this post was submitted on 29 Jan 2025
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I've been noticing a recurring sentiment among Americans - frustration and disillusionment with the economy. Despite having gone to school, earned a solid education, and worked hard, many feel they can't get ahead or even come close to the standard of living their parents enjoyed.

I'm curious - is this experience unique to the United States, or do people in other countries share similar frustrations?

Do people in Europe, Australia, Canada, or elsewhere feel like they're stuck in a rut, unable to achieve financial stability or mobility despite their best efforts?

Are there any countries or regions that seem to be doing things differently, where education and hard work can still lead to a comfortable life?

Let's hear from our international community - what's your experience with economic mobility (or lack thereof) in your country?"

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[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago (2 children)

You're describing a very scary future... What would you say we can do to prepare for it?

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

Fuck if I know, play Fallout games with the difficulty turned up on a self imposed ironman mode.

Or figure out how to signal to the Vulcans that we need help.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 12 hours ago

Just a few ideas of stuff you can learn that could come in handy during a societal collapse.

Start learning about homesteading, soil science and sustainable farming techniques. Look up 1 acre farming plans.

Have a look at open source ecology's global village construction set.

Get into beekeeping.

Learn how to make rope.

Learn how to make a primitive kiln and forge.

Get a guide to edible plants in your area.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

That's very helpful, thanks lol

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 day ago

I genuinely wish I had better advice, but if climate experts explaining, for 20+ years, how fucked we will be if we do not drastically change has achieved negligibly effective results, I am not going to be able to come up with anything that will actually fix the problem.

I am disabled. I live off of SSDI. Fixed income.

If Trump cancels that, I'm dead.

If not, my plan is to try to move to Minnesota.

Low fire risk, relatively low flooding risk, lots of access to water, at least for now its a blue state, and it is the least expensive blue state to live in (that isn't the desert of New Mexico).

Also has a decent range of assistance for poors like me, a rental rebate program... but who knows what'll happen if Trump just cancels all the federal funding for all that.

Has a lower required common income to rent ratio, 2.5x compared to 3x in most of the rest of the non climate disaster zone parts of the US.

If I can give any useful individual advice it would be to form a mutual aid network with your friends and family, and go check out some predicted climate danger maps, move somewhere that's low on that but also affordable, learn how to cook from raw ingredients, learn how to mend and maintain things like appliances, vehicles, clothes, etc.

All my friends and family were QAnon MAGAtards, or hysterical, irresponsible, backstabbing hypocrites, or both, so I'm SoL on the 'have a support network' front, but I can at least move somewhere better for me.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

I don't think there's a lot you can do ... a lot of problems are big and complex, like food getting expensive, a staggering economy, ... but what you can do is to talk with your friends and build social connections. If it doesn't change reality, at least it makes you feel better :) and i mean it, lots of mental health problems (that are so widespread today) can be at least alleviated by social contact. And maybe gives society a little bit of extra stability ... if people are connected in meaningful ways.

Apart from that, i can only pray that people take the world and the future seriously, and think twice before they put children into this world.