Former President Donald Trump is expected to surrender himself to the Fulton County jail at the end of next week – on Thursday or Friday, a senior law enforcement official with knowledge of the surrender told CNN.

  • flossdaily@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Absolutely. And in so many way. I’m only in my 40s and I feel like I’m living in a vastly different world than the one I was born into.

    The rate of change is unlike anything humans have ever had to cope with in our 2 million year history.

    For almost all of human existence, there wasn’t even a CONCEPT of progress… no sense that humanity was going anywhere. Your life was virtually identical to that of your great great great grandfather, and would be the same experience had by your great great great grandchild.

    I remember a world of rotary phones, small towns with personalities before chains homogenized the world. I remember how the United States had a whole different personality before 9-11. I remember when Republicans had actual plans for governing (OBAMA’S affordable care act was basically a clone of Bob Dole’s plan). I remember the world before the Internet, when malls were packed and buzzing, when shopping in stores felt magical and not like a ghost town.

    I remember analog and even black and white TVs. I remember the first video games and PCs,b dial-up Internet, browsers before tabs were invented.

    I remember when acid rain was there number one environmental concern, and how we actually accepted the science and made policy to fix it.

    I remember the bugs.

    I remember so many more bugs. The night alive with fireflies. Windshields plastered with splatters on the highway.

    I remember paper maps! FM radio. Cassette adapters.

    The world is so, so, so different. It changed so fast.

    Republicans became a suicide cult.

    The government stopped breaking up monopolies, and started bailing out too-big-to-fail banks.

    The United States tortures people now. People never charged of a crimes were tortured at Guantanamo Bay.

    I grew up in a home that my parents bought cheap. They had two cars. They took us on vacations every year. They saved up for retirement. My dad had a PhD. He did well.

    I have a law degree. I will never own a home. I will never be able to afford even a single vacation. I will never be able to retire.

    They rolled back Roe.

    They staged an insurrection.

    I’ve been working with GPT-4 night and day since it was released to the public. I’m 100 percent convinced that with a little supplementation, it is the first artificial GENERAL intelligence.

    It can already create better writing and code than MOST of the human population.

    Where will it be in 5 years? 10? 20?

    It’s going to be smarter, funnier, more creative, more thoughtful than all of us. In our lifetime. WHY, then, are we even HERE at that point? Why do we even exist?

    These were questions for science fiction. For the future.

    It’s happening NOW. WE, of all humans in the span of history, are the ones who will see our species become obsolete.

    So yeah. Let’s take moment to realize how cosmically, historically insane it is to live in this moment.

    • DoutFooL@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Amen. And love your first point about how way back, the average person did not have a concept of progress in their day-to-day life.

      I guess that didn’t really start to blow up until Newton laid the laws of physics down (along with calculus - what a guy) to allow for drastic scientific development. Once we had steam engines and the Industrial Revolution…change has become almost commonplace now.

      I too remember paper maps…always in the glove box.

      Having to remember phone numbers.

      Encyclopedias

      No cell phone and no internet.

      • solstice@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Newton laid the laws of physics down (along with calculus - what a guy)

        Poor Leibniz, totally forgotten by history. Can you imagine inventing friggin calculus and nobody notices or cares? lol

    • MyNameIsIgglePiggle@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I was thinking about your comment and came back. I’m nearly 39 so a similar age.

      First of all. What if you put your phone down, got off the internet and had a look around at your life and what is happening directly in your world. I’ll bet it’s not as chaotic as it feels when we see crazy headlines everywhere. You get up, chat with your family if you are lucky enough to live with someone, perhaps you go to work and interact with your coworkers or clients, hopefully the day isn’t too stressful. Come home, think about what you will have for dinner and hope it doesn’t make you too fat. Go to bed. You might squeeze in some time for hobbies, or visiting friends on the weekends.

      Sure, housing is a massive problem right now, but financial bleakness isn’t new - imagine how it felt to live through the great depression? I’m in Australia, but a couple of years ago we had my son’s birthday at this nice lookout at the top of a hill. There was a plaque there that read that the road to the top of the hill was built by men during the depression in exchange for food to feed their families. The more kids you had the more hours you had to work. It was like 5 or more kids was a mandatory 12 hour day.

      That would have felt bleak and like there was no way out.

      Imagine getting caught up in world war 2? You would think the world had now really gone to shit. It was so traumatizing to the population here that every tiny town has a plaque of all the people who died from it. The names in the list are usually longer than the population of the town right now.

      Then after the war, stuff like the threat of atomic war, nuclear winters and the entire earth dying because of a conflict escalation.

      You described my childhood experience perfectly, but we might have just been very lucky and grew up in an optimistic decade full of rationality and scientific progress.