this post was submitted on 20 Aug 2023
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What clicked and made you have a different mindset? How long did it take to start changing and how long was the transformation? Did it last or is it an ongoing back and forth between your old self? I want to know your transformation and success.

Any kind of change, big or small. Anything from weight loss, world view, personality shift, major life change, single change like stopped smoking or drinking soda to starting exercising or going back to school. I want to hear how people's life were a bit or a lot better through reading and your progress.

TIA ๐Ÿ™

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[โ€“] afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world -4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

If you made a utopia you would live in it. All those lower tiered workers choose to do so. No where in the book do you see them storming the Canadian border trying to get out, or setting up their own communes. Because why would they? They are at zero risk of starvation, zero risk of being homeless, zero risk of pathogens from sewage, zero risk of any of the other horrors the bulk of humanity has dealt with in the past. Entertainment alone is so inexpensive that you could use it as housing insulation. Who the fuck wouldn't want that!?

Hey tomorrow you no longer have to work in a sheet metal factory, you get a nice house in the burbs, you get work that requires zero effort, you get a cool car, all forms of media are cheap as dirt, your wife can stay at home if she chooses, you dont have to cook if you dont want to, your 3 kids go to nice schools in safe areas, and you have enough money to go to a bar every night. Your brain and energy levels are peak so you can engage in any hobby. Oh and the only catch is you can't literally try to overthrow the government. I know, so oppressive.

You yell about the violence in the system, has their ever been a government that didn't have that? Go ahead and pick the nicest government you like on earth and ask yourself what would happen to you if you starting burning down buildings and attacking the powers-that-be.

And your comparison about slave owners demanding gratitude is just plain wrong. An abusive parent and a good parent both will say that they are a good one. No one is the villain of their own story. That is why you have to look at facts. And the fact is that those workers had more material wealth and agency compared to chattle slaves.

One thing you got right, they do hate us. I am despised in pretty much every factory I show up at, but it's fine the feeling is pretty mutual and feelings don't change facts. These places are a mess of inefficiency, waste, and poor workmanship. I have production horror stories of the union metal shops. A few months ago I came to a metal shop for an upgrade and the machinist had a recliner in the shop. Spent about 6 hours on Faceboot and listening to conservative talk radio. I swept up a bit as I was heading out and he told me that he never cleans because it isn't his job, then sat in his recliner again.

I think the ending of the book summarized the author pretty well. The luddites had no idea how to replace the society they torched. Kurt didn't have any solutions, he had complaints, and I can't do anything with actionable items.

[โ€“] theluddite@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Unsurprisingly, I disagree with your interpretation of the ending. I think your interpretation of the whole book says a lot more about you than it does about Vonnegut or other people; it's misanthropic, unempathetic, and patrician to the point of infantilizing others. I suspect that our views on what we as humans need to be fulfilled, what true freedom really is, and how we should treat each other are so far apart that there's no bridging it. I hope you one day you reconsider. Until then, it's been fun chatting. Good luck out there, friend.

[โ€“] afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world -3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

My view is simple enough. I want humanity free from bad things. Kurt's view is that people should be forced against their will to endure the bad. Which one is treating people like infants?

Me: bad things are bad, I am trying to remove bad things. Enjoy the world where you have everything all of the time. Where you can explore, create, procreate, screw, drink, and the only freedom you lose is one you never had to begin with. The freedom to break stuff.

Kurt: no, you must toil despite it being not required. Work shall set you free. Humans should work a job that they hate because it gives them selfworth.

How did that work out for Cambodia?

[โ€“] theluddite@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Your total unwillingness to critically engage with what you do for a living continues to say more about you than it does about Vonnegut.

[โ€“] afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world -4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yes of course it is my fault and we should all just blindly follow what a hack writer had to say.

I know what I am doing and what I am about.

[โ€“] theluddite@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

This is galaxies away from a good faith argument. You don't seem like a dumb person, so you're either engaging in bad faith for reasons all your own, or you're so defensive about any criticism directed towards your work that you don't realize how silly you're being. Either way, I think this is the end of the line for us. Hope you have a pleasant rest of your Sunday. I unfortunately have to keep working for a bit but will be done soon. Cheers!