Our biased attention means we’ll always feel like we’re living in dark times, and our biased memory means we’ll always feel like the past was brighter.

  • Naich@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’d say that objectively, the mid to latter part of the 90s was pretty good. The iron curtain had fallen, there weren’t any major economic disasters, the world wouldn’t go batshit until after 9-11, and the internet wasn’t full of complete arseholes.

    • mem_somerville_kbin@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Well…a lot of people were dying of AIDS then. And there was a lot of hostility to the gay community. I think it depends on your perspective.

      I love history, and spend a lot of time thinking about it, reading about it, talking about it. But there’s really no time I’d like to travel to as a unmarried, not Christian, education-craving female. YMMV.

      • meat_popsicle@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        How much have global temps gone up since then? How much BPA/PFOA/PFAS has been released into the ecosystem since then? How many once-in-a-lifetime economic calamities have we had? How many more school shootings do we have per year now than before?

        I think you have to look at the complete picture and not just some key points regarding demographic improvements. LGBT kids get shot in schools too, LGBT people lose their jobs and become homeless too.

        There were great improvements in some areas, but we need to be circumspect on the broader declines.

        • 0x1C3B00DA@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          So what are you saying? That the middle of the AIDS crisis was a better time to be a gay man than now because there’s still a chance they may be shot today? LGBT people can still become homeless today, like anyone else, but it was way more prevalent a few decades ago when it was legal to fire them for being LGBT.

          It seems to me, most of the improvements were in raising the floor of society (disallowing discrimination based on various factors) which generally go ignored by more privileged people like myself. But the recent declines lowered the ceiling of society in ways that affect everyone, but less than the gains made by minority/oppressed peoples in recent decades.

    • Pons_Aelius@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      the mid to latter part of the 90s was pretty good.

      While yes, the threat of Nuclear War subsided, we were well into the “ignoring climate change and thus ensuring the next century would have to pay the inevitable toll” phase.