• @[email protected]
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    257 months ago

    It’s the growing disparity in wealth.

    I recommend taking matters into your own hands before taking your own lives.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      It’s a lot of things. Climate hopelessness, a political system that seems hellbent on maintaining this negative feedback loop, yes, the economic situation, but also a soulless life under late stage capitalism where it’s proven over and over again you matter less than a line going up, we are commodified at every turn, our personality traits are nothing more than economic indicators or data points to sell us more shit…we live in a hostile world. And it’s hostile by humanity’s own making. And it’s soulless by our own making. Maybe humans used to die at 25 by a mountain lion attack more frequently, but some kind of purpose was found in that survival life. Depression and anxiety and a feeling of pointlessness are capitalism-made.

      This problem seems so framed by experts as “why do these kids want to die?” When the question they should be asking is “what is society giving them to live for?”

      • @[email protected]
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        177 months ago

        I’m on a train trip across the U.S. today, so I will add what I see out the window: A landscape systematically strip-mined of beauty, meaning, and sense of place in service of extracting maximum profit from the people who have to exist in it.

        • @[email protected]
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          127 months ago

          Yup. That too.

          We are detached from anything close to a life tied to meaning. All meaning was bought and sold. Our ancestors were turned into bricks to build the foundation of capitalism, and we aren’t even that important anymore. We’re the fuel that the massive engine of capitalism runs on. The machine is built. Now it’s running over capacity and more and more of us are needed to stoke the fires that keep the over-indulged engine running at max capacity to spit out some goddamn pitiful little line that means further excessive wealth for those who were born from the people who turned our ancestors into goddamn bricks.

          And they ask, “why are kids so darn melancholy?!”

    • @aodhsishaj
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      7 months ago

      Please point to the bootstraps I may pull to fix:

      Income disparity

      Inflation

      Price Fixing

      Expensive Medical Care

      Rising rents

      Increasing Fuel Costs

      College Debt

      Climate Crisis

      Subsidized Oil,Gas,Corn,Beef,Eggs

      Water Rights Crises

      Because if they exist I will pull them.

      • @[email protected]
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        77 months ago

        Mutual aid. It has a real shot at working because it crucially isn’t about pulling yourself up, but people getting together to lift one another up.

        And longer term, a lot of mutual aid organisations have explicitly revolutionary goals.

        • @aodhsishaj
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          77 months ago

          Agreed. A lot of these problems are generational and stem from a twisted view of individualism. The “I got mine” mentality.

          My reply was more about the ambiguity of “take matters into your own hands.” I cannot solve this with my own hands. I need help. Mutual aid networks provide that.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            Food not bombs is a decent name, although it’s decentralised so every org will be different. If you search “food not bombs” + your city or state you’re likely to find something. All these orgs are local and decentralised because it’s a primarily anarchist method, but once you get in contact with one group they can point you towards others.