At least half of men don’t wash their hands before leaving a public restroom. Literally everything is covered in dick stuff. Source: 30+ years of using public restrooms as a male.

  • Hegar@fedia.io
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    2 days ago

    Neuroscience shows that rulers will always become evil.

    Getting more power actually changes your brain, suppressing your ability to use empathy. The very powerful will always struggle to remember that others are human and don’t want to be hurt.

    Humane behavior and hierarchy are mutually exclusive. Heirarchical organization encourages humans to hurt each other.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      I think part of it is that when good people gain power they realize that they have also taken on responsibility. And when you are shouldering a lot of responsibility, and the people around you are not, it’s easy to see them as childish or selfish, or not thinking things through thoroughly (because let’s face it: they’re not).

      Plus as a responsible party you have to be responsible for everyone and this can mean limiting your beholden-ness to any one party. That can look like distancing or lack of empathy for that person. “Oh now that you have power you’re too big for me, huh?” Pretty much yes, actually.

      If you’ve ever been in charge of something you know what I’m saying. And when I see people blindly bitching about people in power I know they’ve never been responsible for anything bigger than a shopping cart.

      • Hegar@fedia.io
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        9 hours ago

        It’s not a question of “look[ing] like distancing or lack of empathy”, or just “bitching about people in power”.

        Scientific studies that look at your brain itself - not your behavior - show that as people get more power the brain’s empathy centers become suppressed and you are chemically less capable of being a good person.

    • eightpix@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The data is skewed. All of the functioning systems we use reward concentrations of power.

      Thereby, systems of rule must distribute power and contest the concentration of power. It literally takes a village to save us from ourselves.

      David Graeber and David Wengrow introduced me to historical examples of non-hierarchical societies in The Dawn of Everything.

      • Hegar@fedia.io
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        1 day ago

        The fact that power results in antisocial behavior has been understood for millenia.

        Lots of societies have had cultural infrastructure of equality that attempts to mitigate this weakness in our biology and prevent harmful levels of power accumulation. The basque village layouts that Davids Graeber & Wengrove talk about, or the practise of ‘insulting the meat’ of successful hunters.

        • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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          16 hours ago

          Which is why I feel that for humanity to succeed we will eventually need an entirely new form of societal governance to replace capitalism & communism, just as those systems replaced feudalism and tribalism. Something like technoism where decisions are made and enacted by machines, incapable of self motivation; or geneticism where leaders’ selfish impulses are either bred or edited out of them. We are still many, many years off from technology being able to accomplish this, but the only way to overcome the human factor is to… well… remove the human factor.