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>> No.12311774 [View]
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12311774

Social media has allowed for a larger insight on foreign cultures that diminished the need for a strong identity. No one really identifies with a set of strong ideologies anymore, save for the 2 most predominant subcultures of the late 2010s, the Alt-Right and the Far Left.

When we look back on this time period, we'll likely remember the young white men who supported Trump in red MAGA hats with a strong distaste for immigrants, and the minorities who opposed them using the internet and social media as their strongest assets. Subcultures are remembered for opposing whatever central culture's prevalent at the time, just as how the hippies opposed the war, punk opposed disco, and scene kids opposed whatever it was they were opposing. Aside from left/right-wing politics, there's not much else to respond to.

The American 2010s will likely be remembered for rap (trap, drill, mainstream, underground/soundcloud) and the subsequent downfall of other genres, the influence of black Americans over the rest of America, the overwhelming presence of social media in real life, and the sharp contrast in beliefs between Liberals and Conservatives. Everything else will be obscured over time.

>>12309159
>The world right now is also so pluralistic that there is nothing specific to react to.

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