allstajacket
WKR
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2022
- Location
- Southest Michigan
I figured this was the place to post this as it’s very random but a thought that came to me..
The internet has broken the boundaries between the classes.
What the hell am I talking about? I’ll use Rokslide and it’s users as an example.
Well, before the internet, people that hunted with Mossberg, Remington, and Savage rifles, usually interacted with and “hung out” with people who did the same. They lived in the same area, worked together, and likely made the same ballpark income. Certain exceptions of course, but bear with me here.
If you were in this class, let’s call it lower or middle-class, the things you “wanted” and sought after were the things your friends or acquaintances had or used. The people driving Cadillac or fancy European vehicles likely didn’t hang out with the guys driving Dodge, Chevy, or Ford trucks. Again, always certain exceptions, and maybe you saw that shiny new luxury shotgun at a local store, but nobody you knew had one and you understood it was a fairy tale.
Insert the internet. Now, if you took an income poll on Rokslide for example, I bet there are people who make under 40k a year on here, and likely people who make over 500k a year. And these two groups of people share thoughts, pictures, and stories every single day.
Now, the Mossberg Rifle and basic Leupold user is being told the only way to be successful is to follow Rokslide drop tests for their optic and they need to save up and shell out $1,000 or more for their optic, plus at minimum they need to have a tikka! Or even put it on a Credit Card. (I’m not knocking this opinion, just using it for context) 30 years ago their entire hunting gear cabinet may have been worth $350, and they were likely very successful.
Now take the Rokslide example and apply it to every single thing ever. Cars, trucks, watches, knives, houses, jobs, whatever. There’s a forum or subreddit for everything.
…and people genuinely “him” and “haw” about why anxiety and depression is as high as it is.
I’ve fallen victim to this myself of course in the past, and I wonder how it may be affecting people who aren’t even as fortunate as myself.
I think this has benefits also, as co-mingling between “classes” likely has lifted up a lot of people too. Discussing things like how people got successful, and tricks and tips they learned along the way would definitely help someone find their way out of the lower class.
I don’t think there’s any way to fix the negatives of it, this is just an interesting thought that popped into my head this evening.
Anyone else here fall victim to this? Is this basically FOMO?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
The internet has broken the boundaries between the classes.
What the hell am I talking about? I’ll use Rokslide and it’s users as an example.
Well, before the internet, people that hunted with Mossberg, Remington, and Savage rifles, usually interacted with and “hung out” with people who did the same. They lived in the same area, worked together, and likely made the same ballpark income. Certain exceptions of course, but bear with me here.
If you were in this class, let’s call it lower or middle-class, the things you “wanted” and sought after were the things your friends or acquaintances had or used. The people driving Cadillac or fancy European vehicles likely didn’t hang out with the guys driving Dodge, Chevy, or Ford trucks. Again, always certain exceptions, and maybe you saw that shiny new luxury shotgun at a local store, but nobody you knew had one and you understood it was a fairy tale.
Insert the internet. Now, if you took an income poll on Rokslide for example, I bet there are people who make under 40k a year on here, and likely people who make over 500k a year. And these two groups of people share thoughts, pictures, and stories every single day.
Now, the Mossberg Rifle and basic Leupold user is being told the only way to be successful is to follow Rokslide drop tests for their optic and they need to save up and shell out $1,000 or more for their optic, plus at minimum they need to have a tikka! Or even put it on a Credit Card. (I’m not knocking this opinion, just using it for context) 30 years ago their entire hunting gear cabinet may have been worth $350, and they were likely very successful.
Now take the Rokslide example and apply it to every single thing ever. Cars, trucks, watches, knives, houses, jobs, whatever. There’s a forum or subreddit for everything.
…and people genuinely “him” and “haw” about why anxiety and depression is as high as it is.
I’ve fallen victim to this myself of course in the past, and I wonder how it may be affecting people who aren’t even as fortunate as myself.
I think this has benefits also, as co-mingling between “classes” likely has lifted up a lot of people too. Discussing things like how people got successful, and tricks and tips they learned along the way would definitely help someone find their way out of the lower class.
I don’t think there’s any way to fix the negatives of it, this is just an interesting thought that popped into my head this evening.
Anyone else here fall victim to this? Is this basically FOMO?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk