• Chaos0f7ife@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Probably about two or three years before I was born. I was a 90s baby and lived through one of the best decades in human history in terms of childhood entertainment. Nick Toons, Razor scooters, sock’em Boppers, and Pokemon just to name a few. Also cartoons themselves were the best that television had to offer. Hey Arnold, Rugrats, and Dragon Ball Z, just to name a few. If you were a kid in the 90s, you were in your PJs, eating cereal and watching Saturday Morning Cartoons, while your Holographic Charizard sat in your sock drawer so nobody was knew where it was. And your Nintendo 64 with the Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time was still warm because you threw a tantrum when you couldn’t beat the Water Temple. After Cartoons, you got your clothes on and went outside to play baseball with the boys while ignoring the girls because they have cooties and you don’t want to contract cooties, while secretly having a crush on one of them.

    At the end of the day, your parents called you in for dinner because it was getting dark out and, with mud and grass stains littering your shirt, you laugh with all your friends, knowing that, after a dinner of spaghetti and meatballs, you where going back to your room to play on your N64 again untill 2 in the morning when your parents are finally fed up with the noise and tell you to go to bed.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
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      10 days ago

      Exactly what I came here to say. Well, I would specify sex rather than gender. I wouldn’t want to be born female at any point in history.

      • Case@lemmynsfw.com
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        10 days ago

        Hoo, I’d say loaded statement, but… well, you’re factually correct. Just polarizing.

        That being said, I appreciate my mom for a lot of things, but the major one is my views on feminism.

        I’m not some pro-female only person. First wave feminism, equality.

        My wife is a strong woman who doesn’t need me, fuck, she’s the breadwinner and has been for most of the relationship.

        She kicks ass, takes names, and somehow still has the energy to pick up the house a bit. I was weaker in that last part in the beginning, but I’ve made strides. Definitely a learned experience, but a very valid one.

        I’ve dated the ultra girly-girl type. Its isn’t for me. I want a partner who is fine standing on their own, and chooses companionship.

        Shit, she has worked in hospitals and had grown men attack her (health care worker violence is shockingly common, and I’ve experienced it as a man who worked at a hospital in a non-clinical capacity) She takes no shit. She’s also smart as a whip.

        A dumb bimbo is easier to date, and I would guess be married to, but ultimately unfulfilling. Have a thought. Defend your thought. Please. If a man can’t deal with that, they aren’t much of a man.

        • Coriza@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          That is a weird comment. Maybe I am just dumb but I read it all and I have no idea what you are trying to say apart some type of women is ok and other not so much?

          Also what is polarizing in what Drusas said?

          • Case@lemmynsfw.com
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            10 days ago

            Well, factually, throughout history, women have had a terrible deal.

            Living in red states my whole life, women having opinions, much less rights, is polarizing.

            I don’t agree, but man… women voting is STILL an issue in some rural areas. Thus, polarizing. Not so much with the common consensus, but with some.

      • cabbage@piefed.social
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        10 days ago

        I guess at least there are those specific moments in history when, if you were to be born in a specific country, being a woman at least significantly increases your life expectancy.

        If I knew what shit was about to go down and I had to be born in, say, Soviet Russia in 1925, I would probably have opted to be a woman. Not because it seems so darn great, but because chances of at least making it to age 30 would significantly improve.

        Then again, not a point in history I would particularly favour.

  • Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 days ago

    I really liked being a kid and teenager through the 80s and 90s, I don’t think I’d change that. But I would certainly accept the opportunity to do it again!

    Maybe this time in Japan, instead of the US. Though the US would be fine too.

  • Tiptopit@feddit.org
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    10 days ago

    Guess the late 50s or sometime in the 60s. Guess this would be a very good compromise for the quality of life, listening to good music and a good perspective for life in general.

  • Toes♀@ani.social
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    10 days ago

    Can I choose the future? Ideally some sort of utopia like the federation in startrek?

    History hasn’t been kind. I would probably need to cosplay a business tycoon or something to survive earlier.

    If I go too far back it’ll probably be nice. But I’d probably die due to an infection brought on by my autoimmune issues.

    • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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      10 days ago

      I think you should have to pick a year and hope for the best. otherwise it’s no different then choosing some fantasy past like ‘medieval times, but non violent and progressive, and no plagues.’

      • Toes♀@ani.social
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        10 days ago

        You make a wonderful point.

        I’d pick 1999, Akihabara. So I can experience early anime culture at the source.

  • 🐋 Color 🍁 ♀@lemm.ee
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    10 days ago

    Victoria, Australia, 1990s. I say Victoria because it’s not as hot as most other areas of Australia and I don’t do well with heat.

  • nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 days ago

    Im always stuck on the point that we never consented to existance, can I simply decline to be born in this hypothetical because I think thats my pick.

  • CaptPretentious@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Sometime in the future, assuming the human race even lasts long enough.

    Basically when a world like Star Trek TNG exists.

    All my stupid health problems could be fixed.

    To be able to travel space would be great, to lay on the moon and watch the Earth. Go admire Jupiter (from a distance).

    Work, not because I have to, but because I enjoy the challenge and want to better myself and humanity.

    I know for the show they couldn’t really go all out, but I think being a holodeck author would be fun as a side hobby. Could be in a fun working out with whomever inspired you. Hands on learning, anything. Visit places you can’t (like surface of Venus). But also think of like what a video game would be like because you wouldn’t need a controller or VR headset you’re just there. So you could be a Space Marine. Or be Spider-Man! We’ve done reading books, we’ve done watching books, we’ve even done audiobooks… But there you could participate. Or maybe just be there and watch it unfold.

  • LucasWaffyWaf@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I’d have loved it if I could have been there with the Elephant 6 crew in Athens GA during the 90s. The music those folks produced is some of my favorite, and it’s totally the music I’m trying to make myself.

    • mommykink@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Any link to your music? I love the E6 collective. Most people just know NMH but the whole lot of them were just amazing

      • LucasWaffyWaf@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Nothing published just yet! I saw the E6 documentary this summer and it lit a spark in me and my mates. My biggest influence is from the Olivias, and particularly I take more after Will Hart’s style (with my best mate being the Bill Doss of our group.) I’m actually gonna try doing some field recordings to try a Green Typewriters-esque musique concrete piece.

  • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I choose to use my powers for evil. I will pop into existence in 2000 BC, 50 yards from the future Apollo 11 landing site. Neil Armstrong is going to make one small step for a man. Then he is going to shit in his space diaper when he finds a 4000 year old dessicated infant corpse just sitting there, completely inexplicably, exposed on the lunar surface.

  • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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    10 days ago

    Chicago such that I turned 17 in 1973 when the draft was formally stopped… So 1956 then. Then ideally get an associates for next to nothing and transfer to urbana in the now the later half of the 70’s which is a perfect time to get a computer science degree.

  • hemko@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 days ago

    Eh, maybe just a decade earlier so that I would have had a chance to see Pantera play live. Otherwise meh

    • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 days ago

      The advent of computer technology is kind of hard to pass up but there were other things in history that could have been just as interesting on a different level. It might have been cool to be an explorer when the americas were discovered. Ok life would have been pretty miserable but the vast unknown would have been cool. Still would be hard to give up modern medicine.

  • kyub@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 days ago

    1-2 decades earlier maybe (meaning: 60s or 70s). Location… I don’t know. Maybe Norway, I’ve never heard anything bad about Norway. Might just be random selection bias though.

    • cabbage@piefed.social
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      10 days ago

      Norway only discovered oil worth extracting December 23 1969. So you would not have grown up in a particularly rich country, but you would see the country gain incredible wealth as you grew older.

      If you were born in the early 60s and bought a house in the early 80s, you’d be pretty fucked when the global economy crashed. But I guess that goes for everywhere. The 70s would probably be a better bet in that sense.

      You’d probably not live in a city, but in some village in the middle of nowhere. So the wealth of the country would mostly be noticable through the social security web built around you, and the fact that your random village suddenly got a tunnel to it. If you’re a farmer you’d receive subsidies so it would be somewhat possible to keep going, even as your peers in continental Europe would run out of business one by one.

      You’d probably secretly wish you would also go out of business so you could retire to something less taxing.

      You would spend your childhood amazed by America, and jealous of the youth revolution going on there. You’d watch American movies and grow up idolizing American and British war heroes. You would think your stupid valley was the most boring place on earth.

      In your old age, you would thank your lucky star you’re not in America. Maybe you’d get a house in Spain for the cold winters. Your family would think less of you for it, but they wouldn’t be vocal about it.