The Age of Progress Is Becoming the Age of Regress — And It’s Traumatizing Us - Something’s Very Wrong When Almost Half of Young People Say They Can’t Function Anymore


There are charts, and then there are charts. Statistics, and then statistics. The kind that take your breath away. Want to see one of those? Just take a hard look above. Those numbers are the surreal combination that typifies this age — not surprising, yet still shocking.

Just how stressed out are we? How much distress are our societies really in? More than a quarter of people say they can’t function anymore. More than a quarter. 1 in 4 people. That is a breathtaking, ruinous figure, and we’re going to discuss just why.

After a caveat or two.

First, the point. Our societies are in dire states of distress that are rising off the charts.

Now. There’s going to be the guy — and it’s always a guy — who says: so what! That’s fine! Suck it up, chumps! What are you, women? Life is hard, get over it. Don’t be that guy. Nobody should be that guy. Why not?

What’s an acceptable figure for “the number of people who can’t function anymore because they’re so stressed out”? A third of a society? Half a society? At that point, surely, we’d be nations of quite literal zombies, stumbling through the daily motions. Perhaps you see my point. While there’s always going to be some number of people in a society who find it hard, who struggle, who can’t cope — more than a quarter of people in such shape is totally unacceptable. It points to severe levels of institutional failure, from economic to political, as we’re about to discuss.

Those numbers are even worse when you break them down by age. Almost half of people aged 18–35 say they can’t function anymore. Almost half. More than half of young people say they are “completely overwhelmed” by stress. Almost half of people in the next generation, from 35–44, say they can’t function, either. Those are vast, vast numbers of people — and such a fact should make us all pause.

Let’s pause for a moment to establish another that that guy will object to, because he’s uncomfortable with the subject of feelings. This is a fact. It’s an empirical reality, based on data. When I say our societies are in dire straits, distressed off the charts, I’m not kidding. So let’s not minimize, but explore it.

What does it say when more than half of young people say they are overwhelmed by stress, and almost as much can’t function anymore? That’s what you’re probably asking, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves, and explore for a moment just why people are this stressed out.

The reasons are pretty obvious, aren’t they? The research above asked people just what was stressing them out, and the answers were in order, something like this. Inflation, the economy, the cost of living, the future, the political climate, climate change. The usual smorgasbord of catastrophes confronting us at this juncture of human history. And it’s plain to see, too, that their burdens fall disproportionately on the young.

What does all this mean? A lot of things, but let’s begin with this one. If you’re stressed out to the point you can’t function — and we’re going to discuss exactly what that means — you’re far from alone. We have this strange norm of not really discussing our feelings in our Calvinist societies — and it turned into the even stranger norm of joking about our real feelings with despair in the eyes. It's not a joke to feel this way.

This research wasn’t general. It was done by the APA, and the APA asked specific questions about what “not being able to function anymore” meant in daily practice. Getting out of bed, going to class, going to work, having relationships — all the things that daily “functioning” more or less means. You can read it for yourself if you like, and you should — but the point is that it wasn’t a general, vague question. When people said they couldn’t function, they really meant it, in specific and pinpoint ways. And that is a very, very big problem.

We can hardly be societies where large numbers of people can’t function — because they’re overwhelmed to the point of basically catatonia. Where stress and depression are destroying their abilities to learn, work, relate, socialize, create, build, evolve, grow. Societies like that will obviously fail in several ways. Economically, they’ll lose productivity, politically, socially, they’ll stop cohering, and politically, democracy will stop working. Everything we think of as modernity stops when people stop functioning, because modernity is about freedom. But what does freedom even mean when you’re hunkered down unable to get out of bed because life has become too stressful?

This problem is real, in other words — it’s material. It’s not just about “feelings” — the way that we play into our broken systems by minimizing our emotions. Emotions are real, and they matter intensely, perhaps most. What this research suggests is that we are becoming societies of people who are in so much pain that they are going numb.

Why do people feel like this? Why is it so common to be overwhelmed by bad feelings, negative emotions, these days, to be unable to get out of bed, or stopped in your tracks? Well, it’s because we live in an age of mega-failure. I read a thread about the research above, and wouldn’t you know it, it was full of people saying, smugly, that, hey, things have been worse. At least this isn’t Auschwitz!! LOL. That’s not exactly a great argument, and it’s not thinking either. People really feel this bad. Minimizing it isn’t going to make the problem go away — it’s just a form of denial, which by now, we should all understand is a profound form of ignorance.

Our institutions are failing us, like never before. Yes, there have been World Wars and all sorts of disasters and catastrophes. But behind all that was the backdrop of progress, made of quantum leaps in everything from productivity to life expectancy to happiness to trust to democracy. And now all those things are coming undone, falling, going backwards. It’s not some kind of random wishy-washy feeling people have for no reason. They’re not being weak or emotional or any of the rest of it. We really do live in an age — and these are all empirical facts, too — where democracy’s eroding, where even nations like Italy and Sweden are going fascist, where life expectancy is falling, where fanaticism is resurging, where incomes have been stagnant for decades, half a century in America’s case, where downward mobility is so much the norm that now five generations are experiencing it.

All of those facts, too, are real. The grand narrative that was prevalent yesterday — humanity’s story is made of progress, and once upon a time, there was a Big Bang of it, called the Industrial Revolution, which led to prosperity, and everywhere such prosperity spreads, it brings with it democracy and freedom, and so all we have to do is follow the rules, obey the scripts written for us about how to live our lives, like get educated and work hard, and everything will just get better and better by the year — that grand narrative is now at an end.

The Age of Progress has stalled, and gone into reverse, becoming an Age of Regress. Hence, so much backward motion at once that it’s dragging us all into oblivion with it, it feels like — from falling life expectancy to democratic erosion to rising fanaticism to economic stagnation to comic-book culture, which doesn’t help anyone make sense of any of it, to the disinhibited bullying and mob behavior of lunatics of all kinds and trolls farms on social media, which has replaced genuine relationships for many. All of that backward motion is, again, real.

This really is an Age of Regress now, and it’s leaving us all anti-future-shocked. Do you know the term “future shock”? The futurist Alvin Toffler popularized it, but it was a derivative of an idea dating back to Emile Durkheim, the father of sociology — who said that such rapid technological and social change made people feel uncomfortable. Toffler’s definition was thin and weedy, whereas Durkheim’s was rich and nuanced — Durkheim spoke of relationships breaking and old ways dying. But what is happening now is very different. We aren’t shocked by how fast the future is happening — hey, man, look, I can cook food in thirty seconds in this microwave! — we’re in shock that there isn’t one anymore.

You see, the Age of Regress is a Big Deal because with it comes a thing, a conclusion, that is genuinely terrifying and shocking: the Death of the Future. If there’s just going to be regress now…at least for the next several generations…then the future…is a thing that doesn’t exist anymore. The future is a new idea. Before, there was just…time…and for ancients, it often went in a circle, precisely because, well, nothing much ever changed. Maybe empires rose and fell — but the question was who was going to be king, and who slave. The future didn’t exist yet.

With the birth of modernity came this strange idea of “the future.” What was going to happen next? We became excited spectators in this cinema of the human journey, and whole careers were made on this notion of predicting it, forecasting it, understanding it. This kind of technology would lead to that kind of growth, which would come from this region or state or country, and these people would grow richer. That kind of innovation would make our lives easier and more convenient in this way, freeing up time and energy for us to work on this problem, which was even more important.

We grew obsessed with the future, so much so, that most of us never understood life apart from it, that human beings, for most of their 300,000 years on this planet, had never had a thing called “the future.” Previous civilizations were intensely historically backwards-looking — that doesn’t mean they were backwards, it means that they looked back, and grounded themselves that way. They thought the past was the most important thing, because there was no idea of “the future” — think of the way the Greeks invented complex and nuanced stories about their Gods and where they came from and lived and so forth. All previous civilizations were far, far more interested in history and time and beforeness — and then we came along, invented this thing called “the future,” and grew obsessed with it, basing our entire societies around it. If you doubt me, consider the fact that our economies are about a thing called growth — tomorrow.

So what do you do when the future suddenly dies? You go into shock. Anti-future-shock, to be precise. You’re not anxious and uncomfortable that maybe you don’t know how to use that newfangled microwave, that you don’t have one, so you’re not keeping up with the Joneses, that you’re not wearing the latest fashions or conversant in the latest trends and technologies. You’re overwhelmed by the sudden loss of the meaning of the whole thing. The telos of the journey, the climax of the story, the theme, the point of it all.

If there’s no…future…what the hell is the point of me? How am I going to survive in a world without a future? What even happens in one? Do we all just slowly…accept declining into oblivion? Sinking into nowhere? Hurtling backwards through time, all its follies and mistakes, from fascism to ignorance to war to poverty to hate…is that all that’s left now?

Maybe you can see why people are so stressed out now. It’s a Big Deal. It’s about the Age of Progress ending, and becoming the Age of Regress. Taking this idea of “the future” with it, and in place of “the future” now is just a…black hole. Or maybe a white void. We don’t know what’s going to happen…we just know it’s not good.

And that feeling is the feeling of now, isn’t it? The generalized, free floating dread? Isn’t that what most of us wake up to? We open our eyes, and maybe luxuriate in the comfort a nice, long sleep — and then, suddenly, wham, out of nowhere, panic sets in. What’s going to go wrong today?

We don’t know what’s going to happen anymore — we just know that it’s not going to be good. And we relive this dystopian meta-foreknowledge every single day. Every single day, we wake up, and we don’t know what’s going to happen — and that’d be OK if the scales were equally weighted, but by now, we know they’re not, and so the main question of the day becomes: what kind of hell is going to break loose today? For me. For my country. For the world. A new wave of the pandemic? A fascist coup attempt? A new Big Lie? Or maybe just a bill I can’t pay, a friend turning into a far right lunatic, and so forth.

This is what it feels like at the End of the Future, which is where we are now. We don’t know what’s going to happen, we just know it’s not going to be good. That’s the polar opposite of the way things used to be, and the way we were told they were not just going to be, but should be: we didn’t know what was going to happen, but we knew it was going to be good. New technologies, innovations, gadgets, inventions — that old narrative of the Industrial Revolution — would raise our living standards and make everyone happier and freer and thereby buttress democracy in the process, too. But now? It’s not like that at all anymore. Now the main question is: Jesus, what the hell is going to go wrong today? Can I just have one day — one — without some kind of surreal new level of dystopia being reached?

All of the above says we’re at a Turning Point. One age is becoming another. Is the Age of Progress really over? Does it have to become the Age of Regress? And who wouldn’t go catatonic, watching everything from democracy to the planet to the economy simultaneously die? This feeling, this free floating dread, is the feeling of being at a Turning Point — but not having fully recognized it yet.

That’s because too many of us have adopted the posture of cynicism — even if we don’t know it. Cynicism isn’t always a sneer and a curdled grimace. These days? It’s you and I making ourselves the butt of the joke, the kind of dead-eyed irony that says, “hey, I’m powerless, and I accept it, isn’t it funny, ha-ha.” No, it’s not funny. Not really. This posture is what our failed institutions want. For us to go numb and accept their failures, and transform them into our catatonia? Why, that’s just fine with them — because it means nothing has to change. We reinforce the systems that fail us when we adopt the pose of sulking children, batting eyelashes at each other, which is largely where we are today.

It’s time to grow up. Let me capitalize it, so you know I mean it. Grow Up. As a species, as nations, as people, as beings. Yes, the future as we once thought of it — consume, feel superior to the next guy, until he can consume more than you, feel bad, see a therapist, work harder, consume more back, and never mind anything else — that idea really is over. It is finished, done, at its limit.

And until we move beyond it — instead of living in its shadow, resenting the loss of that future, telling childish jokes about it, which barely mask how much we long for it, instead of, with all our might, freeing ourselves to be genuinely upset about the way our institutions have failed us, recognize how much we’re all hurting together, challenging the broken systems which have let us down, and that way, reinventing an age worth living in — this is all we’re going to have. Failure. Trauma. The End.

Tough words, I know. Tough love, maybe.
 
Boomers decided to worship criminals and people too self-centered/defective to function in society, and tear down any trace of real community, since community requires reciprocation and some personal sacrifice, and that would be unfair to expect from the criminals and dropouts.

It really crystalized for me recently, while watching the twitter male left berate some woman for hating aggressive hobos. And the flood of genderspecial pedo teacher stories. Lionize predators long enough, and eventually every interaction in society will just be predators trying to groom or take advantage. Thank you for reading my thesis, please come again.
 
What's changed is that marriage and family are dead concepts. Nobody gets married any more, and nobody has kids. We've rejiggered everything to make living alone in your masturbatorium the end goal of life, and everybody's absolutely fucking miserable. But the only thing we've concluded is that...I guess black people's toypods aren't equal enough or something.

"The future" used to mean, "that place your kids are going to live in." You worked hard and sacrificed so your kids could have something. That's not true for the average Millennial or Zoomer. The girls were raised since birth to believe that if they get married and have children, they've failed at life, they'll miss out on all the fun and adventure Mom thinks she would have had if Dad hadn't knocked her up at 22. The boys melt their brains with porn and video games, because those are the only things they don't get punished for.

Well, now you don't have kids anymore. You don't have a wife or husband. "The future" for you is getting old and sitting alone in a room, waiting to die, as people from other continents move in to take over. You're not allowed to complain about this, that's racist. In fact, most Millennials and Zoomers have trained themselves to not even think about it. Millennial men and women, now overdosing and suiciding as they enter their 40s, won't let the thought cross their head that they should have had families. Instead, they convince themselves that the reason they're so miserable is we live in a world where an innocent nigger can OD on fentanyl while a cop has his knee on him.
maybe I wasn't being a conspiracy theorist when I used to think that demonizing marriage and having kids was going to lead to mass loneliness. I mean, sure you can create a successful career, but spending money all on yourself won't change the fact that you'll always be alone when you go home at night. Sure, you can live wild, but at the end of the day, will hookups be the same as personal connections? Will trooning out make you feel better, or will you just feel worse?
But no, families are what the icky religious people do. You wouldn't want to be like those backwards third-world country people who at least know how to continue the human race do you? No one with a family genuinely wants one, it's the patriarchy blah blah. 💊
 
You’re an animal. A social animal, the descendant of an unbroken chain of survivors stretching back to before they were even human. You’re optimized for survival, everything about you is made for the fight.

But now your life takes place in an overpopulated mouse paradise. Life is too constrained and too easy and therefore intolerable. Your instincts have nowhere to go. When you act on them, the system punishes you. Don’t fight. Don’t nest. Don’t claim territory. Suppress your aggression. Be from nowhere, a man of no people, a woman without sisters. Feed at the trough. Numb yourself. “Be afraid to know your neighbor and to die.” Consume, consume. Pour your instincts into video games where an avatar hunts and kills. Mother your cat. When the sun sets, watch a screen, hypnotized by shadows on a wall.

You are an animal, a social animal, a wolf pacing his cage. The words to describe the cage have been taken from you, so you can’t even see the bars. You don’t understand that you’re howling at the moon. The best you can do is “I can’t cope”.
 
Based rant.

Also best advice to actually not having to dread "the future" is getting a job and not living above the paycheck. Normal people don't have time to have anxiety.
meh

When it comes to playing the generational blame game, everyone begins to lose as everyone denies responsibility. The older generations have said the same about the new since Aristotle and likely even more before. They'll acknowledge differences and still place blame, festering resentment. Nothing is resolved and nothing is changed. You've done the equivalent of sitting on the plastic chair while scoffing 'zoomers.'

Really, everyone's trying to feel better about a shitty situation they caused or are stuck in, which results in a whole lot of nothing because feelings are motivators: you're supposed to be doing something productive as a result of them, not bitch.
 
Boomers decided to worship criminals and people too self-centered/defective to function in society, and tear down any trace of real community, since community requires reciprocation and some personal sacrifice, and that would be unfair to expect from the criminals and dropouts.

It really crystalized for me recently, while watching the twitter male left berate some woman for hating aggressive hobos. And the flood of genderspecial pedo teacher stories. Lionize predators long enough, and eventually every interaction in society will just be predators trying to groom or take advantage. Thank you for reading my thesis, please come again.
Same thing happened in the furry community. The weirdo pedophiles were tolerated until they became the majority and there's no pushing back anymore.
 
I hope Russia fucking nukes us and you die of starvation and thermal pulse burns.
I would bet a can of apocalypse beans that if word goes out that the nukes are coming, at least one fat fuck will rush out for a big mac combo to "see them through the mess".

This whole article is a fascinating insight into the mind of children who failed to become adults. People who are making it deeper and deeper into their limited pool of years, still expecting someone to provide a path to a future they feel they were promised. Still not realizing that the future is crafted, built, by the people who want it, not some march of progress. And despite their wailing, this march of technological progress is in fact continuing to accelerate - They've just become so inured to it that they take it for granted, to the point they miss it entirely, and resent that there's nothing even more impressive taking its place.

Any one of these idiots could realize that even on a shoestring budget, they have the ability to create just about anything in this world, if they want to put the work into it. But they're so destroyed by politics and consumerism that they feel the only things they're allowed to do are ones that support the appropriate causes, in the appropriate ways, with the appropriate products. If these people could simply take individual responsibility, rather than turning everything into a movement, they may feel a bit better.

Even the long term environmental dooming isn't new. We went through the mini ice age, leading to centuries of farmers wondering if their harvest would be good enough, or if their children would starve to death over the winter. Conditions got colder and colder, and towards the minimum, there was mounting fear that it would simply keep going, keep getting colder. Even if your crop was sufficient, the wars from those who were not so lucky would put you and your family at risk, and many of your would probably die from it. And yet people carried on. Compare that to today, where people are bitching about hotter summers in a western country with near universal access to the most advanced insulated homes and thermal regulation technology in history, and crop declines due to drought every few years in a period where obesity is orders of magnitude more deadly than starvation. And its not even all bad, the very same CO2 and Temp increases have also lead to immense global greening, the conditions have been incredible for forest growth. Even human survival has improved, yearly deaths from cold exposure have declined by absolute numbers more than heat exposure deaths have increased, a net saving of lives.

These people are just the 30 year old conclusion of the children who would work themselves into a bed shitting terror over scoring 98 on a test instead of a 100, and demand that it become a 100 less they face even the slightest discipline, from parents who wouldn't lift a finger if they started murdering cats and building effigies of their bones in the backyard. Mental maturity is becoming increasingly rare among these people, and increasingly narrowly focused atop of that - Leading to bizzare scenarios like people who have really mature mental models regarding the concept of retirement and fiscal savings, but complete childish ignorance to personal finances, economics, etc. The kind of person who complains about their difficulty making exact 401k contributions while tracking the compound growth of their meager savings, and then spending 60% of their budget on food and rent to live in an absurdly overpriced location to go out partying and wonder why they're struggling to make ends meet.

I guess to sum up these ramblings, you don't live in an age of regression. Your slowly coming to realize that you've never developed, and the world you think existed never did. The Midlife crisis of the generations past was about recapturing the last vestiges of youth after diving into maturity so early (Married, kids, house and career by 20), despite the absurdity of doing so. It feels like this is the midlife crisis of the modern generation, trying to avoid the inevitable adulthood even as its forced upon you by the endless march of time.
 
I guess to sum up these ramblings, you don't live in an age of regression. Your slowly coming to realize that you've never developed, and the world you think existed never did. The Midlife crisis of the generations past was about recapturing the last vestiges of youth after diving into maturity so early (Married, kids, house and career by 20), despite the absurdity of doing so. It feels like this is the midlife crisis of the modern generation, trying to avoid the inevitable adulthood even as its forced upon you by the endless march of time.
Damn you Count Graduon!
 
All I get from this is “waaaa!!! I can’t afford my $30 a day Starbucks habit and Funko addiction on my part time minimum wage counter monkey job! Mommy and daddy won’t foot the bill for my rent either! They actually expect me to put in effort to support myself? Evil capitalist fascists! Waaaa!”
 
I would bet a can of apocalypse beans that if word goes out that the nukes are coming, at least one fat fuck will rush out for a big mac combo to "see them through the mess".

This whole article is a fascinating insight into the mind of children who failed to become adults. People who are making it deeper and deeper into their limited pool of years, still expecting someone to provide a path to a future they feel they were promised. Still not realizing that the future is crafted, built, by the people who want it, not some march of progress. And despite their wailing, this march of technological progress is in fact continuing to accelerate - They've just become so inured to it that they take it for granted, to the point they miss it entirely, and resent that there's nothing even more impressive taking its place.

Any one of these idiots could realize that even on a shoestring budget, they have the ability to create just about anything in this world, if they want to put the work into it. But they're so destroyed by politics and consumerism that they feel the only things they're allowed to do are ones that support the appropriate causes, in the appropriate ways, with the appropriate products. If these people could simply take individual responsibility, rather than turning everything into a movement, they may feel a bit better.

Even the long term environmental dooming isn't new. We went through the mini ice age, leading to centuries of farmers wondering if their harvest would be good enough, or if their children would starve to death over the winter. Conditions got colder and colder, and towards the minimum, there was mounting fear that it would simply keep going, keep getting colder. Even if your crop was sufficient, the wars from those who were not so lucky would put you and your family at risk, and many of your would probably die from it. And yet people carried on. Compare that to today, where people are bitching about hotter summers in a western country with near universal access to the most advanced insulated homes and thermal regulation technology in history, and crop declines due to drought every few years in a period where obesity is orders of magnitude more deadly than starvation. And its not even all bad, the very same CO2 and Temp increases have also lead to immense global greening, the conditions have been incredible for forest growth. Even human survival has improved, yearly deaths from cold exposure have declined by absolute numbers more than heat exposure deaths have increased, a net saving of lives.

These people are just the 30 year old conclusion of the children who would work themselves into a bed shitting terror over scoring 98 on a test instead of a 100, and demand that it become a 100 less they face even the slightest discipline, from parents who wouldn't lift a finger if they started murdering cats and building effigies of their bones in the backyard. Mental maturity is becoming increasingly rare among these people, and increasingly narrowly focused atop of that - Leading to bizzare scenarios like people who have really mature mental models regarding the concept of retirement and fiscal savings, but complete childish ignorance to personal finances, economics, etc. The kind of person who complains about their difficulty making exact 401k contributions while tracking the compound growth of their meager savings, and then spending 60% of their budget on food and rent to live in an absurdly overpriced location to go out partying and wonder why they're struggling to make ends meet.

I guess to sum up these ramblings, you don't live in an age of regression. Your slowly coming to realize that you've never developed, and the world you think existed never did. The Midlife crisis of the generations past was about recapturing the last vestiges of youth after diving into maturity so early (Married, kids, house and career by 20), despite the absurdity of doing so. It feels like this is the midlife crisis of the modern generation, trying to avoid the inevitable adulthood even as its forced upon you by the endless march of time.
I know this is probably going to sound like cope but: the telltale signs of adulthood are out of reach for many, which is part of the problem.

Want to own land? Good joke, unless you're a rich foreigner.
Want to start a family? Dating is fucked.
 
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THIS is why I hate millennials and Zoomers. No, you faggots didn't come up with it. People as far back as the Bronze Age looked toward the future. They build their present on the foundation of the past with an eye toward the future. That's why they built bridges, dams, aqueducts, farmed, domesticated animals.

So, no, you faggots didn't come up with the future. You just thought it meant luxury gay space communism without working for it, now you're sad that reality went "LOL, No. Get to fucking work."

And I don't want to here you Zoomers and Millennials crying about how the future looks so bleak.

Want to know what the future looked like for everyone between 1950 and 1999?

View attachment 3837537

This. THIS was our fates, you faggots. I knew girls afraid to have children because they were worried about their children growing up in the horrors of a nuclear apocalypse.

And no, don't come in here talking shit about how "EXPERTS SAY THAT..." when you were born in 1998 and listen to motherfuckers who flat out retconned history.

Oh, it's hard! We don't have anything to look forward to!

You lazy, pampered, coddled, spoiled little niggers.

Oh, I won't be able to have my penis plated in gold/have my vagina bedazzled with diamonds!

How about you get to fucking work.

Life has ALWAYS been fucking hard.

Hardly any of you assholes have had to kill to survive. An animal or a man.

How many of you have gone hungry? How many of you have had to live without electricity or running water? How many of you have had to keep a wood stove lit?

You know what?

Sit your spoiled, pampered asses down.

The future's still coming.

I'm sorry it's not the Glorious Gay Space Luxury Automated Communism where you get to upload your body into a robot because [FILL IN ENEMY] stole it from you, but, guess what, Roberto, you should be goddamn grateful you go to bed with a full belly.

The majority of human history people strove for a full belly, safety, and contentedness.

You faggots have dopamine receptors as blown out as your assholes and are whining you aren't happy 24/7.

Fuck you.

I hope Russia fucking nukes us and you die of starvation and thermal pulse burns.

Faggots.

Hello, based departament?
 
I guarantee that previous generations would all be diagnosed with muh mental health condishuns at fucking exactly the same rate, if not far higher, if that scam industry had existed back then as it does now. Of course, back then if you couldn't or wouldn't hold it together, your options were to either figure it the fuck out or end up in an institution. And back then, "getting help" didn't refer to doing crafts in therapy groups, being given a government disability check to sit home all day eating junk food and jerking off, and being given your own personal ass patter to lie to you and say all you need is a sense of entitlement and a sex change operation.

Pathologize everything, call any unpleasant emotion or discomfit a disease to be treated with SSRIs, handouts, fake validation, a free pass to avoid any kind of work or responsibility, offer unending praise for doing less than the bare minimum because their condishuns make life so unbearably hard compared to everyone else, and absolutely no fucking shit are people going to jump on the bandwagon. More people are being dragged in to the learned helplessness trap by the scam mental health industry that has sprung up to exploit the demand, but it all starts with the purely self-interested people who have bullied everyone into seeing their bogus DSM labels as cool and desirable status symbols and anyone who calls out their behavior is harassed into silence for "discrimination" or "shaming" them which is de facto illegal. Calling shell-shocked men cowards for being too undeniably fucked to support their family after making it back was horrific, as were the abuses committed against people in insane asylums, but we've overcorrected so far in the opposite direction that it's become cancerous.

Basically the South Park episode where Cartman is diagnosed with anxiety had it 100% right.
 
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