46 pointsby stog5 hours ago26 comments
  • internet20004 hours ago
    This Douglas Adams quote is still undefeated:

    1. Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works.

    2. Anything that's invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it.

    3. Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things.

    • chasing0entropy4 hours ago
      The garbage that counts as 'invented' in 2010-present has a third of the thought, twice the expense, and mandatory dlc.
      • dude2507114 hours ago
        Yeah, that quote is starting to show it's age.
        • techblueberry4 hours ago
          The thing that's really interesting about quotes like these, and probably adds validity to the fact that they might not be true anymore is not just how outdated they are, but how young they likely are. Before the industrial revolution, things didn't change fast enough for this quote to be valid. Now they change too fast.
      • th0ma54 hours ago
        I certainly think both can be true, we can have different contexts of technology as we get on the train and go through this cycle Adams describes, as well as fundamentally disagree with a technology's marketing for fundamental reasons. Additionally you could be both and this isn't a conflict.
    • pier254 hours ago
      There's definitely some truth to that but not everything is a generational thing.

      Eg: Social media is a net negative for kids and teens.

      • t-34 hours ago
        Kids these days can't even play outside by themselves, let alone explore alone or be unsupervised miles from home with no adults like we could when I was a kid in the 90s and 2000s. What else can they do other than use social media? The creeping infantilization of the youth has robbed them of any chance for socializing or fun that exists outside of a screen.
        • pier252 hours ago
          Are you sure it's not the other way around? That all of this is happening because of social media, phones, etc?
      • SilverElfin4 hours ago
        I think that’s still not really proven. For example, see this recent article:

        https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/jan/14/social-media-t...

        My suspicion is that children who are not raised properly or are naturally more susceptible to certain issues, may be more damaged by social media. But it’s also possible that other children are positively benefiting from it, or at least just not negatively affected to the level that everyone assumes.

        I’m speculating, but I bet children who are raised properly still have enough offline time doing things like playing outside and having some independence, that they are balanced and healthy.

    • hahahahhaah4 hours ago
      That is subtly wrong for things like social media and AI. 50 year olds can embrace and use these things. However the dangers of these things are well accepted by all adults IMO not just older people. Many of the AI saftey crowd are young.
  • narrator4 hours ago
    As an old-timer, the biggest difference between now and the 80s and 90s is that in the 80s and 90s entertainment was relatively scarce. An album cost $20, which was a lot in those days. You could get movies, but you had to go to the video store and remember to return them, and the selection was often limited. If you liked some weird band, most record stores didn't have it. In the 80s TV was very limited and you had to get home in time.

    So today entertainment is unlimited and everywhere, personalized and you can have more free entertainment than you could ever watch in a million years. This means other forms of entertainment like hanging out with friends, going to the symphony, the opera, or out to the movies, or just hanging out in public are much less valuable than they used to be.

    One example: As a teenager, I used to go to a special screening of a Warren Miller film about extreme skiing that they would do once a year. This was a big annual event where we would watch daredevils ski and do tricks with old Warren narrating and pay $12 to get in. They wouldn't have anything like that on regular TV. Now, there is an unlimited amount of that stuff on almost every single video platform on the internet.

    Also, one other huge notable difference was pornography was very hard to get a hold of, and now it's available in unlimited amounts for free. This warps society in all kinds of weird ways. For instance, women were mysterious, incredibly alluring, and much more irresistable in those days. Just seeing cleavage was a big deal! Now all that mystery is totally gone for men who don't abstain from pornography, and young men seem hugely demotivated to date.

    • cal_dent15 minutes ago
      I get some of these but at the same time, I happily watched the same videos, played the same game, listened to the same bootleg copy of some cd I was into over and over again. Point being that sure there is more stuff, but I don't think the absence of that abundance doesn't necessarily mean that people would be doing other stuff than consuming some entertainment.

      Some thing has obviously changed in society, but what are the other people doing who aren't so insular like we say most of the new generation are? Why doesn't it affect them?

    • techblueberry3 hours ago
      I've summarized this in some ways as there's nothing weird anymore. Nothing counter-culture. There's this notion some people who grew up in that time have who have become old and cynical which is like "How can anyone who grew up in the 90's be offended by anything. We had South Park!"

      I was a teenager when The Spirit of Christmas came out, and the great thing about South park is how strange and transgressive it was. There was nothing like that anywhere. I've become a little bit of a fuddy duddy in my old age, but not because I'm truly offended by off-color jokes, but I miss when things felt like they were really transgressive. Off color jokes aren't really naughty when they're everywhere. I've started to listen to more classical music and read the classics. I'm not like trying to be "edgy" but it feels like one of the few things that is not ubiquitous.

      • blargthorwars3 hours ago
        Rebellion nowadays is living like a sterotyped 1950's family.
      • cindyllm3 hours ago
        [dead]
    • nickt3 hours ago
      I was around in the 80’s in the UK and this was a real thing:

      https://newsthump.com/2026/01/28/uk-on-verge-of-return-to-he...

    • throwyawayyyy4 hours ago
      Agreed. Though I hated it at the time, in retrospect I am grateful for how often I was bored, growing up in the 80s and 90s. I'm sure I owe my career to it, I started programming computers from a lack of anything else to do.
  • ckrapu4 hours ago
    A thought I often have - older millennials and younger Gen X have a unique obligation to fix certain parts of society because we are the youngest generation old enough to remember how to operate in and enjoy a world that wasn't A/B tested into a gray, lifeless background hum.
    • raw_anon_11113 hours ago
      I am 51 and a Gen X. I did my part, I voted for policies to increase the social safety net, universal healthcare, etc.

      This is the world that people wanted. I have the Ben Kenobi plan, I’m going to disappear somewhere and when the evil empire comes for me, just give up and die and then it becomes the younger people’s problem.

    • nurettin4 hours ago
      I sometimes think that I know better, and younger people are just wasting away. But maybe every generation feels that way when they come of age.
      • thfuran4 hours ago
        Given that we have written record going at least as far back as Socrates bitching about the kids these days, I think it's pretty consistent. But it's different this time, I'm sure of it.
    • hubber2 hours ago
      Some of us still remember the days before "multiculturalism". It breaks my heart knowing kids these days will never experience that.
  • dapangzi4 hours ago
    I was hoping this would be more fleshed out as an article, but the sentiment is understandable.

    Want to throw some of my knowledge of digital music, as you called it out specifically.

    In the late 90s most digitally arranged music production was relegated to trackers (think Amiga trackers) and sequencing samples and loops, because the storage simply didn't exist.

    Then that would be committed to tape, sometimes on a 4-track, sometimes on studio-quality tape, sometimes on ADAT.

    Fully digital music production like we have now was out of reach for most people until roughly the early-to-mid 2000s, when you see an explosion of people, even in local music scenes, quantizing drum parts and using virtual instruments (usually VST) that would normally require tens or even hundreds of thousands in hardware.

    • Sharlin4 hours ago
      Tracker music was always a hobbyist thing, with a few exceptions. Not really relevant in the greater music scene.

      But digitally produced music was of course a huge thing in the 90s. Countless genres of electronic music – techno, trance, house, whatever have you, all of that made on computers. And of course pop was almost all synth – digital synth – just like today.

      • dapangzi2 hours ago
        > Tracker music was always a hobbyist thing

        I was specifically talking about end-to-end digital music production being used to "clean up" recordings per the article. Not whatever "scene" you are conjuring.

        > Computers helped you make things louder, cleaner, faster.

        For people with limited resources (i.e. indie musicians without huge budgets), digital multi-track recording was not democratized until the introduction of low-cost hard disk storage at sufficient capacity to allow digital multi-track recording at home, roughly around 2002~2003.

        Of course I'm aware of synthesizers, etc. I was an electronic musician myself during this period, and I lived it. I had the gear racks, ADAT machines, etc.

        We did not have the resources as independent musicians to use non-linear digital editing software broadly until storage became cheaper.

        Again, a lot of that music was typically done with looping and sample hits arranged on a midi sequencer, similar to trackers, but with distributed infrastructure.

        Listen to older KMFDM, for example, the looping really stands out due to the limited storage they had when arranging, they would arrange sample hits and loops as I was talking about above.

        Musicians with studio backing and infinite money could afford giant digital productions suites and were using crude versions of Pro Tools by the early '90s, am well aware.

  • throwyawayyyy4 hours ago
    If you want to sum up the 90s in the UK for people like me who became adults then, it would be the song, "Things can only get better". A little embarrassing, yes? Naive? and yet there really was an optimism then. If things weren't great (and objectively it was a poorer country), they were getting better, and they could get better, and they would. Happiness is more about cake tomorrow than cake today, and in the 90s you really could believe it. Do we have that belief now? Managed decline, it feels like, is the best the UK can offer.

    To make this a bit more pithy: in the 1990s we were excited about the coming 21st century. In 2025, do we think the 2030s are going to be better, really? Or are we looking down the barrels of one maturing catastrophe over another?

    • dougb54 hours ago
      I too loved that song as a kid, but it's from 1985. It felt like the right song for that era too!
      • throwyawayyyy3 hours ago
        True! But so indelibly linked to the 1997 election, and all the promise and promises of the incoming Labour government.
  • singingbard4 hours ago
    The Internet is to blame!

    But you could say we peaked before electricity too:

    - It broke our natural circadian rhythm

    - It enabled the 24-hr grind

    - With radios and televisions, people were now staying home for leisure instead of going to parks and public spaces (TV dinners!)

    - It led to immense pollution

    Technology really is a double edged sword.

    • refurb4 hours ago
      Quality of life has a lot to do with how you choose to spend your time.

      I know lots of people that have no idea what Reddit is. They’ve never had a Facebook account.

      Those aren’t happenstances - they are the result of the choice on what they spend their time doing.

      I’m not surprised people who spend most of their time exposed to the rage bait that fills social media think the world is falling apart. Especially if you’re not aware that it’s not an accurate or balanced view of reality.

      • abnercoimbre3 hours ago
        Something new to grapple with though is that (in the US) we have the most extremely online White House in history. Our highest ranking officials, with their departments, are on social media day in and day out, and make decisions motivated by it.

        It's very strange.

  • adw4 hours ago
    The author is in their forties or fifties. They’re forgetting one important thing; they were young and the world was in front of them.
    • 4 hours ago
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    • anon2914 hours ago
      Every single 'it was better in the X0s' is actually 'i want a tween/young teenager in the X0s'.

      Everything else is post hoc rationalization

      I'm jealous of my kids since they are so much better off in every way

      • silisili4 hours ago
        I'm conflicted on that myself. On paper their life is certainly so much easier and more comfortable.

        On the other hand, I feel like there's some intangibles missing. Not having instant access to everything made for patience and appreciation. Not having laptops and cellphones meant having to converse and interact with those around you. It's hard to describe why any of that is better than today, but it just feels like it was to my old brain.

      • techblueberry3 hours ago
        I don't think it is, so many kids watch stranger things and ask if kids really did have that kind of freedom back then. I get why many things objectively better today, but suicide rates are up. I don't think people's mental health and happiness follow like objective statistics very well. And why would we assume it's true? This concept of "I wish I was. tween/ young teenager in the X0's" has probably only been true for like 100 years.
      • feelamee4 hours ago
        not every. I have not lived in 90s at all, I am from the current millennium, but.. I am nostalgic about 90s. This is strange, but I feel nostalgia about times I never live
      • verdverm4 hours ago
        20-30 is the most commonly picked best age, while teenage is the most widely picked worst age

        https://today.yougov.com/society/articles/53769-what-are-the...

      • oncallthrow4 hours ago
        > I'm jealous of my kids since they are so much better off in every way

        Really? It’s interesting how much I see this take online. I never see people saying this IRL.

        • mitthrowaway24 hours ago
          I disagree with the above take. I feel bad that my kids have to grow up in the world of today rather than the world of the 90s.
          • anon2914 hours ago
            That's because you're listening to your hormones not reality.
        • anon2914 hours ago
          Yes of course I am. This is the best possible time quite literally. Barely any conflict. The entire world, including 'poor' countries, are getting richer. Like the world of 2100 is going to be F'ING amazing.

          We are making our way to a post scarcity world and it's amazing.

          All the negative news you hear everyday are just distractions from what's actually going on.

          • yoz-y4 hours ago
            It is very hard to hear the good news happening “somewhere” when you see the bad news happening in your backyard.
          • nickt3 hours ago
            I’m optimistic too, but I can’t help wonder if the post scarcity world, like the future, won’t be evenly distributed.
          • vermilingua4 hours ago
            > Barely any conflict

            I feel like you might not be paying much attention.

          • actionfromafar4 hours ago
            2100: "You're gonna have dictatorships and you're gonna love it?"
          • Kye4 hours ago
            Is this satire?
            • ericd3 hours ago
              We’re quickly entering a new era of energy abundance, without needing to constantly dig up, process, and cart around enormous amounts of oil. And solar has recently gotten cheap enough that people in poorer countries around the world are deploying huge amounts of it. That’s pretty amazing!
              • Kye3 hours ago
                What does this have to do with my question?
                • ericd2 hours ago
                  You asked if it's satire, I gave you a reason it might not be.
  • QuiEgo2 hours ago
    Social media broke society. The echo chamber effect from the feed algorithms has led to everyone living in their own little realities and it's so terrifying to watch what happens when people don't have the same truths.

    I remember early, invite-only Facebook before it got heavily monetized and it was such an amazing tool to bring people together, keep you connected with old friends, organize group events, and stuff like that. Then it... changed.

  • pezezin2 hours ago
    For me the 00's were the real deal, that decade when Internet at home finally became affordable but before the arrival of smartphones, social networks, and 24/7 connectivity.

    But they were also my high school and university years, and as many other comments have pointed out, we tend to remember those years as the best of our lives.

  • Sharlin4 hours ago
    I sympathise with the author's point (the machines in The Matrix were right!), but the analog music part doesn't really hold water. Digitally produced music was of course a huge thing in the 90s. Countless genres of electronic music – techno, trance, house, whatever have you, all of that made on computers. And of course almost all of pop was digital synth based by the 90s.
  • verdverm4 hours ago
    Your perception of the best decade is correlated with your age

    https://today.yougov.com/society/articles/53769-what-are-the...

    • JKCalhounan hour ago
      I've seen a few people point this out in this thread, but, seriously? There's a generation that are going to say the 2020's were the best decade?

      I think that suggests:

      1) Things are getting worse from decade to decade and,

      2) If you weren't alive in an earlier decade you don't know how great it was.

      (Personally, I saw the creek start running with shit when cable TV exploded and at the same time trash AM talk-radio began. The 70's were the last decade when we weren't hating each other.)

  • matt-attack4 hours ago
    > Things came out slowly. Albums. Games. Software. That slowness gave them weight. You lived with them for a while instead of replacing them next week.

    This is very true (and should include films as well). When big movies came out they were a big thing. Waiting in long lines for a ticket to a movie was a normal thing. People talked about them weeks and weeks. They were sort of big cultural events.

  • techblueberry4 hours ago
    I think about this issue a lot too, and while I think everyone calling out that these feelings are cyclical, and choosing a decade of that persons own life means that it's just nostalgia has validity, but I also think that, there is probably truth to the idea that our cultural peak is behind us. Some Cultural historians would probably put it some time in the 17 and 1800's when we were building cathedrals and making classical music.

    I've become something of a cultural conservative, thinking that most significant cultural lessons, the ways to live the good life can be learned by looking behind us.

    There are probably multiple peaks though, and I think a peak in the late 20th century is one of them. I think the 20th century in and of itself will probably always be considered a peak, or significant and the reason is the invention of the motion picture and the way motion picture technology evolved over those 100 years. Our image of ourself as a society will never have quite the evolution you get from having like low fps black and white imagery early in the 20th century, to basically 4k sci-fi like the Matrix in 1999.

    But I think the like Stranger Things running around on bicycles, getting to experience the birth of modern technology, sort of a combination of maximal freedom and maximal aesthetic experience, shared cultural touchstones and while not yet introducing social media and post-9/11 anxiety is a signifcant cultural peak.

  • 4 hours ago
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  • RickJWagner2 hours ago
    How could he miss movies?

    I’ve got several streaming services available to me. When I’m looking for a good show, it’s very often from the 80s or 90s. A lot of newer movies end up started and not finished.

  • brettgriffin4 hours ago
    Something I've come to accept and try to remember: people will complain about literally anything you give them to opportunity to complain about.

    The world is better today in every conceivable way for more people, than it was at any point in history. But it isn't good enough for enough people, and the people who remind you of that are usually doing the least to improve anything, for anybody.

    I don't really understand why. It seems fall under this larger victimization umbrella. The best answers I've seen for it are that it is either some cathartic response to just how good things have gotten, or that the complaint itself represents some marginal effort, enough to elicit a dopamine response.

    I was born in the 80s and have vivid memories of the 90s. I absolutely loved everything as it was at that point in time. But to look at the world around us today and to think anything before was the peak is just incomprehensible to me.

  • oncallthrow4 hours ago
    This is true, and I think a good indicator of its truth is that basically all generations agree about it. Even Gen Z, who weren’t alive at the time.
    • TacticalCoder4 hours ago
      Yup that's the thing: it's not only people who lived that era who do wish they could live in it today.

      I never wanted to live in the post-WW II late 40s/50s: maybe the sixties though. For honestly the late 40s and 50s looked incredibly dull. Just dull: movies were dull, acting was dumb, music was mostly pathetic save for a few exceptions.

      The boomers really lived the absolute dullest, naive, era and nobody fantasizes on it.

      There's never been a teenager from the 80s or 90s saying: "Oh wow, I so wish I lived in the 50s". That's not a thing.

      And yet I see many young persons asking me, today, about the 80s and 90s. They like some of the music (sure, some were cheesy but it wasn't the uber dull pathetic stuff from the 50s: not to mention the incredible poor recordings unless you were as successful as Elvis Presley) and they definitely enjoy some of the epic movies. And the cars: many twenty-agers do love cars from the 80s and 90s.

      They understand it was pretty much today's world, but less soul-sucking.

      • techblueberry3 hours ago
        I'd be curious to see the 20's since it seems like that was it's own like big breakout time culturally.
  • SilverElfin4 hours ago
    I am sure every single generation has something like this to say about a decade that was meaningful to them. But I feel the 90s are special because it was a period where you got to experience two worlds - the pre Internet one and the post Internet one. You had all the promise of the early Internet without the downsides of what came later with social media, monetization, etc. And people were still generally … normal. They had lives offline that were authentic and I think that made them happier and healthier.
    • dude2507114 hours ago
      The "every generation" thing is for when the progress is linear.

      From no transistors to 13+ sextillion in less than 100 years does not feel linear.

  • zer00eyz4 hours ago
    > We used tech without letting it own us.

    This was, and is, a personal choice.

    You can call me a judas goat if you want for spending my whole life building the things I would not use, but that is the nature of the game.

  • RickJWagner2 hours ago
    MTV!

    To anyone old enough to have seen the first few years, it was awesome beyond description. Just totally great.

    ‘Take on Me’, ‘Walk like an Egyptian’, ‘Come On, Eileen’…. That was peak entertainment, the likes of which we have not seen again.

  • sebastos3 hours ago
    As Douglas Adams and xkcd #1227 have pointed out, the older generations have complained about this sort of thing since Plato. However, I do not believe this observation settles the matter, because it does not seriously contend with the null hypothesis: that we really have been steadily enshittifying the human experience since Plato.

    Who has the right of it? Do the new generations simply not know what they are missing. Or is there something in human nature that makes us unavoidably crotchety as we get older and, thus, not to be taken too seriously? In my opinion, it is simply an open mystery.

    On the one hand, many tangible, measurable things have improved over the last 2000 years, or, indeed, since the 90's. Steven Pinker has made this point somewhat convincingly by looking at unambiguously positive things like reduced infant mortality.

    On the other hand, every single generation can give detailed accounts of how much more real and alive and authentic the world was a few decades ago. The accounts have similarities across the generations, but they are also rooted in specifics. To argue that we're all mis-remembering or failing to appreciate what the new decade has to offer is to insist on a rather fantastic level of self-doubt. If our entire lived experience is this untrustworthy, it kind of makes it impossible to rule on anything - good OR bad. Why should we default to trusting the younger generation?

    I think the surrounding technological context of our age has brought this long-simmering matter to a boil. Now that our electronic communication is so sophisticated that we can essentially build "anything", it starts to re-focus our attention from "CAN we build it" to "SHOULD we build it". This question about digital society is complementary to the broader, long-standing civilizational question. Have the trillions of hours the human race has expended shaping our society resulted in _better_ life, or just life with a deeper tech tree?

    One novelty of our time is how certain human enterprises play out at 10x speed in cyberspace. This lets us watch the entire lifecycle as they Rise and Fall, over and over. This lends perspective, and allows patterns to emerge. Indeed, this is exactly how Doctorow came to coin the term enshittification. If there's any truth to the life-really-is-getting-worse theory, you'd want to find some causal mechanism - some constant factor that explains why we've been driving things in the wrong direction so consistently. Digital life lets us see enough trials to start building such an account. You can imagine starting to understand the "physics" of why all human affairs eventually lead to an Eternal September. Wherever brief pockets of goodness pop up, they are like arbitrage opportunities: they tautologically attract more and more people trying to harvest the goodness until it's pulverized - a tragedy of the commons. Perhaps some combination of population growth and the inevitable depletion of Earth's natural resources lead to such a framework.

    Whatever you think about it, I mostly just wish people would acknowledge that it is an unresolved debate and treat it as such. It is critical to understanding what it is worth spending our time on, and it is the kernel of many comparatively superficial disagreements (e.g. the red-blue culture war in US politics).

    • techblueberry32 minutes ago
      > On the other hand, every single generation can give detailed accounts of how much more real and alive and authentic the world was a few decades ago.

      I don’t know that this is true, and I doubt it meant the same thing to Plato as it did to us; I read somewhere that in ancient times, nostalgia would have been for the world of the gods, not a specific time and place.

      The thirties and fourties’ were probably not more alive and authentic than the 50’s and 60’s. The 1920’s were a cultural peak that retreated until the 1960’s, and prior to the Industrial Revolution, things didn’t change fast enough for like decades to be significant. The original documented example of nostalgia was about soldiers nostalgic for home, not explicitly their youth or another time.

      All these feelings, “nostalgia” are going to hit different without shared cultural experiences, and changing technological and aesthetic context,

  • jvfjllkttg4 hours ago
    The 90s were shit.
    • tryauuum4 hours ago
      yeah, especially in the post-USSR countries. It was a culture shock to understand that in other parts of the world it was a peak of society
  • notepad0x904 hours ago
    I think this is just millenials discovering nostalgia. For me all kinds of things sucked (even though I am a millenial).

    I really love lots of things about the world today. I love delivery apps, remote working, so much entertainment. I feel much safer in some ways (not in others -- but that's a 2026 development). I hated walkmans and cd players, they skip, wearout,etc... I hated having to rent movies, sometimes all the copies have been rented out, and you had to deal with fees for not rewinding. and the media quality sucked.

    Even when there was internet (if you're lucky, and you afforded the very costly computers back then), you had to share time with landline usage. You had to remember landline numbers too.

    I hated writing all the time, pens, pencils, sharpening pencils, pens leaking in your pocket. There were no cameras anywhere back then, so people were free to be really bad to each other with little consequence. You didn't go viral for berating a waiter back then. Everything terrible cops are accused of doing today, it was 10x worse in the 90s too.

    So many thing were inaccessible unless you were in the right neighborhood and with the right amount of family income.

    In news and politics, petty things were made to be a big deal, like Clinton's affair for example. People today fall for the deception of nostalgia and think it's because things were by relation not so bad back then, but it's just that they were kids and their parents sheltered them. All the stuff in epstein's list, all the #metoo revelations, all the gang warfare and war on drugs chaos in cities, that happened in the 90s too. matter of fact, a lot of the terrible things happening today are only coming into the light now that we have smartphones, internet and things are getting exposed.

    In my opinion, the US peaked in 2022-23 in many ways.But post-covid trauma and the current administration nullified much of that.

    What was great in the 90s was that the US had a healthy amount of national pride and love of country. Russia/Putin has been trying to undermine that, split the us apart from within since the fall of the USSR. Which by the way, all the 90's nostalgia is fueled by the whole "we won the cold war" euphoria in part, and mostly younger people being fooled by the whole "that means we're the good guys" nonsense. Until Iraq of course.

    But anyways, social divisions and strife has widened dramatically, but the people who call themselves "MAGA" were "tea party" prior to that and all sorts of other names historically. All the chaos with the current admin is caused by "the heritage foundation" which has been sowing sees of divisions and chaos since before the 90s (thank them for project 2025). My point is the divisions and chaos are not new. but a lot of people that were doing badly in the 90's are doing much better now (oh..and did I mention how terrifying aids was then? even covid in 2020 was nowhere near as scary).

    We're terrible at appreciating what we have right now in the present,today. We're losing so much of our rights and privileges because of this nonsense, so I hope you all don't propagate it. The 90's were nice in some ways, but they were mostly horrible, and the more disadvantaged you were the worse they were. There was more injustice, more misery, more suffering, more discomforts. We have the best technology, the best health care, the most powerful military, an economy which by all means should be crashing but is somehow surviving, a government which is being attacked by cartoon-level villains at all sides and somehow it too hasn't collapsed yet. Even our allies which are turning to other countries, even they haven't forsaken the US completely yet.

    This mindset of "we used to have it great but it's over now" is defeatist. it is actually the same mindset MAGA is using for their lunacy.

    The problem I think is our generation and gen-z are finally grown ups now, but instead of fighting to keep what we have and improving it, we're in this defeatist mindset looking back into the past and thinking it used to be better. Not appreciating the progress achieved by the sacrifices and struggles of so many. What you don't fight to keep is taken away from you.

    Oh and by the way, remember the ozone crisis, it was more scary than climate change now, and we fixed it more or less now (although objectively, climate change in the future will be worse if it isn't fixed).

    I really really hated school so much!! now for all the problems I had, there has been so much research into them. educators are more aware and more willing to provide individualized plans to students. I wish I had wikipedia back then, heck I wish I had chatgpt back then, I was the student that asked 1000 questions and annoyed everyone, I could annoy chatgpt instead if i were a student today.

    Taxis, how horrible and scammy they were! it was such a hopeless, boring and miserable time. I could go on all day.

    The key thing everyone should keep in mind is that nostalgia is by its nature deceptive. This is why eyewitness testimony is also unreliable. We selectively recall things from the past, not only that, our minds alter how we felt back then in the recall process.

  • sprkwd4 hours ago
    90s are the new 60s
  • ThrowawayTestr4 hours ago
    Yeah it was great if you weren't gay.
    • oconnor6634 hours ago
      Infant mortality was also 1.5x higher in the US than it is today. (Depending on who we mean by "we", this difference can be much larger.) Cystic fibrosis was a death sentence. "Late 90's" barely includes the development of effective AIDS treatment, though certainly not the rollout. (Maybe part of what you were getting at above, besides gay marriage.) Etc etc.
  • chasing0entropy4 hours ago
    Agree, Internet/bbs, CDs, 3d polygon based games. Programming, excitement for the future.