Life as we know it is over. The sooner we come to terms with that, the sooner we can envision a new set of possibilities for ourselves and society
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Replying to @cognazor
I think mostly good things are going to come of it? (other than 100s of thousands of deaths). I am in my own weird corner of social media, but it seems like people are tired of a lot of stuff that just sailed on inertia for a long time.
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Replying to @xstntlprvrt69
I definitely don't want to minimize the suffering and death that this is causing, it is tragic. But I tend to agree, our current trajectory was not sustainable, and perhaps this will be a wake up call in preparation for the even bigger disruptions down the line
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Replying to @cognazor
I see: 1) rejection of a lot of onerous regulations that have been in place for a long time and have been dropped in the emergency 2) support for expanded social security and healthcare 3) a realization that our economy prioritized market 'efficiency' over resilience.
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Replying to @xstntlprvrt69
I agree with most of that, but not necessarily a state administering #2. I think we need to become as decentralized as possible, governance at the minimum viable scale
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I mean, these are mostly descriptive of changes I see in the Overton window, although, normatively, I also agree with most of them. I do appreciate the 'exit' notion of trying to preserve and revive cultural technologies rather than reducing everything to a policy problem.
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