• demonquark@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    None of these events are noteworthy by themselves. Max they merit part of a sentence as an example of an ongoing trend.

    Exception if one of the events turns out to be a handy symbolic point to indicate a change in the world order.

    E.g. Serious human contribution to global warming which started in the early 20th century kept a pace and peaked in the early 21st century. Public opinion began to sour after an increased occurrence of climate disasters, such as tsunamis and forest fires.

    Or: The Russian successor state to the soviet union did make token efforts to reassert its power in Eastern Europe, such as the 2021 war in Ukraine. However those efforts ultimately proved futile and by 20xx all former Warsaw pact countries, excluding Russia itself, had joined the European union.

    • idiomaddict@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      I guess it depends on how far out you go. In 500 years, probably not significant. In 50-75 years (I was thinking about 20th century timelines when I was thinking about significance), maybe the forest fires and Jan. 6 aren’t hugely relevant if there’s nothing that builds on them, but COVID, Abe and Ukraine would have been taught in my school. We learned about the Spanish flu, the assaasination of William McKinley and the Crimean war, which seem similar and only the Crimean war was really connected to anything else by our teachers.

        • idiomaddict@feddit.de
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          10 months ago

          Not that I can remember. Did it shut down the entire world for several months and lay the groundwork for consolidation of money and power on a scale not seen before?

          If so, I should have.

          Edit: I’m dumb. I did learn about the Spanish flu, but I think of that as happening in the teens.