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: Watching a system fail can be cathartic for those who felt the system never worked for them in the first place. It is the "burn it down" instinct—the belief that something better can only grow from ashes.

: History shows that the most significant leaps in technology, philosophy, and social justice often happen during periods of total instability. the_world_is_falling_apart_and_you_like_that_cl...

Ultimately, finding peace—or even a dark kind of enjoyment—in the world’s instability isn’t about wanting destruction. It’s about being ready for change. We don't like that the world is falling apart because we want suffering; we like it because we are tired of the old world's lies, and we are curious to see what we will build in the clearing. : Watching a system fail can be cathartic

To "like" the world falling apart is often a coded desire for a . Ultimately, finding peace—or even a dark kind of

: In a stable, massive system, the individual feels powerless. In a fractured world, small actions matter more. People "like" the chaos because it feels like a moment where they might finally have a say in how the new world is shaped. 4. The Moral Complexity of the Spectator

Why do we find ourselves glued to the "doomscroll"? Psychologists suggest several reasons for our morbid fascination:

: Finding joy in the misfortune of the institutions (or people) we dislike.