ttystikk
Well-Known Member
You mislabel me.I reject your hopeless cynicism.
Things are better today than they were 40 years ago. In some ways, not all.
There is bad:
I don't deny that the economic condition of the 90% stagnated while the 10% have accumulated all the economic gains. Also economic conditions of the lower 30% have gotten awful.
On the plus side, we have made social progress. The ADA, progress towards increased diversity in the workforce, education methods and attitudes have improved. We no longer accept the "my country right or wrong" belief. The implementation of the Affordable Care Act was a leap forward towards universal access to healthcare. It's not a big deal to have black and women political leaders. These are important changes that set the stage for a more progressive society. It can't happen the other way -- economic improvements without social improvements mean large groups of our society get left behind.
If you want to disregard social progress because we've lost ground economically, I counter that with the idea that the 10% has used racism and misogyny to take over our government. Social progress is economic progress. We are making progress in an important area and everybody will benefit over the next 10-20 years.
But not next year.
So, I reject your hopeless cynicism.
Politically, things are definitely worse. I can't wait for your argument to the contrary lol
Socially, things are definitely not better; ask Jewish people, LGBT people or people of color instead of white washing so much.
Economically, things are more polarized than ever.
But golly, isn't your new smartphone sexy?
If there was no hope, I wouldn't bother discussing things.
I'm not optimistic, that's true. Having paid attention in history class, I'm well aware of how much worse things will likely have to get before they change.