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Progress

40 Ways Things Are Getting Better

"What has gotten materially better in America in, say, the last twenty years?" So! Much!

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 8.31.2021 11:45 AM


westendrf570021 | gemma ferrando & jeremie roman Westend61/Newscom
(gemma ferrando & jeremie roman Westend61/Newscom)

"What has gotten materially better in America in, say, the last twenty years?" David Walsh, a University of Virginia postdoctoral fellow, casually asked on Twitter yesterday.

Hundreds of responses poured in, citing everything from consumer goods to medical treatments to cultural attitudes, laws, and Brussels sprouts.

The overwhelming number of responses and their variety provides a nice reminder that a lot of stuff really has been getting better over the past few decades and American society isn't really the perpetual motion fail machine many people make it out to be. In the interest of celebrating progress, here's a sampling (in no particular order) of those responses…

What's Gotten Better in the Past 20 Years?

1. Home entertainment

switch your TV to low resolution mode once and see what type of poverty we used to live in https://t.co/CyPHEnp5rw

— Tyler Conway (@jtylerconway) August 30, 2021

In 2001 if you missed an episode of your favorite tv show you used to have to just, like, hope that a tv network would put it on tv again one day. https://t.co/TsB9LPg3HU

— Mike L. Goodman (@TheM_L_G) August 30, 2021

https://twitter.com/AryehCW/status/1432400754208350208

The Big Bang theory is no longer on the air for starters https://t.co/TyD38YM7bm

— david zaslav haters club (@dauntlessdalton) August 31, 2021

2. Crime rates

Violent crime has dropped like a rock. pic.twitter.com/weFrlVIIuG

— Bad Cop / Bad Cop (@jeirvine) August 30, 2021

3. Micromobility options

The quality and cost of electric micromobility have dramatically improved. For the price of a single 2001 Segway, you can now buy 16 commute-ready e-scooters. We're really just waiting on cities to wake up. https://t.co/TNABguydNo pic.twitter.com/kBsx7ZAnaU

— M. Nolan Gray (@mnolangray) August 31, 2021

4. Better cannabis quality

https://twitter.com/timmarchman/status/1432482849710542850

5. Information access:

Access to information https://t.co/INUjDlzGjS

— Flip (@ebrwn_7) August 30, 2021

https://twitter.com/MVLibertas/status/1432384593286606859

my internet speeds ???? the days of waiting half an hour to buffer a twenty minute video are long gone, may they rest in peace https://t.co/MOlZnxKfBr

— jaybiiird.bsky.social (@AOBaumbach) August 31, 2021

Better accessibility to international media (TV, movies, books, music, comics, everything-Thank you translators!) https://t.co/AXijvukdMg

— Frank Skornia (@FSkornia) August 30, 2021

It might be controversial, but communications technology. Social media has real negative effects, but the ability to instantly read and watch anything you want, or communicate with anyone, is a big deal.

— Peter Sterne (@petersterne) August 30, 2021

6. Acceptance of neurodiversity

https://twitter.com/wraphouse01/status/1432671846097358848

Our diagnostic criteria for, understanding of, and vocabulary around neurodiversity.
Cannabis laws (in some places, anyway).
The visibility and resulting relative safety of gender diverse people (but we've still got a long way to go to on this one). https://t.co/5aZyZ6vxqs

— Manda Cherry @ Norwescon! (@MandaTheGinger) August 31, 2021

7. Restaurant food variety and quality

In the 80s, Chinese takeout and the Italian place were the "ethnic" food options, and considered a bit exotic in much of the country. Coffee was like, Folgers Crystals.

The availability of so much more in the food/bev category - though often unaffordable - is noticeable. https://t.co/nm4nsN7eLe

— edburmila.bsky.social (@edburmila) August 30, 2021

https://twitter.com/nu_handen/status/1432383533817937932

8. Attitudes toward LGBTQ people and their treatment under the law: 

https://twitter.com/MizDanaClaire/status/1432424602135777280

Gay marriage https://t.co/ZYeyz4FXrS

— Ayana Haviv ayanahaviv.bsky.social (@ayanahaviv) August 30, 2021

Trans rights. https://t.co/Fd7ClCNJCE

— Kalany (@kalanyy) August 31, 2021

https://twitter.com/yonatanb/status/1432524274015764482

In the last 15 years the overall openness and tolerance of lgbtq students among their peers has demonstrably improved.

I see kids being openly who they are far more today than when I started.

— Eldritch Millennial (@BmoreBaker42) August 30, 2021

https://twitter.com/Too_Big_To_Fail/status/1432370043153752073

9. Convenience food options

Cold caffeine and on-the-go meal replacement products. You walk into most gas stations and convenience stores and in stock they have protein bars in a Willy Wonky-like variety of flavors & artificially sweetened mostly palatable drinks with enough caffeine to send you to the moon https://t.co/cKs6slhZw9

— Sam Raskin (@samraskinz) August 30, 2021

The only real answer here is "fast food chicken sandwiches" https://t.co/6LzRk4H0xG

— Chrispy (@HowMuchForGoat) August 30, 2021

10. Being an introvert and/or misanthrope:

there's a taco spot in my neighborhood that lets you order over text and pay on venmo so you don't have to talk to anyone when you want tacos https://t.co/IonKm7h0Qx

— julia reinstein ???? (@juliareinstein) August 31, 2021

11. The digital reading experience:

Ebook readers https://t.co/Q1k5ZTR94V

— Chris Scullion (@scully1888) August 30, 2021

12. HIV care:

https://twitter.com/misterscampers/status/1432395854833491973

13. Alcohol options:

Beer. In early 2000s, beer was just awful in New York. Heineken was considered good beer. https://t.co/LXPwk1wb8f

— Onur Özgöde @ummodern@sciences.social (@ummodern) August 31, 2021

Such a good one. When I arrived in DC in 2006, I was pleased if I went to a bar and was able to get…a Yuengling ????

— Central NJ Yimby ???????????????? (@YIMBY_Princeton) August 30, 2021

Wide availability of good craft beer. So much so that I've gotten sick of it and moved on. But every little gas station and convenience store now has decent beer whereas 20 years it would have been all and only Anheuser-Busch.

— Chris Sturr (@ChrisSturr) August 30, 2021

Cocktail bars, the power of modern medicine, dope pizza spots. https://t.co/xlFQFEEQoJ

— Leif Brostrom (@leiftheviking) August 30, 2021

14. Options if you don't want alcohol:

Non-alcoholic beer and VST amp sims for recording guitar. Two things I can no longer do the old fashioned way and almost don't even miss https://t.co/KVyEwh8EiC

— matthew ellis (@matthiasellis) August 30, 2021

15. Mental health treatment: 

ALSO, the number of and social acceptability of medication to treat anxiety and depression. https://t.co/j38e3vxTOH

— Sarah (@sosomanysarahs) August 31, 2021

16. Automobile efficiency and safety:

https://twitter.com/DavidCMaybury/status/1432377932295512076

Access to sustainable, lightweight electric vehicles in cities. https://t.co/lt1Yj0poCj

— Russell Murphy ???????? (@RussMurphNY) August 30, 2021

Cars! https://t.co/NrWUdFRum1 pic.twitter.com/BgDmYi821c

— Ashwin Varma (@varma_ashwin97) August 31, 2021

Cars are so much better that it's ridiculous. Quieter, better handling, safer, faster, less polluting. They're rather more expensive, but even then, the average 2020 Hyundai beats the pants off the average 2000 Hyundai *and* the average 2000 Mercedes

— chatham harrison is heading to greener pastures (@chathamharrison) August 30, 2021

17. Transportation options for people without cars

The ability to transport people or things without owning a car for folks above the poverty line, through tech-enabled, on-demand car rental, grocery, and food delivery services. Huge improvement to quality of life. https://t.co/2tug49ZOs0

— Aarjav (@aarjav) August 30, 2021

18. The ability to get around without getting lost

Aside from the big obvious ones, for me it's getting directions. I am TERRIBLE at directions. Mapquest literally changed my life. https://t.co/HXKBboi6DH

— Kingfisher & Wombat (@UrsulaV) August 31, 2021

The ability to not get lost while driving in an unfamiliar area. No printing directions or asking a local or finding a gas station with a map https://t.co/1AOVIr1d6c

— Brad "Signore Pane" Fuerbringer (@BardLee4) August 30, 2021

19. Specialty diet/food options

Vegan products: availability, variety, and quality. Color printing. Cocktails. https://t.co/SPlgjyZYv9

— Cornflower Blue (Special Low Frequency Edition) (@epicharmus) August 30, 2021

Even in the last 5-10 years vegetarian food options have completely changed and are significantly more popular and accessible and also fake meat tastes way better https://t.co/z9tgPu9ls0

— Shannon Strucci (@plentyofalcoves) August 30, 2021

https://twitter.com/cjd11/status/1432369772323299330

https://twitter.com/gracie_chaos/status/1432413632986435584

20. Being a nerd

https://twitter.com/Ela_Hadrun/status/1432500652802863106

21. Phone calls (or lack of them)

Telephones/no long distance charges, no texting charges, ability to communicate nationally and globally by internet/social media with a portable phone. https://t.co/KlNMKy8OwQ

— Phoenix Rising ????️‍⚧️ they/them (@synphoenix72) August 30, 2021

https://twitter.com/Jesselansner/status/1432374241329045506

22. Getting dressed

there are so many things that have gotten so much better that we don't even notice.

Like, advances in materials sciences have made super soft fabrics dirt cheap and completely ubiquitous. A $9 sweat shirt at Walmart would be nicer than basically anything you can buy in 2001. https://t.co/S7JMhTogBv

— Allan (@AvianDentures) August 30, 2021

23. Cancer treatment

Cancer treatment pic.twitter.com/ETfmPhXKu3

— Bailey Steinworth (@baileys) August 30, 2021

24. Weather reports

Weather forecasting. pic.twitter.com/BTti2zrMW5

— Gwen C. Katz (@gwenckatz) August 30, 2021

25. Bicycling infrastructure 

https://twitter.com/sdho/status/1432408651432607754

Cycling infrastructure, and the proliferation of bike sharing programs in particular is incredible. Safe, affordable, opens up cities in a new way.

— Seb (@Sebastianos15) August 30, 2021

26. Cameras

Camera technology
Cameras on phones
Damn I can't believe I went like 25+ years of my life without a camera phone let alone a good one

— Mel (@Melethonomia) August 31, 2021

27. Avocado access

Access to avocados in places outside of California/Southwest.

— Josephine Robertson (@revjorobertson) August 31, 2021

28. Hygiene products

https://twitter.com/lowinchen/status/1432580251435954178

a weird one, but when I arrived in the US it was difficult to get shower gel: people had bar soap in these little plastic boxes. This was very annoying, esp at e.g. the gym. Anyway, shower gel is now triumphant. https://t.co/pi3Xz0HhJX

— Arthur Spirling (@arthur_spirling) August 30, 2021

29. Video games

video game graphics are pretty good now https://t.co/XDjviwxThA

— brandon.wad (@Thatoneguy64) August 30, 2021

30. Access to fruits and vegetables

https://twitter.com/CtownBnnaPantz/status/1432486801218932737

31. Gambling laws

Gambling on sports legally https://t.co/Bt3OBk44y6

— Rick, Host of Coin Flip Live (@TheRickRosen) August 30, 2021

32. Movie theaters

you guys got those movie theaters with the reclining seats, those are pretty good https://t.co/jasEJ83BGq

— dj mr showmanship (@voellig) August 30, 2021

33. Digital video 

https://twitter.com/masamage/status/1432711754048589845

https://twitter.com/ArguingMeadows/status/1432497354939289603

34. Democratization of the public sphere

Ability for marginalized people to have their voices heard and form communities with others in their situationhttps://t.co/j6N7BiRW51

— Ian (@muddymudskipper) August 30, 2021

35. Clean energy

The price, availability, and efficiency of renewable energy.

— Gregory Brew (@gbrew24) August 30, 2021

36. Access to diverse music

internationalism in music. that k-pop and reggaeton are able to dominate the charts without being labeled fads is a good thing

— David Grossman (@davidgross_man) August 30, 2021

37. Body positivity

this is a cool thread. my earnest contribution: I think a lot about how many young girls are growing up with the existence of the body positivity movement, and how happy — and envious — I am of them for that https://t.co/DJ3xg7dSB2

— Rachel Holliday Smith is mostly posting elsewhere (@rachelholliday) August 30, 2021

38. Smoking rates

Smoking rates are down! https://t.co/1dpoWprpoF

— Kenan Anderson (@KenanAnderson1) August 30, 2021

39. Carbonated beverages

Seltzer https://t.co/cwbFlYM3Ei

— Ashley (@ashweck) August 30, 2021

Alcoholic fizzy water https://t.co/ol8DtdePC3

— Mark O'Neill (@failedvagabond) August 31, 2021

zero calorie coca cola https://t.co/rnUKPZh3HJ

— lifelong las vegas golden knights fan???????????? (@FooleryThomas) August 31, 2021

40. A lot of people's behinds, apparently

https://twitter.com/bergerdbeans/status/1432508023650467843

my ass https://t.co/Hk6BdgAOM3

— punished cailin (@capittalism) August 31, 2021

my ass https://t.co/w9n0WxyKsu

— sladeofyaupon.bsky.social (@sladeofyaupon) August 30, 2021

Answers relating to food, alcohol, marijuana, coffee, computing, and TV—areas no one can deny have improved since the turn of the century—seem to be the most prevalent. And, despite a diverse set of answers both quirky and serious, there's still a whole lot of progress that's gone unmentioned. As a number of people commented, it may be easier to list things that haven't gotten better over the past two decades.

https://twitter.com/jacob_nestle/status/1432375443655643145

???? A lot.

Read more in our progress megathread: https://t.co/rplQ2J8BKR https://t.co/hviEbgiwQ0 pic.twitter.com/akxbIMyhdO

— Human Progress (@HumanProgress) August 31, 2021

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

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