• @essell
    link
    278 hours ago

    There’s fewer people in poverty now than at any point in history.

    The world has always been getting better in global measures of health, food and education if you consider all of humanity.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      43 hours ago

      I don’t think that’s actually true. Have the metrics for what we consider poverty changed and adapted with inflation and the perfecting of corporate wealth hoarding? “Poverty” is an ambiguous term, and relative poverty is real. That doesn’t show in a standard-line “poverty” metric. What was considered “extreme poverty” is the lowest, but that’s people living on under $1.90/day. I couldn’t even find information on that metric being updated to reflect the current high inflation and profit-explosion landscape.

      Also: if you technically pull people out of poverty by outsourcing to the lowest paying, least labor regulated parts of the world, is the fact that extreme poverty went away in those areas even a good thing?

      • @essell
        link
        117 hours ago

        Yup.

        They were geographically limited and not as dark as reported

          • @Zachariah
            link
            26 hours ago

            In general or about the dark ages?

              • @Zachariah
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                46 hours ago

                Fiction: If you’re in for a multi-book series, I recommend the Amber chronicles by Roger Zelazny.

                Dark Ages related: The Merovingian Kingdoms, 450-751 or The Long Morning of Medieval Europe

                Spiritual/Philosophical: Audiobook of The Art of Mindful Living by Thich Nhat Hanh

                • DominusOfMegadeus
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                  fedilink
                  25 hours ago

                  I’ve read the Amber Chronicles, although it’s on my re-read list. Is the Dark Ages non-fiction?