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102 points crescit_eundo | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.289s | source
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aredox ◴[] No.42741439[source]
>In the 1860s, Charles Baudelaire bemoaned what we might now call doomscrolling: [...] The poet’s revulsion was widely shared in 19th-century France. Amid rapid increases in circulation, newspapers were depicted as a virus or narcotic responsible for collective neurosis, overexcitement and lowered productivity.

On one hand, one could think "oh, the current social network bashing is just the same doom and gloom reaction to more communication, it will pass".

On the other hand, if you know well the period, the newspapers of the time - which were closer to the tabloids of today, but worse - did a lot to stir hatred of foreigners, of Jews, of Poor, and contributed massively in causing wars, colonialism and pogroms.

Emile Zola published "J'accuse !" in a newspaper, but it was newspapers who stirred rabid antisemitism everywhere.

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dbtc ◴[] No.42741577[source]
They had opium, we have fentanyl.

It's not all bad but it's more potent now by far.

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1. inciampati ◴[] No.42742282[source]
Poetry with a heavy dose of truth.