all have the least amount of time, but are still the backbone and brains to our communities.