I hate this stance. There’s so much good in people as well. Check out https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mean_world_syndrome and realise you are reading about a giant once in a lifetime terrorist attack rather than an everyday occurrence. Too many terminally online people just get a warped perception of what others are like from constant negative news and end up glorifying isolation as a result. More and more people do that while posting about doing so leads other people to do so as well.
I don’t glorify isolation! Instead I glorify the idea of wiping out all life, forever. It’s not enough to just take out the humans because something else will eventually evolve to be as dumb as we are.
…that’s not the point I was making. My point is that barbaric events like what happened in Israel on Saturday are rare and letting that colour your entire perspective on the human race is unhealthy. Someone kills 50 people headline news across all forms of media, someone saves the lives of 50 people you will probably never even know their name.
Yes, curse the world because you feel powerless rather than try to do something about it.
The current system sucks, but the average human is pretty chill. Most people just want to feel safe, eat good food, and enjoy time with friends and family.
Some people are in shit situations and are easily manipulated into becoming hateful creatures, and some people in power understand this and abuse it. Systems that create these situations are the issue, and we have continuously improved systems throughout our existence. We usually change systems when they hit a threshold of hurting enough people, which is not the best strategy, but it’s how we’re wired. But it takes enough people getting pissed off and doing something about it rather than bitching and giving up.
So quit bitching and do something. Volunteer for a group that combats climate change. Find a job at a sustainable company. Advocate to friends and family why they should care and what they should do. At the very least, you can be at some peace with yourself for doing your best
Nah, friend. Religion does encourage superstition and such nonsense, but it doesn’t, on average, lead to violence and hate. As mentioned above, it’s usually shit situations that make people susceptible to that stuff.
Imagine you have a family. You used to be able to support your whole family, comfortably, with your job. But over the past twenty years, things have been getting more expensive. You’ve had trouble get raises to catch up. Even worse, the company is laying people off, and you’re worried you might be next. It feels like the world is going to shit. You’re too busy with work and family to keep track of all the politics and economics to know why things are happening. You just know that things suck, and you don’t know why. So you start wondering, “what changed?” Well, there’s a lot more talk of gay people. Or you’ve been seeing women with hijabs, and you never saw that before. Maybe they’re the reason. At church, you complain about your life to your friends. They claim it’s the gays and the Muslims. They tell you there’s another church where the pastor knows what’s going on. You should go there instead. So you do, and now you’ve gone from a pretty chill, “love everyone” kind of Christianity to the “gays should burn in hell” kind of Christianity.
Honestly, beyond the different denominations, I think even within denominations, it can be almost an entirely different religion, based on the congregation and pastor/priest.
I know, I understand that but it’s important to talk about it, it’s the only way we can understand and be understood and protect ourselves from misunderstandings.
I hate this stance. There’s so much good in people as well. Check out https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mean_world_syndrome and realise you are reading about a giant once in a lifetime terrorist attack rather than an everyday occurrence. Too many terminally online people just get a warped perception of what others are like from constant negative news and end up glorifying isolation as a result. More and more people do that while posting about doing so leads other people to do so as well.
I don’t glorify isolation! Instead I glorify the idea of wiping out all life, forever. It’s not enough to just take out the humans because something else will eventually evolve to be as dumb as we are.
hate to break it to you, but the Israel-Palestine thing is happening a whole lot more than once in a lifetime
…that’s not the point I was making. My point is that barbaric events like what happened in Israel on Saturday are rare and letting that colour your entire perspective on the human race is unhealthy. Someone kills 50 people headline news across all forms of media, someone saves the lives of 50 people you will probably never even know their name.
the human race does suck. capitalism is a death machine that has ruined the planet. we’re as good as dead. enjoy climate genocide and digital fascism.
Yes, curse the world because you feel powerless rather than try to do something about it.
The current system sucks, but the average human is pretty chill. Most people just want to feel safe, eat good food, and enjoy time with friends and family.
Some people are in shit situations and are easily manipulated into becoming hateful creatures, and some people in power understand this and abuse it. Systems that create these situations are the issue, and we have continuously improved systems throughout our existence. We usually change systems when they hit a threshold of hurting enough people, which is not the best strategy, but it’s how we’re wired. But it takes enough people getting pissed off and doing something about it rather than bitching and giving up.
So quit bitching and do something. Volunteer for a group that combats climate change. Find a job at a sustainable company. Advocate to friends and family why they should care and what they should do. At the very least, you can be at some peace with yourself for doing your best
Average humans are chill until they touch religions.
Nah, friend. Religion does encourage superstition and such nonsense, but it doesn’t, on average, lead to violence and hate. As mentioned above, it’s usually shit situations that make people susceptible to that stuff.
Imagine you have a family. You used to be able to support your whole family, comfortably, with your job. But over the past twenty years, things have been getting more expensive. You’ve had trouble get raises to catch up. Even worse, the company is laying people off, and you’re worried you might be next. It feels like the world is going to shit. You’re too busy with work and family to keep track of all the politics and economics to know why things are happening. You just know that things suck, and you don’t know why. So you start wondering, “what changed?” Well, there’s a lot more talk of gay people. Or you’ve been seeing women with hijabs, and you never saw that before. Maybe they’re the reason. At church, you complain about your life to your friends. They claim it’s the gays and the Muslims. They tell you there’s another church where the pastor knows what’s going on. You should go there instead. So you do, and now you’ve gone from a pretty chill, “love everyone” kind of Christianity to the “gays should burn in hell” kind of Christianity.
Honestly, beyond the different denominations, I think even within denominations, it can be almost an entirely different religion, based on the congregation and pastor/priest.
I know, I understand that but it’s important to talk about it, it’s the only way we can understand and be understood and protect ourselves from misunderstandings.