• mortemtyrannis@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    This was pretty much what set me on the path to radicalisation.

    The system felt so unfair and then to learn that there were people who could do exactly this just because they were born into a family with large capital it was infuriating.

  • tyo_ukko@sopuli.xyz
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    3 days ago

    Has there ever been a time in human history where we were just allowed to exist for our passions and not work for survival? Our economic system definitely has its flaws, but this meme paints with too broad strokes.

    • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      We’ve basically conquered scarcity at this point in history. There’s really no reason people shouldn’t have all their basically necessities provided today, but bcz of greedy assholes, they’re always in search of more money, so we don’t get that.

      • Dessalines@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        There’s still a lot of actually important work that needs doing, like solving world hunger, poverty, and homelessness (which unfortunately most countries aren’t paying people to do, except for a few), but for the most part this quote is spot on:

        • papalonian@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          think about whatever it was they were thinking about before someone came along and told them they had to earn a living.

          This right here moved me. Not just because it’s so spot on, but because I don’t even remember what I was thinking about back then.

          • bstix@feddit.dk
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            3 days ago

            As a kid, a friend asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I said I wanted to be an inventor, like Gyro Gearloose.

            He said: That’s not a job.

    • School_Lunch@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      The Renaissance was a time of a vast labor shortage. This allowed workers to demand higher wages, and it also allowed leisure time to study new things and make new art.

      • tyo_ukko@sopuli.xyz
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        3 days ago

        This is true also when you have strong unions to bargain for good benefits. Still, you need to do some work, as opposed to the message of the meme “you have to pay for being alive”.

        • metaStatic@kbin.earth
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          3 days ago

          Unions are a band aid solution to capital exploitation.

          it’s still in their best interest to oppose automation so members can continue to work pointless jobs for a wage.

    • DurbanPoison@feddit.nl
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      3 days ago

      in capitalism I wanted to be an astronaut, but now I have a substance abuse problem and write spaghetti code for a corporate machine that would not give a shit if I dropped dead tomorrow.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        My mental health increased massively when I stopped being a programmer.

        I had to do neurofeedback training to reduce the beta wave amplitude if my brain. They were three standard deviations above normal even when I was having an incredibly calm day.

        The neurofeedback clinician had me skip my ritalin for a few days before doing that baseline scan. The day of the scan I felt a calm like nothing I’d felt for months. Even in that state my beta waves were three standard deviations above normal.

        The neurofeedback training put a stop to my panic attacks.

        Anyway, beta waves are used in logical decision-making (the thing a programmer does 10,000 times per day), and they’re also used in fight or flight response. Good thing to know about how the brain works.

        Luckily as a software dev I had the money for the neurofeedback. I spent about $7k on that in total, in chunks of about $1500 at a time.

        • DurbanPoison@feddit.nl
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          2 days ago

          Shit dude. That would financially ruin me after the first payment. (I don’t get paid in dollars nor euros, but the company does.)

          What job do you do now? How bad was the pay cut? (Or unexpected pay boost)

          Do you still take Ritalin? I’ve been taking Vyvanse for a year now, switching from a Concerta generic. I’m indifferent, but the lisdexamfetamine lasts wayyy longer. Also I get this strange general sense of “something great is going to happen very soon”.

          Venlafaxine and Buproprion helped major with anxiety and somewhat with depression. Instead of getting anxious, I now get grumpy.

          Before it was “oh shit, oh fuck”, now it’s “ugh shit, what fucking now”

          Saw you were sitting at 0 points. Who tf downvotes someone’s thoughtfully written non-hostile comments?

          Btw thanks for the brain wave info. I thought that was like, hippie stuff, but no it’s like, legit science.

          • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            2 days ago

            I’m an uber driver. The pay is atrocious, but the work is super easy and I feel energized after a long shift. I may go back to tech, but in a talking job like sales or support. I’m just not built to write code all day.

            I stopped taking all the stimulants at some point before being fired. Even after the panic attacks stopped, I still couldn’t get to a point where I could write code more than two hours per day. As a full-time dev I was expected to account for 9 total hours including 8 billable hours per day. It never worked out.

            But I stopped taking the stimulants and discovered my productivity was just as high without them. Which with code means still pretty low. But any other kind of work I can go twelve hours without issue. I’m really productive so long as I’m not making precise and articulated decisions all day.

            I’m an excellent driver, but the rules don’t change. Driving is the same set of rules every day, every road condition. There’s like maybe 150 rules to memorize and then all I have to do is implement them perfectly. As an autistic I’m really fucking good at that.

            Programming is like doing construction, except:

            • You never build the same thing twice
            • The tools change daily
            • The building code changes daily
            • The properties of the materials change daily
            • Physics changes daily

            I’ve done a lot of different jobs and programming is easily the most mentally taxing. I always say if you’re doing the same thing twice as a programmer, you’re doing it wrong because you could have automated something.

            I just can’t be that creative all day every day.