this post was submitted on 12 Feb 2024
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I urge you to touch grass
This. Being engorged in a bubble can skew one's world view pretty badly.
For instance, if you're only in Lemmy, you might indeed start to think that the world is going to a nazi hell again and the only way to fix that is a communist revolution, comrades. Or if you're in Twitter, you might start to think that the woke mobsters are ruining the west, or whatever.
If you're on tiktok or youtube, you'll get the bubble you taught those things to be.
The center is probably still holding, and normal people in normal life are being normal.
What makes you so confident you're not the one in a bubble?
By seeing the sun shine and the birds tweet, real actual tweeting. Not sniffing Elon Musk's farts.
By pretending nothing exists beyond your immediate surroundings, in other words.
I don't know wtf you think Elon Musk has to do with anything.
I'm confident that I am in a bubble and that I'm not fully aware what kind of a bubble it is.
Well, that's more than I was expecting. Might I suggest you look around for signs that fascism (or at the very least, authoritarianism) is on the rise in many democratic countries? Some countries to look at are the US, Germany, Italy, Hungary, Turkey, India, and Israel.
Sure, some of those are obvious, like Turkey and Hungary. They've been on that path for several decades now. Some people in Turkey tried to fix the situation with a failed coup, which made things even worse of course.
I have to note that sometimes the pendulum still swings the other way. For instance, just a year ago, we (Finland) had the most left liberal government we've ever had before swinging to the current one -- which in turn is the most rightist government we've had in 50+ years. Poland just turned back from a rather conservative path that they had followed for quite long to a more liberal one.
India, Italy and Germany I don't know that much about. Germany also is currently on a rather liberal government, but the next one will probably be more conservative. The recent change seems to stem from Russia's war in Ukraine, that made everyone more conservative and militaristic out of fear. When the war ends (it should at some point, somehow), I believe/hope the fear can dissipate. Depends a lot on how it ends and if the risk of Russian invasion lingers.
Israel's government is pretty unpopular in Israel. They might very well vote a very different kind in the next elections, unless Netanjahu can somehow pull a win in Gaza.
Then there's the population crisis, coming from the boomer generation. People are old. That makes the political and economic situations worse, which in turn makes everything worse. In history, the left has usually been able to capitalize on such misery, but for some reason I don't quite understand the populist right has been snatching the sentiment.
And then there's Russia, possibly the most fascistic country on this side of the planet, directly funding and supporting the rise of fascism in Europe. There's a possible silver lining here too if Russia loses its war: a weakened Russia could mean weakened fascism everywhere.