this post was submitted on 20 Aug 2025
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bloomer

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"I've been to the future, we won."

This quote on a t-shirt was brought up in this podcast episode and it made me tear up in the bus. A pretty powerful reaction. The quest in this episode is Rob Hobkins who has written a book called How to Fall in Love with the Future. which is essentially a book that invites us to travel to future worlds we would actually want to live in.

The podcast episode is sort of lib and idealist, but imo it reaches something very important. It for example goes over possible future soundscapes and places like carless cities but the important part is the whole idea of why we should spend time imagining better futures. It made me think about how Marx points out that humans make things first in their mind and how this also applies to the futures we build. We imagine them first.

And if we can only build things that we can imagine and can only imagine doom and despair, then only those get cultivated.

I feel like this might sort of explain the China bloomer/doomer mentalities we now see or the hard crackdown on the solidarity that tried to spring up at the start of covid (it did show some people a possible better world). The machines of conservativity like LLMs also only serve to destroy our ability to dream better futures imo.

So I thought it would be lovely to hear others stories of the futures they imagine. I'll add my own once I've really thought about it. I'd suggest listening to the podcast episode as a primer if your cupboard of better futures is all empty.

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[–] PKMKII@hexbear.net 13 points 9 months ago (1 children)

The suburbs are gone, transformed into either farmland or back to nature. Most people live in dense clusters around rail stations, of which there is a robust network, seamless mixes of high speed rail, light rail, and metro/subway systems. The highways are a tiny fraction of what they were, and mostly exist for moving resources that the rail network can’t easily move; personal transit is highly restricted on them. The station towns are built to be walkable, personal vehicles are small and not used for daily life. But because of their density, their denizens can easily access the green space on the edges of the towns. The kids can play on the streets because there simply aren’t many cars for them to worry about.

There’s a real sense of community, not the vision of “community” reactionaries use to gussy up their hatred. We work fewer hours and spend way less time commuting so we have more time to spend on enrichment, in community groups, with our families. That extra time and the restructured socialist political economy means we have a lot more inputs into how our day to day lives go, not just political theater giving us the empty calories version of engagement.

[–] StillNoLeftLeft@hexbear.net 4 points 9 months ago

Love this. Thank you. heart-sickle