2020 was the Worst Year Ever! – You’re joking, right?

nivek

As Above So Below
2020 was the Worst Year Ever! – You’re joking, right?

Of the lavish banquet of absurdities laid out in 2020, one of the most delectable is Time magazine’s December 14 cover declaring that 2020 was the “worst year ever.”

You’re joking, right?

In history’s immense tapestry of human misery, it’s not even in the top 100 worst years.

Consider 1177 B.C., when many of the great civilizations of the Mediterranean Sea and Mideast collapsed, and the survivors struggled through a pre-modern Dark Ages. This book assembles what is known about this catastrophic era: 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed.

Then there’s 1644 A.D., when the Ming Dynasty was overthrown by the Manchu invasion, a series of self-reinforcing misfortunes stemming from extremes of climate (a.k.a. The Little Ice Age) that left millions hungry and vulnerable to disease and the predation of roving bandit armies.

The Little Ice Age and the famine, conflicts, civil wars, coups, revolts and rebellions it launched killed between a quarter and a third of Eurasia’s population. Entire villages melted away as starvation drove the survivors to desperation. The misery stretched from western Europe to China, and lasted for decades.

This fascinating history lays it all out: Global Crisis: War, Climate Change, & Catastrophe in the Seventeenth Century.

Though it is now relegated to a footnote in history, the Antonine Plague of 165 – 180 A.D. decimated the Mediterranean, Mideast, North African and Eurasian regions, toppling regimes that had endured for ages and very nearly brought the Roman Empire to an inglorious end. Roughly one-fourth of the population died as the novel disease was distributed along Rome’s numerous trade routes, which stretched from Northern Europe to Africa and India.

Western Rome’s eventual decline and fall was also the result of pandemics and climate change as well as the usual suspects of war, political in-fighting, overtaxation and the stranglehold of self-serving elites: The Fate of Rome: Climate, Disease, and the End of an Empire.

Europe’s inhabitants circa 1350 A.D. would have chosen the years 1347 – 1351 as “the worst ever” as the Black Plague took the lives of a third of the population:The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe.

The inhabitants of North and South America would have selected the years following 1492 and the arrival of Europeans carrying novel diseases as the worst years ever as the diseases carried away between 50% and 90% of the people who were alive in 1491: 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus.

And finally, the worst of the worst, a gigantic volcanic eruption in early 536 AD that changed day into night and summer into winter across Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Asia for more than 18 months.

Yep, and what about the greatest natural disaster of the 19th century: the Krakatoa eruption in 1883 that caused shock waves 10,000 times more powerful than that of an hydrogen bomb and shattered the eardrums of sailors over almost 40 miles away.

Declaring 2020 “the worst year ever” reveals much about the psychology of our delusional state of affairs. It reflects an absolutely abysmal grasp of human history and a self-absorbed desire to exaggerate the calamity so the rebound will be gloriously triumphant.

It also embodies our delusional addiction to measuring the well-being of the human populace with financial markets: as long as stocks are hitting new highs, we’re all doing wonderfully.

So party on, because “the worst year ever” is ending and the rebound of financial markets, already the greatest in recorded history, will only become more fabulous.

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AD1184

Celestial
It might be the worst year in recent memory. I have noticed a tendency in popular media to superstitiously ascribe properties to specific calendrical years. For example, 2020 is held to be the year of the coronavirus pandemic. However, the disease's name is Covid-19, and it arose in humans in late 2019. The pandemic is also an ongoing event that is going to extend well into 2021. The pandemic therefore belongs to an era that extends across the years, paying no heed to calendars. The idea that each year has a separate character or significance, with all major events neatly contained within it, is a bogus one.
 
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nivek

As Above So Below
It might be the worst year in recent memory. I have noticed a tendency in popular media to superstitiously ascribe properties to specific calendrical years. For example, 2020 is held to be the year of the coronavirus pandemic. However, the disease's name is Covid-19, and it arose in humans in late 2019. The pandemic is also an ongoing event that is going to extend well into 2021. The pandemic therefore belongs to an era that extends across the years, paying no heed to calendars. The idea that each year has a separate character or significance, with all major events neatly contained within it, is a bogus one.

I've been using the term the 'Age of Covid' in reference to this pandemic...'AoC' not to be confused with another abomination people refer to as AOC...:Whistle::laugh8:

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Standingstones

Celestial
The Black Death (Plague) gets my vote for worst pandemic ever. Depending on which records you wish to believe, 25 million to 200 million lives were lost, up to 50 percent of European people died.
 

The shadow

The shadow knows!
From Wikipedia.

The Spanish flu, also known as the 1918 influenza pandemic, was an unusually deadly influenza pandemic caused by the H1N1 influenza A virus. Lasting from February 1918 to April 1920, it infected 500 million people – about a third of the world's population at the time – in four successive waves. The death toll is typically estimated to have been somewhere between 20 million and 50 million, although estimates range from a conservative 17 million to a possible high of 100 million, making it one of the deadliest pandemics in human history.
 

Rick Hunter

Celestial
What's sad is, I honestly don't recall any mention of the Spanish flu in any of my high school or college history classes. They went right from Armistice Day to the Roaring 20's with no mention of it.
 

JahaRa

Noble
What's sad is, I honestly don't recall any mention of the Spanish flu in any of my high school or college history classes. They went right from Armistice Day to the Roaring 20's with no mention of it.
Where did you grow up and what decade were you in highschool? I was in highschool in the early 70's and it was mentioned in our history class. I find it interesting that no one remembers or if younger never heard of the Hong Kong flu, which was almost as bad except that the flu vaccine was being tested during that time and the second year a lot of people were vaccinated so it was just one long winter 69/70 when it was so bad.
 

JahaRa

Noble
Grew up in central Kentucky, in high school 92-96. Went to both public and private.
Well, that explains it. Even in the 70's if we wanted a good education we had to get it ourselves in the library. You are only a couple years older than my kids. The oldest went to a private school and the focus was making sure everyone got a high score on the SAT test. The younger one went to a public high school and I don't think the teachers had much time for teaching, it was all about discipline because they were not allowed to kick kids out of their class and send them to the office when they were disruptive. Not sure why, they even had a cop on campus but it did not change anyone's behavior.
 
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