Unsettling and drastic changes since the late 19th century
I need to know the truth. Here is the thing. I think there is a disease and modern society has been profoundly sick ever since the late 19th/early 20th century until the present. These centuries have been subject of profound and drastic change if I may say so. 100+ years ago it would have been unthinkable to let women vote, to let people of different races intermingle in a gentia cloaca, to let mentally ill people cut off their sexual organs and corrupt their flesh, to praise the jews who have historically been segregated, yet now even the most conservative of our "leaders" wouldn't think of sending africans back to their continent, let alone prevent women from taking positions of power or withdrawing aid to jewish causes. This troubles me deeply as it coincides with some other phenomenons which may or may not be related. For example men nowadays appear to have lost their masculinity. They are lacking and pale in comparison to their forefathers. Body hair has become ever more scarce in our bodies. Our voices are not as deep as they ought to be (Probably because of endocrine disruptors, even gim-maxxing does not seem to make up for the afformentioned losses). At the same time people seem to have lost agency (They'll endlessly scroll or browse the internet like rats under operant conditioning). Sure people will rant on the internet like I and many of you probably do, but taking action is practically foreign to most of us. So to get to the point this is what I am asking: What are the causes of these drastic changes? Is it a conscious effort with interests and agendas in mind? Are technologies beyond our understanding being used on us? How do I protect myself from emasculation, endoctrination/mind-control and the lure of digital devices which turn most people into undisciplined zombies (I mean just look at the amount of apps and meds aimed at mental health and self-improvement. There is clearly a problem with people, isn't there?). P.S: Just look at the changes in art.