A short video that explains *a lot* about the modern world & conservatism. “They also want to feel normal. They want to walk around and see that most other people have made the same choice they made.” And that last line!
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A short video that explains *a lot* about the modern world & conservatism. “They also want to feel normal. They want to walk around and see that most other people have made the same choice they made.” And that last line!
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This video is also available on TikTok.
And a transcript:
The key to understanding the world today is in this comic right here portrays a brave older marine in a coffee shop where the barista says, "Can I interest you in a soy latte?" He says, "No, just coffee black." "Caramel macchiato?" "Just coffee black." This scenario has never occurred once anywhere in the history of the world. And if you say, "Well, yeah, but it's just a joke." I'm saying the thing that it's exaggerating has never occurred.
But the perception of the world that caused the artist to create this and motivated people to share this millions of times is incredibly important because in reality no one ever took his black coffee from him. Every shop like this has black coffee. All that happened is the range of options for other people expanded and he perceived that as persecution as his choice having been taken away.
This is not political. This is a human nature thing. Most people are not satisfied to simply have the option to live their life the way they want. They also want to feel normal. They want to walk around and see that most other people have made the same choice they made. And if over time they see that their own personal preference has become less popular and even worse is now seen as being basic or unsophisticated, they will perceive the mere existence of those other options as a criticism of them, even if they've never heard anybody voice that criticism.
This is why it's so important for some people to imagine the archetype of the angry vegan. Even though one, I have never run into one of those people in real life, not even once. and two, meat statistically is more popular now than it has ever been in the history of the world. There is basic psychological comfort in knowing that you're conforming to what the world wants and in the reassurance that that world is not going to change.
And this is why it doesn't help to simply tell people you can keep doing the thing you were doing. No one's stopping you from drinking your coffee because it's not about the coffee. It's the fear that if everybody else stops drinking coffee the way I drink it, then I will become an outcast. And that is scary to someone who suddenly is remembering how they have always treated outcasts.
One is reminded of the phrase: "When you're accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression."
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