lowk all i do nowadays is read books, play guitar and nkthing much, who wanna be my friend
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14I sadly don't particularly find economics interesting due to it's inherent exploitative nature; any economy i enjoy often is "primitive" in nature. older models. I was recently ranting about my fear of how the market will shift with moderate labor becoming fully automated? but the discussion basically was just me working out pathways that society might take and then me getting angry about rich people and whatever etcetera..
We're almost fully moved to being an oral culture. All the gains in education if they even meaningfully existed have been wiped out
You say that but trade paperback/overall book consumption peaked in the mid 80s, and the troubles started well before that. I think what you're identifying there with the men sleeping is the intense social stratification we've undergone that has removed well-read-people as you've put it from being able to influence those with power.
All major publishers have been taken over by woke foids for some time now. No fiction is written for men anymore. It's all DIE authors targeting a female audience. Or some jew writing a crappy "darker version of Harry Potter" (Magicians by Lev Grossman). Fiction that'd get boys into the habit of reading are older books not on the shelves at B&N. So if parents walk in with a boy it'll be all meh to him. (except maybe manga)
what? This is true but when did this come up in conversation?
>trade paperback/overall book consumption peaked in the mid 80s
You didn't say or even imply that. You wrote a non-sequitur. I don't believe that's true. The industry people I know who worked at the time blamed cheap music and video tapes. It isn't so much the woke (although they're a factor) but changing media consumption habits aided by the availability of new formats.
Did you expect them to say "we're fucking things up"?
"Executives in the 80s were woke idiots" is a silly line that doesn't apply here sorry friend. It's like how the internet cut newpaper print circulation in half, the VCR and walkman did that for pulp novels. Technological change can happen and remove the foundations from your industry.
Sometimes the market can change wildly and randomly underneath you, and will destroy everything you've built. Nassim Taleb calls this a 'Black Swan' event.