• redtea
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    5 months ago

    What about under socialism? There was a time when you wouldn’t really bump into ‘strangers’ because you’d roughly know everyone in your area. From the market, the village, etc. Do you happen to live somewhere that most of the people you see are people you’ll never see again?

    Edit: it starts with a nod or a smile, maybe a shared grimmace because you’ve been caught in the rain or an aggressive driver stopped one of you crossing the road, then a hello, then a how’s your day, etc, but I can’t walk the dog without stopping to have a quick conversation or two with people who were once completely strangers and now are still strangers but friendly ones. This kind of thing just seems so natural. I don’t think either of us are ‘interrupting’ each other’s days.

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      I do think it’s because, under capitalism, every moment of free time is rare and precious. It feels like I’m stealing what little slice of freedom they have if I talk at them, or I’m disrupting whatever schedule they have created to squeeze time for themselves.

      And really, I’m just projecting my own feelings, and I know that’s irrational but it doesn’t stop me from doing it lol