>>82759339
>This made people more unique than they realised but also more secluded than ever, as they now had nobody to share their "uniqueness" with, with certain exceptions of course.
This is true. People online now are very specific.
>but they won't just give up their profits for this, so they're trying all sorts of ways to cirmcumvent it, like immigration, outsourcing and AI, all of which have more drawbacks than not, which they'll realise in due time.
The future is pitch black due to those 3.
>Of course this isn't as prevailent yet, since the majority of the population predates such social media, but it is what we're converging into.
We're moving towards a real dystopia and it's actually accelerating.
>I'd rather say the modern metropolis went the way of the internet, as social media shaped peoples knowledge of the world, they grew distant and unrelateable to each other.
This is partially true.