#dystopian

wilwheaton
kenyatta

The 17-year-old slammed her door and cranked the air conditioning as high as it would go, hoping that a final blast of cold air might make the 95-degree day more bearable. She then headed outside to the motel’s overgrown courtyard, a route that took her past piles of maggot-infested food that had been handed out by do-gooders and tossed aside by the motel’s residents. Several dozen of them were gathered by a swimming pool full of fetid brown water, trying to figure out their next move.

The motel’s owner had abandoned the property to its residents back in December, and now the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic was turning an already desperate strip of America — just down the road from Disney World — into something ever more dystopian. The motel’s residents needed to pay the power company $1,500.

[…]

The aging motels along Florida’s Highway 192 have long been barometers of a fragile economy. In good times they drew budget-conscious tourists from China, South America and elsewhere, whose dollars helped to pay the salaries of legions of low-wage service workers; the people who made one of the world’s largest tourism destinations — “the most magical place on earth” — run.

In tough times, the motels degenerated into shelters of last resort in a city where low-income housing shortages were among the most severe in the nation and the social safety net was collapsing. Now they were fast becoming places where it was possible to glimpse what a complete social and economic collapse might look like in America.


christdystopianfloridaorlandoeconomic collapse
pikeisaman
quoms

Local news stations across the U.S. aired a segment produced and scripted by Amazon which touts the company's role in delivering essential groceries and cleaning products during the COVID-19 pandemic, and its ability to do so while "keeping its employees safe and healthy."

The segment, which was aired by at least 11 local TV stations, and which was introduced with a script written by Amazon and recited verbatim by news anchors, presents a fawning picture of Amazon, which has struggled to deliver essential items during the pandemic, support the sellers that rely on its platform, and provide its workers with the necessary protective equipment. Each anchor introduces the script then throws to an Amazon-produced look "inside" an Amazon fulfillment center, which is narrated by Amazon spokesperson Todd Walker: [...]

Each station introduced Walker as though he were one of their own reporters. He is, in fact, a "PR manager" at Amazon, according to his LinkedIn page. Walker used to be a broadcast journalist, according to his personal website and a sizzle reel he produced for his site.

amazoncovid19dystopianpropagandajust buy your own happy segments on air
droidmom
sapphichat

why is this being reported like it’s a good thing? and it’s not just women who are at risk, I’m sure this would cause hell for illegal immigrants and people who are running from abusers

rusty-queer-dyke

What would happen is: murder, sexual assault, home invasion, burglary, stalking, abuse, doxxing, kidnapping

And this goes for everyone, especially Poc, queer folks, disabled folks, immigrants and women.

(I most likely even forgot some.)

In short: hell would break loose. Sounds like a fucking black mirror episode.

gardenofroseandthorn

PALANTIR?

‘Cartoon villain’ indeed, what the fuck.

spockvarietyhour

It’s increasingly being used by local law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and Canada, scraping social medial profiles for photos to match up against. The above NYT article is well worth the read.

if you've reached your free of articles disable java on the page and reloadprivacydystopianClearview AItechnologypattern recognitionjust makes you check your privacy settingsbut that's closing the barn door after the horses have already left