I was reading a book on social life of the upper-middle class and new rich of the American 1920s and realized so many things we now do proudly were considered socially taboo back then. This was especially the case for clothing, makeup, women in certain public spaces, etc. What do you think will be different in the 2120s? Or maybe even the next 50 years?

  • RichardBonham@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I am going to operate under the following assumptions:
    -the current global trend towards authoritarian governments will continue and become more prevalent
    -balkanization will be the new norm: an atlas will show more numerous and smaller countries
    -climate change (extreme heat, extreme humidity and sea level rise) will make large regions functionally unfit for human habitation by reasons of lethal heat and/or humidity, loss of coastal access, lack of potable water and/or loss of sustainable agriculture.
    -we’ll be well into the technological curve for AI and robotics. We’ll have gone past the early stage where people over-estimate technological capabilities and far into the later stages where people will under-estimate technological capabilities
    -if cash is still legal, it will be useless for all legitimate transactions because no institution wants it. If it still exists, it will only be useful for peer-to-peer illegitimate transactions: crime, drugs and sex.
    -whatever is bad now will be worse

    So: social taboos that exist today that will not be taboo in 100 years?
    -slavery: we already see slavery in all but name in the form of privatized prisons and wage-slavery (work a soul-killing minimum wage job, or die/be homeless). What if the cost of being able to emigrate from a country or region that is uninhabitable is slavery, whether real or de facto? It’s the cheapest form of labor.
    -murder: being deemed outlaw will make a comeback. An outlaw is outside the protection of the law, so killing an outlaw is not a crime.
    -extortion: governments and government proxies (militias, death squads, religious sects) will exercise sanctioned extortion
    -hoarding: if you are living in an unstable balkan state or are an unpopular minority in one, hoarding will not be pathologic
    -civilian ownership of firearms
    -racism and nationalism; best way to keep out undesirable climate refugees is to de-humanize them
    -corporations being into every piece of the pie: a logical extension of the trend to privatization or “wanting government to be run like a business” is the replacement of nation-states by corporations or zaibatsu-like alliances of multiple corporations

    • Riccosuave@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No offense intended, but I sincerely hope you are wrong on all accounts. I doubt it, but one can hope…

    • Wanderer@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      balkanization will be the new norm: an atlas will show more numerous and smaller countries

      How is this not more of a thing? All these countries that didn’t exist until Europe organised them have grown and matured (in a way). But plenty of countries complain about how the boarders were made, why don’t they sort them out and change things?

      Like nothing is stopping them from doing it. Blaming it on someone 100 years ago that is long dead isn’t stopping anything from happening.