After stealing the idea from unnamednewbie, I decided to make a thread about it...
My vote goes to....
Sierra Leone
My vote goes to....
Sierra Leone
Last edited by Inspect@hDeck (2006-10-22 18:20:39)
I'm living just fine here in the states.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
Exactly. Dystopia doesn't mean anarchy, necessarily. The US is supported by a well defined class system, where those on the bottom support those on the top without any hope of ever escaping.JG1567JG wrote:
I'm living just fine here in the states.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
The United States of America is really starting to show this aspect of a dystopia. The corp world in the US have a lot of effect on our government. Large companies, "support" people in the government that assist their company. Also, the average person is losing some of their rights because of the companies, look at the Net Neutrality proposal, phone companies want to limit the average person by persuading the leaders of the US to by "supporting" said leaders.A totally or near-totally socially privatized world without a democratic republican state or with a state that only serves the business sector - business and private contractors own and control all of society and social organization.
German is a good example of this when it was under Nazi control. Hitler made the people think that their government was better because it was based on the Aryan race. Also, USSR (most communist states) could also fall into this description. The USSR tried to say that communism was working, and everyone was doing better then before the communist took over. Doctor Zhivago is a good movie that shows this aspect. To summarize the movie in a few sentences, Doctor Zhivago was a wealth man before the revolution, but after the revolution he has to tear down a fence on the street just to say warm all the while the communist leaders are saying live is better then before.State propaganda programs and educational systems that scare most citizens into worshiping the state and its government, in an attempt to convince them to believe that life under the regime is good and just.
This description reminds me of most third world nations. Most of these nations would be better, and citizens would not lack key essentials, if the government would support new methods to solve their problems. Some of this nations are even getting support to create, adapt, or invite new ways to deal with their issues, but this funding is spent in other places instead of engineering.A lack of the key essentials of life for many citizens, as with food shortages. If the cause of this is clear, it is not natural disaster or crop failure, but deliberate engineering.
The USA again full fills this description. There are stories, countless stories, where people try to get off of Welfare, but they are held back. When they get a job, their welfare support is reduced or cut off. They then leave their job, because it is more profitable to stay on welfare. A lot of people who are on welfare in the US, choose to have more kids as a way to get a raise instead of getting an educations and a good paying job.A bloated welfare state, in which total freedom from responsibility has encouraged an underclass prone to any form of antisocial behavior, and productive contributors to society, particularly those trying to escape the underclass, are burdened with taxes punitive in effect, if not intent.
USSR, DPRK, Rome, USA and a lot more fall into this description. In Rome, the Cesar was considered a god, USSR put Lenin and Stalin's body on display, in the US people worship the president (Bill Clinton is a good example of this). Egypt's pharaohs are another example of this type of dystopia.A state figurehead that people worship fanatically through a vast personality cult.
That is a very dangerous point of view when higher classes pay a higher tax percentage.Bubbalo wrote:
Exactly. Dystopia doesn't mean anarchy, necessarily. The US is supported by a well defined class system, where those on the bottom support those on the top without any hope of ever escaping.JG1567JG wrote:
I'm living just fine here in the states.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
*sigh* such ignorance.Bubbalo wrote:
Exactly. Dystopia doesn't mean anarchy, necessarily. The US is supported by a well defined class system, where those on the bottom support those on the top without any hope of ever escaping.JG1567JG wrote:
I'm living just fine here in the states.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
I was waiting for some fucktard to say that.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
I don't mean to pick words, but:Bubbalo wrote:
Exactly. Dystopia doesn't mean anarchy, necessarily. The US is supported by a well defined class system, where those on the bottom support those on the top without any hope of ever escaping.JG1567JG wrote:
I'm living just fine here in the states.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2006-10-22 20:13:27)
Phantom, did you do any research or do you know what the definition of a dystopia is? Depending on how you define it, the US is a dystopia, read my former post. In the US, people on welfare are encouraged to stay on welfare, because the system does not assist those who are trying to get off of it.Phantom2828 wrote:
I was waiting for some fucktard to say that.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
The US fits at least two of those. The lower class is oppressed. Remember Katrina, the lower class stated they were depressed, along with a certain race. Most urban areas are overcrowded. It may not be as dense as India or China, but the US has the third largest population behind the fore mentioned nations. The US does have some disease that can not be cured at this time. Cancers, Aids, certain STDs. Depending on where you at, you can live in a squalor neighborhood. The upper class may not see a filthy nation, but what about those people who live in the ghetto. Those who are in the lower class, who live in areas where they do not have grass in their front yard, just dirt, they see those conditions.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I don't mean to pick words, but:
dys‧to‧pi‧a
–noun
a society characterized by human misery, as squalor, oppression, disease, and overcrowding.
A country with suburbs, hospitals, golf courses, "affirmative action," immigrant doctors and Mexican janitors doesn't necessarily fit that bill.
Last edited by dubbs (2006-10-22 20:25:00)
lolMECtallica wrote:
Venezuela
Granted, but all countries have some level of dystopic living. However, I just can't view American society as a whole to be a dystopia. It wouldn't be fair to other countries who are characterized by misery.dubbs wrote:
yada yada yada yadaPhantom2828 wrote:
I was waiting for some fucktard to say that.Inspect@hDeck wrote:
United States
What? I don't get it.rob777 wrote:
oooo so im an unnamed newb now huh well **** u get your own ideas asshole, not only do you get ideas of my threads but then u call me a unnamed noob?!?
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2006-10-22 20:20:44)
According to what dictionary?unnamednewbie13 wrote:
dys‧to‧pi‧a
–noun
a society characterized by human misery, as squalor, oppression, disease, and overcrowding.
And are the golf courses accessible by all?unnamednewbie13 wrote:
A country with suburbs, hospitals, golf courses, "affirmative action," immigrant doctors and Mexican janitors doesn't necessarily fit that bill.
Let me emphasize that I stated, it depends on how you define dystopia. My first post list different ways to define a dystopia, and it list examples of how nations fall into these examples. I even put historical nations into the examples.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Granted, but all countries have some level of dystopia living. However, I just can't view American society as a whole to be a dystopia. It wouldn't be fair to other countries who are characterized by misery.dubbs wrote:
yada yada yada yadaPhantom2828 wrote:
I was waiting for some fucktard to say that.
In America a lot of people live fearful lives, they may not be dehumanized, but they are fearful. They are fearful of terrorist. They are fearful of the stock market dropping like it did in the 30's. They are fearful of war. The list can go on.m-w.com wrote:
1 : an imaginary place where people lead dehumanized and often fearful lives