Did he? Or was it like that even back then? I’m reading this book, and it’s like a carbon copy of our world in the US nowadays. I keep yelling “oh my god, this is basically happening right now!!!” Not as blatant and (I don’t know the word) as in the book, but essentially the same. The book is like now, but on steroids (to explain the word I’m missing). The divide/polarization, the police brutality, the pollution, corporations and exploitation, the government’s overreach… Etc, it’s all here now.

  • @SamuraiBeandog
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    525 days ago

    More a student of history than a predictor of the future. What’s happening in the world at the moment is nothing new, human societies are pretty predictable, at a broad scale.

    • IninewCrow
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      305 days ago

      One man is born with immense wealth, grows up to gain even more wealth and total control of an entire geographic region and wants to control more land, wealth and people … his thirst for power is insatiable and costing the lives of hundreds, thousands and even millions of people.

      Guess the century.

    • @[email protected]
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      55 days ago

      My stoned ass was a prophet in the back of a Chevy Cavalier. My history teacher was pretty adamant about the importance of the field but tried to make it as interesting as possible. Even just watching hotel Rwanda spurred a week of curiosity and lessons

  • @macarthur_park
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    325 days ago

    If you think that’s prescient, try King’s “The Dead Zone”. It’s about a president who makes insane campaign promises (“put pollution in garbage bags and send it to space”), has rallies with mixture of party vibes and violent populism, and who has a signature hat.

    • @atomicorange
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      95 days ago

      Let’s hope “The Stand” isn’t next.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        35 days ago

        That one is in my digital library literally staring at me everyday. I don’t know why I keep putting it off. I think I’ll read it after I read the deadzone then.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 days ago

          It’s the best King novel in my opinion.
          (But I may be biased cause I watched the movies first as a teen and had a crush on one of the characters)

        • @macarthur_park
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          14 days ago

          I highly recommend it. The stand is one of those novels I reread every few years.

            • @macarthur_park
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              24 days ago

              The stand, just because it’s a much bigger scale novel with lots of interesting characters, world building, and a lot of story.

              The dead zone is one I probably won’t reread. But it’s definitely worth it once, like most of King’s work. And the fact that it has uncomfortable parallels to Trump and the MAGA movement adds another element.

  • @[email protected]
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    4 days ago

    Sci Fi is about the time it was written in, with a veneer of futurism to distance it enough to make it not a politicial polemic.

    Hitchhikers Guide is about 70s Britain

    Foundation is about 50’s Europe

    Handmaids Tale is about post-WW2 thru 80s colonialism in Africa

    F 451 is about 50s America…

  • @[email protected]
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    94 days ago

    With thousands of sci-fi books being written every year, one of them is bound to be an accurate prediction.
    And “like now, but on steroids” is basically the definition of the sci-fi genre.

  • @adam_y
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    145 days ago

    Same as it ever was.

    That divide/polarization, the police brutality, pollution … All of it… It has been going on for a long time.

    It is all here now. But it was all there then too.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      25 days ago

      That’s just sad. I didn’t grow up in the US, so I don’t know much about its recent history, aside from what I’ve read/watched on TV.

  • @Fredselfish
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    Haven’t read it yet, but a lot of Stephen King books can feel that way. Stephen is more political then you think, so no shock he could see the direction we were heading.

    That or someone high up in our political system read as a to do book. How I feel about 1984, scary watching parts of that book become reality now.

  • @dominiquec
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    5 days ago

    If you like this type of science fiction, could I interest you in The Space Merchants and Gladiator At Law by Frederik Pohl and CM Kornbluth? More prescient and much more biting, in my opinion. Also much earlier, having been written in the 1950s.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      15 days ago

      You absolutely could. And thank you. Put them on the list. I’ve been reading nonfiction my whole life and I just picked up fiction recently and I kinda like it.

    • @systemglitch
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      15 days ago

      That is right guy up my alley, I love finding old sci-fi.

  • HubertManne
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    34 days ago

    thats how I feel when playing cyberpunk accept like just over the horizon.

  • @[email protected]
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    45 days ago

    I didn’t know he wrote that. Apparently I got to the book before he was outed.

    You could take elements of any novel set in a dystopian future and find commonalities. Like the other commenter said, it’s likely that shitty people were given ideas by these books instead of being warned off.