Hey. Isn't this a Utopian future?

Recommended Videos

maddawg IAJI

I prefer the term "Zomguard"
Feb 12, 2009
7,840
0
0
No, this isn't a Utopian world. It's just seems that way to you because you and I and most folk who grew up in 1st world countries have tunnel vision. Go down to Zimbabwe or a couple small towns in Brazil. These guys are lucky to have bread to eat and unfortunately, this stuff does happen here in our own country. So no, just because I live a comfortable life does not mean that I live in a Utopia. It means I live in a world with flaws. Many flaws actually, but I like it, though that doesn't mean I'm not gonna complain about those flaws when they get on my nerves. [sup]Stupid Xbox controller button being jammed! *mumble mumble mumble*[/sup]
 

blankedboy

New member
Feb 7, 2009
5,234
0
0
Headcap said:
King Toasty said:
I mean, come on. We can love, hate, rage, and do whatever we want. At least in Canada.
So please, stop whining about how miserable your life is. It's fan-fucking-tastic.

You go home, open a can of pop, turn on your PS3, and complain about how much your life sucks because your internet failed. Mhm.
bet the people in the 3rd world or many of the people in the middle east wouldn't say this
you dick
derp

You've got a point, OP. There are a few downsides, but it's good to have a spirit-lifting thread like this every now and then.
 

Paksenarrion

New member
Mar 13, 2009
2,911
0
0
Wait...so, if we aren't living in a Utopian future, does that mean we're living in a Dystopian Future?

...one where there are no realistic sex robots?

...outside of Japan?
 

Vryyk

New member
Sep 27, 2010
393
0
0
If this were a utopia there would be thousands of kittens in my living room. I see no such piles of fluff.
 

Sebenko

New member
Dec 23, 2008
2,530
0
0
Utopia?

No, it looks like the UK is on the fast track to Orwellian dystopia.

Might be slightly exaggerating. Maybe not.
 

SD-Fiend

Member
Legacy
Nov 24, 2009
2,075
0
1
Country
United States
Sturmdolch said:
If this was Utopia, sex robots indistinguishable from real humans would be serving my every desire, and I could cease thinking whilst remaining blissfully ignorant of their vicegrip on the world we once called our own.

Edit: Also on a serious note, your life is as utopian as you make it according to the circumstances.
but if your brain was basically off then you wouldn't be able to notice you were having sex
 

Duruznik

New member
Aug 16, 2009
408
0
0
I think this really depends on where you live. If you live in a developed country where the political situation is rather calm, sure, this is a nice period to live in. Now, if you live in any of the politically unstable areas or a 3rd world country (Such as Africa, the Middle East, etc.), I don't think life is quite as rosey.
 

Womplord

New member
Feb 14, 2010
390
0
0
If this is Utopian, then why are depression rates so high in developed countries (like Canada), and growing? I don't think "people are just whiny" is a very good answer. I suspect that depression rates are high because no-one is allowed to live life in an innate way anymore. What I mean is that instincts are repressed with the weight of all the laws and ethics.

But that's just my theory. Why are depression rates so high?
 

TheXRatedDodo

New member
Jan 7, 2009
445
0
0
You can call modern civilization a Utopia if you really wish, but it seems more like Aldous Huxley's Brave New World to me. It may be "perfect" but people are losing touch with what it means to be human.

Although things actually turned out to be more like a combination of 1984 AND Brave New World rather than being one or the other, which is most intruiging.

So I'm working on making my existence more like "The Doors of Perception" to block all the nastiness of modern civlization out. xD
 

TheXRatedDodo

New member
Jan 7, 2009
445
0
0
Womplord said:
If this is Utopian, then why are depression rates so high in developed countries (like Canada), and growing? I don't think "people are just whiny" is a very good answer. I suspect that depression rates are high because no-one is allowed to live life in an innate way anymore. What I mean is that instincts are repressed with the weight of all the laws and ethics.

But that's just my theory. Why are depression rates so high?
Very pleasing to see that someone other than me has gone down this train of thought.
Depression's main symptom seems to be modern society. I myself suffered a crippling depression that damn near finished me off, and now since I've began to reject society and began living more intuitively and innately, I have found complete, all-encompassing, euphoric joy. I do not think that's some happy accident. It just seems to confirm the theory of depression being largely attributable to modern society.


The whole point of a Utopia is that it's impossible to really live a fulfilling existence in it, that's why it can never happen, and that's why it will never happen. We live in some meagre representation of one, but in an actual one. Most embrace it and get on with life as though it's how things are meant to be but a few of us will slip through the cracks and aspire to live more as savages than "civlized" human beings if this is what it is to be civlized.
 

Fraught

New member
Aug 2, 2008
4,417
0
0
You think we live in a utopian future? Like, all of us?

Seriously, with all the wars, diseases and problems still present, fuck, even with our current lifeorder, you seriously think the future we live in right now is utopian?

You should look up what a utopia really is. We ain't livin' in one.

With that being said, I definitely agree with your "Stop being so whiny" mentality. God, so many people've annoyed me to no end with being that whiny. Gets me all riled up, especially because these days it seems like everyone's doing it.
 

Citrus

New member
Apr 25, 2008
1,420
0
0
We're far from a Utopia, but the world is a better place to live in now than it's ever been.

I never understand comments like "the world is so dangerous nowadays" or "violence is on the rise". Trying living a few centuries ago when you could get swept off and tortured to death because someone suggested that you might be a witch, and then come complain to me about how much the world sucks.
 

SimuLord

Whom Gods Annoy
Aug 20, 2008
10,075
0
0
This is a dystopia, Huxley variant. People are, in the main, content and provided for, but social institutions and order have completely broken down. We've been dehumanized by our technology to the point where we can isolate ourselves from each other.

If I meet someone on campus, chances are good I can't chat them up because they're tethered by the ear to their iPods. It's an illusion of a crowd, but in reality it is naught but a collection of individuals completely socially disconnected.

We've achieved material comfort, but at the cost of our souls. That's not Utopia to me.
 

Kurokami

New member
Feb 23, 2009
2,347
0
0
King Toasty said:
I mean, come on. We can love, hate, rage, and do whatever we want. At least in Canada.
So please, stop whining about how miserable your life is. It's fan-fucking-tastic.

You go home, open a can of pop, turn on your PS3, and complain about how much your life sucks because your internet failed. Mhm.
No, and I don't see the point of this thread.

Headcap said:
King Toasty said:
I mean, come on. We can love, hate, rage, and do whatever we want. At least in Canada.
So please, stop whining about how miserable your life is. It's fan-fucking-tastic.

You go home, open a can of pop, turn on your PS3, and complain about how much your life sucks because your internet failed. Mhm.
bet the people in the 3rd world or many of the people in the middle east wouldn't say this
you dick
I assume his post was aimed at those of us able to read it, people who can afford internet and don't live in 3rd world countries.
 

Kurokami

New member
Feb 23, 2009
2,347
0
0
SimuLord said:
This is a dystopia, Huxley variant. People are, in the main, content and provided for, but social institutions and order have completely broken down. We've been dehumanized by our technology to the point where we can isolate ourselves from each other.

If I meet someone on campus, chances are good I can't chat them up because they're tethered by the ear to their iPods. It's an illusion of a crowd, but in reality it is naught but a collection of individuals completely socially disconnected.

We've achieved material comfort, but at the cost of our souls. That's not Utopia to me.
Ability to chat up a girl = soul.

Finally there's a definition, granted I might not have that, but I'm hardly unable to socialize with people, technology hasn't ruined us in any way, its simply changed us.
 

SimuLord

Whom Gods Annoy
Aug 20, 2008
10,075
0
0
Kurokami said:
SimuLord said:
This is a dystopia, Huxley variant. People are, in the main, content and provided for, but social institutions and order have completely broken down. We've been dehumanized by our technology to the point where we can isolate ourselves from each other.

If I meet someone on campus, chances are good I can't chat them up because they're tethered by the ear to their iPods. It's an illusion of a crowd, but in reality it is naught but a collection of individuals completely socially disconnected.

We've achieved material comfort, but at the cost of our souls. That's not Utopia to me.
Ability to chat up a girl = soul.

Finally there's a definition, granted I might not have that, but I'm hardly unable to socialize with people, technology hasn't ruined us in any way, its simply changed us.
You missed the point. An opportunity for social interaction is lost because someone has isolated herself from the world. She exists in her own shell, any attempts at communication drowned out by the music---unless she's also texting on her phone while listening. But even then it's a closed-loop system.

People need to be more approachable and technology gets in the way. That's what I meant by creature comforts ripping out our souls---we can't talk to each other because of those walls we put up.
 

Naheal

New member
Sep 6, 2009
3,374
0
0
SimuLord said:
This is a dystopia, Huxley variant. People are, in the main, content and provided for, but social institutions and order have completely broken down. We've been dehumanized by our technology to the point where we can isolate ourselves from each other.

If I meet someone on campus, chances are good I can't chat them up because they're tethered by the ear to their iPods. It's an illusion of a crowd, but in reality it is naught but a collection of individuals completely socially disconnected.

We've achieved material comfort, but at the cost of our souls. That's not Utopia to me.
While we're not a utopia, I don't believe that we've quite gotten to the point of being a true dystopia. We are definitely moving towards a cybertech era, but we're lacking the seediness necessary to add the dystopian element as of yet.
 

SimuLord

Whom Gods Annoy
Aug 20, 2008
10,075
0
0
Naheal said:
SimuLord said:
This is a dystopia, Huxley variant. People are, in the main, content and provided for, but social institutions and order have completely broken down. We've been dehumanized by our technology to the point where we can isolate ourselves from each other.

If I meet someone on campus, chances are good I can't chat them up because they're tethered by the ear to their iPods. It's an illusion of a crowd, but in reality it is naught but a collection of individuals completely socially disconnected.

We've achieved material comfort, but at the cost of our souls. That's not Utopia to me.
While we're not a utopia, I don't believe that we've quite gotten to the point of being a true dystopia. We are definitely moving towards a cybertech era, but we're lacking the seediness necessary to add the dystopian element as of yet.
The seediness can be discovered by cracking open the politics section in the newspaper. We've got the corrupt government required (America just dropped out of the top 20 "Least Corrupt Governments" according to Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, which means we're rapidly headed toward junta/regime/insert pejorative Third World noun here territory.