This one cuts deep:
The modern condition is mostly trying to do things on your own that people have historically achieved with a large support network and wondering why you're tired all the time.
@earthshine the modern condition aka the condition of coastal big city Americans
@lain @earthshine it's the case in rural places too (source: been there, done that), let's not start this pointless distinction without a (significant) difference eh
@lain @earthshine It can happen in rural or inland America as well. It just might not be related to “hustle culture.” Instead, it may pertain to getting mental healthcare, paying down a debt, asking for advice on family matters, etc. US society encourages individualism.
@lain @earthshine no, this is everywhere
@ellenor2000 @lain @earthshine Right. The USA is only one example of this, which is caused not by local values, but by modernism displacing the relevance of deep-seated ancient institutions (such as religion), while promoting egoic personal responsibility, then being undermined in turn by postmodernism pointing out the catastrophic failures of modernity (such as corruption within ostensibly rational institutions such as implementations of democracy). Individuals have nothing left to rely on.
@tartley @lain @earthshine Where do you get your water?
@ellenor2000 @lain @earthshine (the surreal, anti-authoritarian, fourth wall breaking comedy of Monty Python being itself an absolutely prime example of the transition from a rational, hierarchical modernity, to a cynical, rebellious postmodernism.)
@ellenor2000 @lain @earthshine Hence the rise in facism, which seeks to redress modernity's failings by regressing to the "proven" social structures of earlier times. These may be hideously unjust on several axes, but many people on middling rungs or higher derived great meaning from being embedded in a dense social fabric & knowing thier place in the world. Meaning that modernity does not provide.
@ellenor2000 @lain @earthshine and the buzz in progressive circles about the alternative approach of "metamodernism", which attempts to blend the strengths of the ancient, the modern & the postmodern, to produce an outlook on life around which we could perhaps structure societies that can provide for both our material and emotional wants.