>>3975Think that's just a slip in wording. I think he means the degree of envy and inequality, thus the motive for overthrowing people, was high in countries making a big jump from farmland to the modern world.
I focused on the environment because the people have not changed but the environment (social readiness for specific attitudes, relation of people to technology) has, so certain behaviors must be rewarded.
Example: BAP says kids who are unaware fail to get through school. If you realize it is fake and gay despite being capable, you get selected out of the environment and work in a supermarket reading conspiracies on the internet like QAnon because nobody around you has actual structure.
Therefore it selects for those who are academic grinders (or social ones if they don't aspire to STEM which means copying whatever those above you say) and in the right culture/feeder schools or those who do well but are unaware of its nature.
A society where we mainly meet strangers as opposed to small communities is one where deception and appearances is more valuable. Environments with a few large companies leads to more dependence and desperate people compared to a society of middle and small companies.
You likely don't get much attention for being an activist who is Black and! Trans today, but ten years ago the environment would be ripe for this. The environment, I feel, is ready for a group of competent young men who can pull themselves together and create a cultural movement rather than more 'activists' for simply how exhausting and how destructive they are.
There was an older man running companies I talked to a while back, and one of the examples of value creation he gave me was taking a book everyone needed for their industry and making it ten times as expensive. I don't think he understood that good neighborhoods used to be everywhere, and that in a high trust society more things cost less, not infinitely more. There was a class of looters in this country decades ago and they trained generations to have short-term values, and I'm afraid there's not much more value people can extract from the barebones supermarkets and places that dot the country today. Walmart for the masses, Whole Foods for the privileged. The high end is still there, if you can make it somehow, but it appears to those who are there that such benefits are commonplace due to their preordained circles.