Decline of Functioning Society


I have no idea what these kids do or why I need them pushing paper and building nothing. I need a running automobile, petroleum products (gas), roads, bridges, running water, electricity, food, medical care, and well constructed buildings with roofs that don't leak. Anything beyond that is a luxury item/service. Maybe next time when you go to college major in something that people actually need and always have to have regardless of whether or not we're in a recession. Being an auto mechanic is recession proof.

What exactly is a (((banking analyst)))? What is an "intern" at a FAANG company? What is a Product Manager? And who would pay to go to an Ivy League college in the 21st Century? The quality of an Ivy League Education tanked in the 1990's and now they are just overpriced DEI degree mills.

These kids are studying and majoring in the wrong things in an attempt to avoid having to get their hands dirty (i.e. the trades) and that's on them.

Gen Z is going for money and not practicality assuming that the economy will always employee people who build nothing of real three-dimensional value. I don't need banks and someone to manage them, I need food and someone to grow it.
 
Upwards of 80 to 90% of those in colleges have no business being there.

A friend's kid was one of the best students in HS, instead of going to Hahvahd like the other bright people, he taught himself CNC programming without going to any trade schools, and was running circles around lower IQ dudes with 30 or 40 years of experience, who couldn't come to terms with the fact, or that his hourly rate quickly exceeded theirs.

That was more than 15 years ago. Had it been a union shop, he would have been the first to be let go in case of layoffs, his skills and contributions be damned, seniority matters more, so he'd been staying away from such places.
 
I'm going to buck the trend here and just say life was better in quality as you go back into the past. Some ups and downs, of course, but increasing in quality the further you go back.
I can appreciate this view, I think it's true in many cases. I still prefer not having to farm or hunt.

After Eden, there always were some pockets of normalcy and tranquility, surrounded by wars, chaos and disorder. I tend to entertain the thought that in aggregate there never have been any good old days. People had to huddle together in settlements or cities for protection, bad mutual intentions were assumed between groups, humanity had gotten so bad, God had to send down the flood.
Overview of Neolithic Death Pits in Europe

Neolithic death pits, particularly in Europe, provide significant insights into early human violence and burial practices. These mass graves often reveal evidence of organized violence among communities.

Notable Sites

Talheim Death Pit

  • Location: Talheim, Germany
  • Date: Circa 5000 BC
  • Findings: Contained 34 bodies, including 16 children and 18 adults. Evidence suggests organized violence, with many skeletons showing signs of trauma from weapons. The violence likely stemmed from conflicts over resources and the capture of women.

Herxheim

  • Location: Near Landau, Germany
  • Date: 5300-4950 BC
  • Findings: Over 1,000 individuals found, with evidence of ritual cannibalism. The remains were often fragmented, indicating a complex mortuary practice rather than a simple burial.

Schletz

  • Location: Near Vienna, Austria
  • Date: Approximately 7,500 years ago
  • Findings: Estimated to contain up to 300 individuals, this site shows evidence of genocide among LBK tribes, similar to Talheim.

Halberstadt

  • Location: Germany
  • Date: Discovered in 2013
  • Findings: Nine bodies, primarily young adult males, showed signs of blunt force trauma, suggesting a mass execution rather than a chaotic battle.

Reasons for Violence

The violence in these communities is theorized to be driven by:

  • Competition for resources
  • Territorial disputes
  • Capturing women for reproduction
  • Vengeance against rival groups
These findings illustrate that violence was a significant aspect of life in Neolithic Europe, reflecting the social dynamics of early agricultural societies.

Rome was a monstrous city, it had to have slums in Aurelius' time. The nobility lived idyllic lives in villas, owned slaves who could be treated decently or not, it was much worse than when they say we're slaves of the system now.

All this stuff about how science overcame things like sanitation throughout our industrial era is more about solving problems we created in the first place by "said industrialization" than it is something better actually achieved . I could go on a whole tangent about so-called "progress" and "technological achievement" in medicine or agriculture. We are solving problems we've created for ourselves
I think the world had to go through that phase to get to cars, computers, planes, and advanced surgery. There were horrors like the phosphorus jaw, but survival started to depend less and less on luck.
 
Back
Top