Our Times 2015 May 2026

These are our times. Exhausting. Brilliant. Terrifying. Unprecedented. And we are just getting started.

The central paradox of our times is that we have never had more power to create, connect, and know—and yet we have never felt more powerless, alone, and uncertain. We carry supercomputers in our pockets but struggle to focus on a single page of a book. We can video-call anyone on Earth but report having fewer close friends. We have mapped the human genome and landed rovers on Mars, yet we can’t agree on basic facts. our times 2015

Our times are also defined by a new relationship with the future. For previous generations, the future was a promise. For us, it’s a source of dread. The summer of 2015 was one of the hottest on record then; now, every summer breaks that record. Wildfire smoke turns skies orange in New York. Floods deluge Pakistan. We’ve learned new vocabulary: atmospheric river , heat dome , zombie fire . Young people don’t just learn about climate change; they metabolize it as eco-anxiety, a low-grade grief for a planet we’re watching transform in real-time. These are our times

Perhaps the most significant shift is the collapse of a shared public reality. In 2015, we still largely trusted the same news sources. Now, we have epistemic bubbles. Depending on your feed, the same event looks heroic or catastrophic. The rise of populism globally—from Brexit (2016) to the election of Donald Trump (2016)—wasn’t just political. It was a symptom of a deeper fragmentation. Truth became tribal. The pandemic of 2020-2023 only intensified this: mask or no mask, vaccine or natural immunity, lockdown or liberty—each became a shibboleth for belonging. Terrifying