Are there still places with vibes anymore? Or did the internet kind of kill it?

I feel like digital spaces have vibes. Nostr has a vibe for sure, but everywhere I go (in America at least) feels flat, steril and homogenous now.

People like to pretend otherwise, romanticizing local charm and it’s fun to do so, but in reality there is no meaningful difference between New York, LA, Chicago, Austin, Miami etc…

The differences feel increasingly superficial. Miami with its neon pink and bad Latin art. New York with its identical minimalist cafes selling identical oat lattes. These aren’t cities anymore, they’re brands. ā€œKeep Austin Weirdā€ feels less like the rallying cry of a bohemian collective and more like a safe corporate brand slogan.

It wasn’t always like this. Cities used to incubate true subcultures that couldn’t thrive anywhere else. Seattle once had grunge music emerging organically from local clubs, distinct in sound and attitude. Detroit was a birthplace for techno and industrial grit that couldn’t have been manufactured. New Orleans had jazz clubs and vibrant local traditions that permeated every street corner authentically. Before the internet collapsed distances, you could sense deep authenticity upon arriving somewhere new. The vibe wasn’t something designed by marketing departments; it was organically woven into the streets, the people, the music, and local myths.

Now, vibes feel engineered and commoditized, reduced to Instagrammable moments and easily replicable aesthetics. I once watched from the balcony of my hotel in Nashville as 200 women waited in line to take the same stupid picture with the same stupid set of angel wings.

Digital spaces, ironically, have become refuges of uniqueness, fostering communities unburdened by geographical homogenization. Platforms like nostr host unique niche communities, from hyper-specific gaming bitcoin cultural milieu to obscure philosophical discussions, that retain genuinely distinctive vibes.

Perhaps we’re now entering a strange inversion, where real-world spaces chase digital popularity, adopting blandness to maximize broad appeal.

In this inversion, digital worlds might become the primary spaces where unique vibes survive, thrive, and multiply—leaving our physical world as little more than a flattened reflection of what used to be.

Nostr is where the vibes are at.

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Homogenization of culture is one of the effects of maintaining an empire. I'd argue an intentional one, as it makes people easier to rule if they aren't ever exposed to new ideas. It happened in Rome, too, albeit through different pathways than in the U.S.

You listed a bunch of cities, that's where the effect of homogenization is strongest. The last bastions of real culture are out in the country, that's where traditions can be maintained independent of an empire's archonic stranglehold. Internet hasn't completely squashed them all out yet, but even those are strongly affected now.

I would say that it’s not that easy. Christianity for example united a huge part of earth.

So it depends on what kind of culture/values one group follows and how honest the ruling class follows those themselves.

It's not just places.

It's the same with movies, music, art, jobs, relationships, food, and everythung else.

When was the last time you are a fruit or vegetable from the supermarket that smelled and tasted like they did when you were a kid?

Sterility, Blandness, and Homogeneity are the new normal.

digitally, only Nostr and blogs (RSS) still have vibes

El Paso is a vibe.

You're describing corporate culture

#Nostr isn't corporate

off mainstream is where the vibes are at. gopher protocol, shared unix machines like SDF, and the Tildeverse, Smaller communities of Pleroma instances in the fediverse, and nostr.

Every authentic vibe that emerges get absorbed in the system and commodified quicker now , thanks to 30% of america having a degree in marketing and the rest being influencers . the sycophant vibe hunters will unearth it and extract any authenticity from it then discard it in no time

I think this is really astute and captures something about the acceleration of culture that happens with the Internet...

William Gibson described the youth culture in Neuromancer as: "Fads swept the youth of the sprawl at the speed of light; entire subcultures could rise overnight, thrive for a dozen weeks, and then vanish utterly."

šŸ’Æ on extracting any ounce of authenticity

even VCs have YouTubey podcasts now.

Absolutely. šŸ’Æ

True. The mainstream web apps has cast a dullness over cities and even small communities alike.

I also believe it’s a side effect of mass migration into Western societies which has also been responsible for this IMO. I very much agree with the sentiment in your post however.

I may have been overwhelmed by bitcoin enthusiasm last year when I was there, but I really feel like Pubkey NY has a serious vibe.

I may be biased, but I think bitcoin places (such as Nostr) will revive the vibe, I really do. It's something about bitcoiners that makes you feel appreciated, welcome and surprisingly equal (not in a socialist kind of way). To think about it, of course they do, it's a fucking cult 🤪

Absolutely spot onšŸ’Æ it’s the reason why ā€œWall Stā€ could only happen in NYC, SV In SF & Motown in Detroit. The education system in part is responsible for the death of a lot of subcultures as it is primarily driven by homogenisation of all individuals by installing the same ā€œmental OSā€, which later evolved to become the woke mind virus. Digital spaces like Nostr attract certain types of people with a somewhat similar worldview but from very diverse backgrounds. The New world reborn.

Go to Bitcoin Alaska this July. Go see nature, whales, glaciers

Perhaps you need to get into the rural areas that having been commercialized, to find vibes

*haven't

To find those vibes, you have to find unique communities. They are harder to see these days because you can't look in a place, you have to form relationships. I think that Nostr could help us find these unique communities that are all around us because it's unburdened by the financialization of everything.

This is a very good note. Very thought provoking, I’ll have to meditate on this idea more.

You need to leave North America. There are vibes everywhere in the physical realm, that will never be replicated digitally. North America is a hellscape of homogeneity driven by cheap consumerism and corporatism.

All the great themes have been used up,and turned into theme parks.

H.H.

I have thought this about music since the advent of streaming etc. When I was a teenager in the 90s, each year in high school had distinct groups based on musical taste. Some kids banded together because of their love of punk, others metal, others techno or experimental electronica. Each group had a distinct outlook on life and a cohesive community spirit based on the values and ideas expounded by the musical genre. For example, the punks and the grunge kids tended to be cynical, nihilistic etc. while those into goth vibes tended to be introverted and arty. One thing all the groups shared was a love of music and the culture surrounding it, and this something I don’t see as prominently in 2025. Now, music is background fodder. It’s an expendable item, not something that inspires community and togetherness. As a big music fan, this saddens me. The internet has resulted in music’s cultural capital being downgraded to the point where it barely has relevance in the majority of young people’s lives. Only a few decades ago, music’s scarcity meant people valued it more as a cultural commodity. Now, any kid can hear any song he wants, and thus music has lost much of its sparkle in the eyes of young people today.

Wanted to zap you. Unfortunately it’s not possible šŸ™

Thanks man. You should be able to zap. My wallet is active

Still not working. You should add your lightning address in your nostr profile.

Is this the right one? coralpug12@primal.net

lnurl1dp68gurn8ghj7urjd9kkzmpwdejhgtewwajkcmpdddhx7amw9akxuatjd3cz7cm0wfskcur4vucnye75kd7

true šŸ¤

Cities neglected by big corporate interests tend to be heavier on the vibes in my experience, or even some smaller towns. The ones that say, fuck the bottom line, we live here, and this place is for us, not you, for every you out there. And it's of course a continuum, but nothing kills the vibes of a place like the existence of giant private equity firms and publicly traded anything.

Arguably at least to some extent this can be felt at times in smaller cities around hubs; I'd argue Brooklyn has more vibes than Manhattan, Cambridge more than Boston, Oakland more than San Francisco, or Eugene more than Portland. And that's not to say these places haven't lost character over time too; just that they're being scrubbed of it slower. Assimilated slower, as the Wall Street Borg removes individuality in its steady march forward.

I hesitate to blame money itself, because money has always been with us. It seems more like the marriage between those driving the money and their organizational systems on the one hand (AGILE...), and DEI, which together, seek to turn people from individuals with unique characteristics into standardized commodities, interchangeable. We're no longer nuggets of gold found in different streambeds and mineshafts, we're melted down, stripped of 'impurities,' and poured into identical weights and stamped with the same image.

I know many see the story of Revelation as a warning for the future, and maybe it's both, bit it bears reminding that 'the Beast 666' (or 616, as it appears in earlier manuscripts), very clearly refers to Nero. One of the things he did, along with slaughtering saints, was debase the money, so that it became less about the metal content, and more just about the mark it bore, as coins no longer had the same reliable weight. The 'mark of the Beast' everyone needed to transact with was these coins, which represented his system of human control, that sought to homogenize society at the time.

Meanwhile, weird comes from Germanic 'wyrd' or Norse 'urđr' meaning 'fate' or 'destiny.' If you ever sit down one day and realize nobody's called you weird in awhile, I'd say it's time to seriously examine your life choices.

Be a force of nature, not a product of a workflow.

Agreed

Summit County, Colorado is still alive. The people there know they have a culture, and rather than defend it from tourists, the simply focus on what they love.

We can find thst lost charm in books. Bukowski is a good start.

NO PLACE IN THE WORLD has the smell of hot garbage in the summer like NYC! No place.

We’re going to learn what the vibe is still like in Bedford soon.

In so far as I encounter any, it is in small towns or barely cities. Usually a cool restaurant, bar, or shop. At best a collection of a few. I avoid the major cities both work & leisure wise.

90% of the places I travel to in the US are indistinguishable. Same 6-10 hotel names, same 15-20 chain restaurants. Very sad.

This phenomenon is analyzed in depth in Mark fishers capitalist realism. Very interesting read.

https://a.co/d/aW9rr0W

Also Naomi Kleins no logo — she very specifically discussed this in relation to cities and their subcultures

you are beginning to wake up.

The city centers of pretty much every European capital is identical by now, save for a few antique landmarks. Same hotels, same shops, same hipster coffeeshops, same fast food bullshit..

I dread the day a crisis pushes a couple of the shop or fastfood chains under and leaves half the continent’s city centers deserted ā˜ ļø

great post

The places that vibe don’t end up on Instagram. They have different websites for that. The kind you can’t access in Indiana

Really well said. I’ve felt this for years. I never get a sense of a distinct culture anywhere. It’s all the same box stores and chain restaurants all with the same fake aesthetic.

I think it’s just a reflection of the corporatization of our world.

My hope is that with the world adopting Bitcoin and people taking back their sovereignty we will also see the resurgence of unique subcultures (in the real world) again, as people won’t have such an allegiance to big corporations.

Neal.fun is a vibe. You mentioned Detroit… I’m even though it’s been hollowed out I think that’s a place to keep an eye on. Artists are taking it over because of the cheap real estate. You can buy an amazing mansion for $400k with vibes galore. But yes I agree with your post… sometimes I wonder if it’s me getting older that’s actually the feelings of today.

this. so much this. farcaster maybe? but everyone is a zombie. flat. not engaged.

I've noticed this inversion of value in real life. I originally posted my PGP key fingerprint to my X profile so people could tell that the digital me is the physical me. Now it's more useful to prove that the physical me is the digital me that people have been following.

In many ways, the digital is more real than the physical.

nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzqxh7p36w84mcf6af8f0rlf255mhtqxfg6ynnnt5t5jpj0p5q3cmdqqsy95gzlrtzwlpygfmvfmu47gadyn425llpvl5jc003c5w9z4k79jgjfnqyp

It is so so sad. You can also feel it when you travel to other countries.

I love Nostr but I love the real world more. The internet has played a big role but I believe the fiat system is the root-cause.

I hope Bitcoin gets to turn this around.

The real vibe is still in nature, away from cities, in the country. Cities are artificial, homogeneous corporate, fiat constructs. Every off ramp looks exactly the same. The population is mostly grey, flat, and programmed.

That, and dude, you're getting old. The lack of vibe you feel irl is due to your lack of tribe. It happens to a lot of us, but even more now that everything is a marketing gimmick.

Great observation. I feel this, too. And have been pondering it for several years.

Group think and conformity were/are virtues for a large (controlling) cohort of the population, who were quick to cancel individual thought and unique, creative expression.

Universalism was heralded as utopia.

The physical world eventually fell into line.

The last 10-20 years have been surreal to the rest of us… generally for the worse.

I’m hopeful that the Overton window is meaningfully shifting.

Citadels fix this

I love this point you make….

ā€œreduced to Instagrammable momentsā€

This is killing irl culture imo

Nostr has the vibes no doubt….. but we are in the world too…. I’d love to see the vibes of Nostr actually ā€˜Stand Up’ in the real world too

There’s much life in places like Mexico, India, Peru

Deep in the trenches but real life

Basically this.

I think South Park nailed with with the SoDaSoPa episode.

The last two few times I've felt vibes in cities were in La Paz in Bolivia, the Gangnam district in Seoul Korea & Berlin in Germany.

I definitely feel this. I think a lot of culture revolves around food. The financialization of food has made it so the same restaurants/foods are now in every part of the country. I’m hoping bitcoin leads to the death of food chains and a revival of small establishments focused on what the area does best.

Structured fund financing killed authenticity. Every investment is being positioned for a growth oriented strategy focused on exits. Real estate funds are gouging their tenants, their tenants are trying to realize economies of scale with standardization, standardized aesthetic manufacturers are using ever cheaper materials to achieve said aesthetic.

The visuals from Broadway in Nashville fit your description entirely. A bunch of bedazzled ā€œcountryā€ bars blaring bad country music, serving cheap beer, underneath lifeless neon lights intended to cater to bachelorette parties, etc. all these bars and all this real estate is owned by some ā€œinvestment groupā€ who is intending to exit to some bigger ā€œinvestment groupā€ or eventually the public markets.

The ponzi is reaching into our real world experience. Anyone supporting ā€œfundsā€ or publicly traded companies (in their current forms) is enabling the experience you’re describing.

Sopranos did a good job of mocking this as it started to really seep in during the late 90s into 2000s. The coffee chain scenes, selling the old chicken store building to Jamba Juice, etc.

The loss/scarcity of small businesses run by people from the locale strips out any authentic culture.

Not to mention young people prioritizing what will make the best Instagram post when prorating consumption.

Vibes are organic electricity found in the real world, for better or worse.

Music, a great conversation, the smell of the air after a thunderstorm, a person's smile or touch, creating something of value for one's self or another's with our bare hands, these create vibes.

Internet platforms are not the real world; they're plastic and inhuman, non-organic & fake. They perpetuate the hivemind, including nostr, it's not exempt.

The internet is where people chase the endorphin catapult, and nothing more.

Breathe, breathe in the air....

Well maybe that always happens. I was one of the earlier hippies. They were sort of an extension of the bohemium beatniks. The early of both were dirt of cool. Sort of anti establishment and those that would question authority. Not branded. So you had your Robert Crumbs. Keep on Truckin and the like. Years later you had drugs sort of take over and groups like the Grateful Dead that were simply a brand stealing from Crumb. The minority became the majority. The few in blue jeans became the majority. Suddenly to be different all had long hair were unkempt. Etc. Branding of whatever the trend is corporate crapitalism which ultimately brings in dreariness and same lack of creativity similar to the Soviet tegimes.

šŸ’Æ Great post! Probably the result of confortable, standard, risk free enviroments. It reduces possibilities and expresion but it is very safe lol

This note and the comments give me hope. Yes, we have lost our way and culture has become a sellable commodity, but we’re coming back and soon the world will be weirder than ever.

Manhattan no...but Brooklyn and Queen's and the Bronx still have their vibez

It has always been about the people. Sounds cliche but the culture follows the people, and cities that have a mix of ethnicities begin to fuse with and dilute the local culture. If this goes overboard or changes too fast you get this profit driven franchise cities.

šŸ’Æ

Outer banks North Carolina

great place.

small towns

Even small towns are not all that much different these days. Same aesthetic

Because big city people have come to the small towns and their vibe transforms the town.

Bingo!!

All the small towns get ruined by the big city people coming there. They come in and their ā€œvibeā€ transforms it into something else. They think they know how everything should be done and don’t understand localism.

The key to having a true vibe is to have no awareness of your vibe. It has to be organic, emergent. Small towns don’t care about vibes and can therefore have them.

my college town had major vibes. cities suck ass.

Havana is emerging. As long as they stay isolated from the globalists, the better. They now allow free market for small businesses. Lots of art, cafes, small businesses…vibe.

Some parts of Florida still genuine vibes. LOVE the Nostr vibes for suešŸ¤™

San Francisco, in my opinion (21yrs years of experience) has vibes. Especially at the playground with my kids.

The vibes went from the TL, Mission and North Beach out to the Sunset and Richmond Districts which have turned into small town vibes and the birth place of new restaurants and bars/music. There are less young people here now because of the cost of living. Most of the people in my neighborhood are my age with kids. These are my kind of vibes.

I agree with this, but think our cities can make a comeback. Also, there are still vibes to be had if you know where to look.

Pilsen in Chicago is one of the best imo

Come check out east Vancouver. I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised.

I have a tiny condo in a hotel on the Las Vegas strip. Vegas strip vibes are pretty cool, probably because I encounter happy people from all over the world who want to have fun. The strip locals and employees are cool too. Lots of libertarian tax refugees from CA. You go off strip though and man, depressing cookie cutter houses and malls. No good vibes whatsoever.

My hometown of La Jolla, where I still spend a good fraction of my time, has a nice vibe too — if you like locals bars and surf culture. Check out the La Jolla neighborhood of Birdrock, for example.

This is totally off topic but you might Google ā€œvibe codingā€ if you have an interest in software development. It’s the gradual migration to this coding style that cemented my decision to retire. Whatever vibe I felt for coding before is evaporating, just like the diminishing vibe you’re experiencing at the city level.

https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/456840/what-is-vibe-coding-and-what-are-the-strong-points-of-this-methodology

DMd

#gonderellaz

NOLA still has vibes. You just gotta leave the French Quarter

Go to a small rocky mountain town, turn cell phone off and drive or wander around. Time should slow down and vibe will be revealed. Or, you'll step in horse shit and get bored.

I think digital spaces have a very shallow vibe where things can turn on a dime. At times I’ve had debates that turned into arguments in some private digital spaces but then had the privilege of meeting with the same people in meatspace—the tone change was instant and unforced. I agree that most commercial venues are built for the masses, but it’s on you to you to find (or build) your local group with which to vibe. Think outside the box, like clubs (free or paid), cigar bars, or niche sports like squash that have dedicated facilities and ladder boards.

I've enjoyed my local pinball community, as another example...

But yeah I think the dynamic here is similar to what nostr:nprofile1qyvhwumn8ghj7ct49ec82unsd3jhyetvv9ujucm0d5hsz9mhwden5te0vf6xxtntd3jkuerp0f6jucm0d5hszrthwden5te0vfexytnfduhszrmhwden5te0v3sk6atn9e5k7tcprfmhxue69uhnzwfj9ccnvwpwx5czuvfn8qargwp58qhsz8mhwden5te0vfhhxarj9ekxjemgw3hxjmn8wdcx7un99e3k7mf0qyvhwumn8ghj7vfexghrzd3c9cczuvf4xyargwp58qhszxthwden5te0v3jhyemfva5jumn0wd68yvfwvdhk6tcpzpmhxue69uhkztnwdaejumr0dshszxrhwden5te0v35hyetrw3hhy7fw09skyafwd4jj7qpqxeejes6lu4scttcmzytq5wfad3e6rljpmhc3snqs89xz3jjavfastutg40 captures in "The Network State", where community *starts* online, but then comes to occupy meatspace later.

This is why I’m going to Alaska in July because I’ve been volunteering for many years at many conferences and I thought I was done. I got a bit block boom because it’s intimate I get to see my friends, but when Bitcoin Alaska came up, I knew I had to do it and I had to be a part of it cause it vibes. I’m sure there’s other places in the world that do, but I’m not sure anywhere else in the US vibes like Alaska does especially in correlation with Bitcoin.

Cairo’s still got some vibes.

For better or worse, I never forget what city I’m in while I’m there.

nostr:nevent1qqsy95gzlrtzwlpygfmvfmu47gadyn425llpvl5jc003c5w9z4k79jgpr4mhxue69uhkymmnw3ezucnfw33k76tww3ux76m09e3k7mf0gh6s5z

The Vietnamese vibe and food scene in Orlando is something only locals know about

Personal solution: Vermont all summer.

I hate the word vibe

Neighborhoods

"Missing middle housing america" is the rabbit hole that will help you understand some of what you are describing. We went from bustling, vibrant, walkable cities to car-centric, skyscraper-city and flat-suburbs, life-draining, and disconnected "cities", with very little overlap between commercial amd reaidential zones.

When I visit Europe, the cities there often have dual-zoned, middle housing with eclectic and fresh living vibes, and those cities breathe life into me. 10/10 recommend.

"Perhaps we’re now entering a strange inversion, where real-world spaces chase digital popularity, adopting blandness to maximize broad appeal."

But in a way, is this different from any other point in time? Ideas, fashion, literature, art... Everything starts off as a bunch of oddball weirdos, then you get "early adopters," then more mainstream people, and everything gets commoditized.... And the cycle repeats itself.

I think there are still plenty of unique physical spaces... #Pubkey is a great example of this. I've gotten into pinball recently, and a city having a robust #pinball scene is still something that is in the "early adopter" cultural stage.

But I think also that what you're arguing really fits in well with the Network State concept, where online communities exist *first* and define physical spaces as a result of that, rather than the other way around...

That’s why I still love Europe. You can’t replicate the feeling of Paris, Napoli, Amsterdam, Berlin, or Barcelona.

in defense of vibes - i recently watched a man pay for a pbr with personal check.

it was not a one off - this is how he pays for his daily beer(s).

Vibes are out there for sure.

nostr:nevent1qqsy95gzlrtzwlpygfmvfmu47gadyn425llpvl5jc003c5w9z4k79jgpr4mhxue69uhkymmnw3ezucnfw33k76tww3ux76m09e3k7mf0gh6s5z

The world has basically become one giant Wal-Mart.

I prefer the vibes in our town of 320 people… farmers, ranchers, Amish… one K-12 school, two churches and one pizza place and one restaurant. Just gotta watch where you walk on the gravel roads… LOL šŸ˜‚ šŸ˜

I’m on a beach in Mexico. It’s pretty damn vibey.

Fresh guac, fish tacos, Dos Equis con limón. Some guy just walks up at dinner with his guitar or sax and throws down.

People know how to LIVE

The shopping may feel the same, but go to a house party, get into the community. They're different

Denton, Texas, has vibes. It's what Austin used to be.

New Orleans still has some vestiges left. But the yuppies, Katrina and lockdowns wiped out a lot of it. We used to be proudly free of Starbucks, now they are everywhere. Bike lanes. No McDonald's (nor any other franchise restaurant) in my two mile radius, but there are plenty outside of it.

They clamped down on the Sunday open barbecues under the overpass. The Indians are mostly commercialized now. Anyone with a couple of thousand USD can have "an authentic second line parade" to promote their convention.

But it's still there. There are some that still just don't give a fuck. Thy're hard to find, but that's for a reason.

Sometimes it's just someone's back yard on a random Wednesday night. But it's still there. Maybe not forever. But I'm not leaving yet.

The swamp outside the city has real people. The French quarter is as bland and corporate as it gets unfortunately.

shhh! NO! The quarter (and Frenchmen Street) are where the real action is! Stay there, tourists! There's cheap booze and all the terrible pizza and chicken wings that you can eat!

PS Never mind the guys with the automatic rifles and camouflage uniforms (in the middle of a completely urban environment). They're there to make it even MORE fun! :)

No doubt that differences between countries/cities have declined due to globalization, but they are not that homogenous yet to make them so flat

Maybe it's a harmonization?

Best vibee are with simple people at the countryside. They are honest and better. With pristine humour and no hidden agendas ;)

I visited LA last summer and it felt and looked like Sim City. Still loved it, but yeah… superficial, homogenous, I know what you mean.

But Nostr has vibes? I don’t know man…

Gm

Nostr…

I hope so. I’m looking for that. I remember what life was like before the internet.

I grew up in the hardcore scene of San Diego in the 90’s and from this post I can guess that you are a little younger than myself but not by that much.

In general I feel you.

Globalization is where my head goes to - but that’s not the whole story.

I might sound weird but this vibe was starting to happen even before the internet was a thing. The dates just don’t line up.

I long for the past for sure -

Looking for its remnants.

I have a daughter though - so I must try to remember to tread lightly because I don’t want those people who come after us to feel like they lived in something that wasn’t as ā€œauthenticā€ because that would be a shame.

Side-note:

I remember in 1999 talking to my best friend about the United States. It was becoming hard to tell the difference between the states. Everything was becoming the same.

Italy

What we attend to grows. We mine for each other’s attention. E-niche development.

Real vibes are losing the battle for attention to sponsored vibes on the internet. It is the cult of who pays more for publicity that gets the more space into our minds thought the internet. We are slaves of our society built on publicity instead of quality and real vibes.

You can find both corporate and communist, private and state sponsored ads everywhere, If they pay the publicity, they get to enter into the feed of thousands of people.

The small guitarist is not getting exposure and can't compete for attention on the internet.

Real vibes will come back when we start being less and less in the Internets and more and more time in physical reality, paying attention to our physical surroundings and real vibes around us again. This will happen, it is just a matter of a couple of generations. We will find the balance.

nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzqxh7p36w84mcf6af8f0rlf255mhtqxfg6ynnnt5t5jpj0p5q3cmdqqsy95gzlrtzwlpygfmvfmu47gadyn425llpvl5jc003c5w9z4k79jgjfnqyp

Nostr has a fantastic vibe, but please let it not be so that we lose the glory of in-person gathering places.

America has completely failed in its culture of design and public QOL. It is a tragedy, but I hold out it can be fixed. We need to break down a bunch of stupid rules and regulations around building so we can get creative again. It does come down, in a sense, to the quality of space that we surround ourselves with. America is largely a sprawling eyesore when it comes to this, so your opinion is well founded

Too much crime, lack of cultural cohesion etc for anyone to go through the massive lift of redesigning America’s cities. Maybe if self driving really takes off we’ll be able to transform most of the parking lot space. Probably the best we can hope for.

Europe got vibes.

Yes Church!

It’s because cities have failed at their core value and they know it. Literally, the competent ones discuss this issue at their planning commissions and city council meetings. The commons are no longer safe. 80 years ago, over 60% of kids biked to school. Now it’s approaching 10%. Because of over regulating housing and debasement of currency, drugs and homelessness are epidemics.

The resilience of cities were the random small interactions of people who would otherwise never cross paths. The parks, sidewalks, and public transportation were common places for happy random interactions. Not anymore. Interestingly, Mark Zuckerberg brought this up about 6 or so years ago, as he envisioned FB filling that void. Nostr does it better.

But check out Charleston, SC.