It's just bitter to think about how the economy hadn't been completely destroyed by then, the racial makeup of the nation was still 90% white, etc.
The cracks were showing sure. But we weren't anywhere near as bad as now. It's troublesome that I know for a fact that I cannot offer my children a better world than I had myself, because the generation before me sold us all out.
The 90s were the beginning of the colorblind psyop against whites. We thought everyone was leaving their in-group biases behind, but then we learned that it was just whites being disarmed ahead of our imminent racial/ethnic free-for-all.
I do remember that yeah. I don't like to think about the nineties to be honest because it was so much better that it's almost farcical.
Better depends on your POV, I guess. The 1990s was my 20s, and I was paying attention back then. Ruby Ridge was my radicalizing moment.
Same, and I was paying attention then too.
It's just bitter to think about how the economy hadn't been completely destroyed by then, the racial makeup of the nation was still 90% white, etc.
The cracks were showing sure. But we weren't anywhere near as bad as now. It's troublesome that I know for a fact that I cannot offer my children a better world than I had myself, because the generation before me sold us all out.
For me it's not that I thought it would last forever. It was that I assumed that was the default state of things.
The 90s were the beginning of the colorblind psyop against whites. We thought everyone was leaving their in-group biases behind, but then we learned that it was just whites being disarmed ahead of our imminent racial/ethnic free-for-all.
sighs in nostalgia