
Delayed Dystopia

Dystopian thrillers seem to be all the rage these days. Whether it is on TV, in the movies, or in books, it seems like there is no shortage of stories set in some kind of future where things are pretty horrible. More often than not in many of these scenarios, there is one defining moment that leads up to the aforementioned dystopia. Nuclear war, a pandemic, zombie uprising, I think we have heard just about every viable situation for the world being thrown into chaos.
Then something happened the other day and it got me thinking:
"What if dystopia doesn't happen all at once, but slowly over time so we don't even realize it is happening?
You're going to laugh, but it was actually something really benign that lead me down this path of though. Although, looking at the world today, it probably isn't too hard to find different things that might make you feel like things are going to hell. Like I said though, for me it was something small, probably inconsequential for many of you, but my brain is funny like that.

I think it's important to point out that dystopian doesn't always mean the world is in ruins. According to Google, dystopian fiction:
"portrays imagined, futuristic societies characterized by dehumanization, totalitarian regimes, environmental disaster, or technological control, serving as a cautionary reflection of real-world anxieties."
Which leads me to what triggered all of this. I know a lot of you don't watch the news. That is totally understandable, there isn't a lot of joy out there right now, and given how "spun" the information is, you don't know what you can trust and what you can't. Despite my knowing this, I still have a tendency to watch the news.
I do have a preferred network that I tend to watch, but that isn't really important for this post for reasons I will explain in just a second.

So I was watching the news the other day and I noticed at the bottom of the screen there was this scrolling ticker running across it. Things like that aren't uncommon, we often see them on ESPN and FOX Sports with updated scores, or on most news channels with updated news stories. However, this one was a bit different.
Instead of news stories or sports scores, it was a Kalshi feed that was listing the bets that were currently being made on the outcomes of real world events.
I'm not really familiar with the Kalshi or Polymarket sites. I don't have an account on either of them and the idea of prediction markets in general are kind of foreign to me, but it really struck me as I saw the numbers scrolling across the bottom of the screen.
As I said, it felt like something from the future as I watched it happening, but not the good future, more like The Hunger Games or Running Man. It's interesting that we have found ourselves in a world where betting on outcomes of world events has gained enough attention that it is important enough to scroll across the bottom of both the major news networks now.
I'm not judging you if you have a Kalshi account. I hope it has been working out well for you. Whether Kalshi or some other prediction market is "right or wrong" isn't the point of this post. I have a couple sports betting accounts, so I am definitely not one to judge.
Actually, it's interesting I bring up sports betting, because in case you haven't noticed, they also list the odds when talking about upcoming contests even on ESPN.

Like I said, I'm not judging, it's just interesting how pervasive things like this have become. If you watch the news, maybe you haven't even noticed it, and I think that is what really led me to the opening of this post. What if dystopia doesn't happen all at once, but it's a slow progression that eventually leads to the kind of wasteland we have become familiar with. AI, futures projection, social media, plus any number of other little things that are slowly driving us towards the brink of nothingness...
What do you think? Let's talk about it in the comments! Am I being overly dramatic, channeling my childhood chicken little?
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