A recent thread on r/AskReddit posed a fascinating question: What’s something normal to us in 2025 that by 2075 will be seen as barbaric?

With over 4,500 upvotes and thousands of comments, the responses ranged from hopeful predictions about medical breakthroughs to funny critiques of social norms. It’s an interesting thought experiment at how our everyday habits might age in the not-so-distant future. Here are 17 of the most memorable takes.

1. Wiping with toilet paper

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Redditor u/Dramatic-Avocado4687 keeps it blunt: “Wiping our asses with toilet paper.”

Another user chimed in to roast our primitive ways: “They cut down trees just to wipe themselves?!” In the future, bidets—or some next-level cleaning tech—might make TP as outdated as outhouses.

2. Factory farming

Factory farming got called out repeatedly. User u/w0ke_brrr_4444 called it “the worst hell on earth that humans have ever created.”

Others noted the rise of lab-grown meat could render the practice obsolete. As u/AltEcho38 put it: “I’m convinced it’ll all be lab-grown by then, and we’ll be looked at as savages for raising animals for slaughter.”

3. Medical bankruptcies

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The American healthcare system came under fire. User u/SarlacFace said, “Medical bankruptcies and for-profit healthcare leaving people to die if uninsured.”

If universal healthcare becomes the norm, future generations might shake their heads at the idea of choosing between chemo and rent.

4. Treating women’s pain like an afterthought

Many commenters didn’t hold back on this one. “Not giving anesthesia with placing IUDs,” wrote u/tt_DVM2011.

Another user, u/ThatRoryNearThePark, shared a harrowing experience: “Worst pain of my life… couldn’t sit upright for at least 48 hours.” If future medicine treats women’s pain with proper care, this era will look like the Dark Ages.

5. Eating animals

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Some users went beyond factory farming to predict the end of meat consumption altogether. Redditor u/ciquta said simply, “Eating animals.”

Others, like u/Zetsubou51, lamented how disconnected people are from their food sources: “We don’t care because we don’t see it. Factory farms are awful for the animals and the people that work in them.”

6. Scrolling endlessly on social media

User u/cornylilbugger predicted: “Spending multiple hours, every day, scrolling mindlessly on social media.”

The irony wasn’t lost on u/Izual_Rebirth, who admitted: “Scrolled way too long to find this one.”

7. Single-use plastics

“Plastic everywhere, all the time,” wrote u/letthisbeanewstart, imagining future disbelief at how we let plastic infiltrate everything from straws to textiles.

U/MarkNutt25 added: “An even bigger problem is plastic textiles. Microfibers are evil.”

8. The 40-hour workweek

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“Working a 9-5 just to survive? Barbaric,” said u/DeathofSmallTalk1.

User u/EvaMayShadee painted a grimmer future: “We’ll probably be working 60-hour weeks by then.” Optimism? Optional.

9. Drilling teeth

The dental industry might face a future reckoning. As u/llcucf80 put it: “Drilling teeth.”

One user brought hope with a scientific breakthrough: “If that new shot from Japan works, pull the tooth, get injection, grow a new tooth,” said u/nomiis19.

10. Chemotherapy

Redditor u/Helpful_Finger_4854 hopes cancer treatments will improve drastically: “Dying from cancer, hopefully.”

Another user, u/Vocalscpunk, put it more bluntly: “We still poison the whole body with chemo and hope the cancer dies first.”

11. Driving ourselves

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“Driving yourself will seem barbaric,” predicted u/CranberryCheese1997, imagining autonomous vehicles becoming the norm.

12. Using fossil fuels

Redditor u/loftier_fish had a grim take: “If the answer isn’t ‘using fossil fuels,’ there will be a lot fewer humans to deem anything barbaric in 2075.”

13. Child influencers

future predictions, Reddit, AskReddit, social commentary, ethics, environmentalism, healthcare reform, technology, modern life, societal progress
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Using kids to generate content got roasted as a future ethical disaster. “Hopefully, monetizing your children for social media will seem barbaric,” wrote u/TheWorstWitch.

14. Modern healthcare procedures

Some users pointed out that many current medical practices could be judged harshly in the future. “Orthopedic surgery with drills, rods, and screws?” asked u/Orthocorey.

Another user joked: “So you guys just strapped them down and blasted them with radiation to cure cancer?!”

15. Animal captivity for entertainment

future predictions, Reddit, AskReddit, social commentary, ethics, environmentalism, healthcare reform, technology, modern life, societal progress
A dolphin plays with a beach ball Canva

Redditor u/w0ke_brrr_4444 went in: “Drugged dolphins in resorts and whales at SeaWorld. Barbaric.”

16. Fast fashion and waste

Wastefulness came under fire. U/rabbity_devotee called out “fast fashion” and “overflowing landfills.”

17. The whole premise of this thread

Finally, some users argued that future humanity might not even have the luxury of judging our “barbaric” ways. As u/NapoleonDonutHeart put it: “By 2075, we’re gonna be way more barbaric… we’ll fight over everything once food gets scarce.”

Whether these predictions hold up or not, it’s clear that what feels normal now won’t always be. And when 2075 finally rolls around, let’s hope they’re a bit kinder to us than we’ve been to the past.

This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • Psychotherapist explains why Gen Z slang may be harder to decode than previous generations
    Photo credit: CanvaGen Z attached to their phones.

    Phrases like “that’s mid” or “no cap, sus” are common forms of slang used by Gen Z. Even when words might be technically familiar, conversations with teenagers can feel like there’s a real barrier to entry.

    According to Duygu Balan, a psychotherapist and mother of a teen, Gen Z slang is harder for many adults to decode because the language is emotionally layered and evolves rapidly online. In a recent story for Psychology Today, Balan explained that slang serves as a social signal separating one generation from the previous one, but digital culture has accelerated the process.

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    Slang evolving in real time

    Every age group develops informal language to signal belonging and shared cultural understanding. But the way slang spreads and functions today has changed dramatically.

    Digital platforms like TikTok, Instagram, Discord, YouTube, and Snapchat have language transforming in real time. A phrase can appear in a viral post, be remixed by thousands of users, and shift definition within days. By the time it navigates to general consumption, the meaning might have evolved again.

    Speed is only part of the story

    The way slang quickly changes is only part of the story. What makes Gen Z slang even harder to decode is that it often compresses emotional meaning into short phrases. These terms do more than describe something. They signal how it feels.

    In fast-moving digital environments, where attention spans are short and communication happens through texts and memes, this kind of conversation becomes incredibly efficient,” shared Balan.

    A 2024 study in Springer Nature Link explained that with shrinking attention spans and the evolution of reaction-based commentary, complex messages are conveyed through shorter expressions.

    Gen Z slang compresses emotional reactions

    Young people use digital shorthand to express emotion quickly. Social media relies on fast interpretation, and specific slang allows people to share tone, identity, and attitude instantly.

    Many of these phrases are used to compress complicated feelings such as discomfort, anxiety, longing, sadness, and skepticism into bite-sized constructs that can be communicated in seconds,” Balan adds.

    Irony plays a major role in Gen Z slang. Expressions can blur sincerity, making it difficult to tell what is meant literally and what is meant playfully. A phrase can carry real emotional weight framed as a joke, allowing the speaker to maintain distance.

    The phrase “brain rot” captures how it feels when the mind becomes overly stimulated. “Delulu” is short for delusional, and it’s a playful way to describe a person’s hopeful thinking. Another common slang term, “low-key,” allows someone to agree without fully committing.

    Trying to interpret these terms can take time and patience since context means so much with them.

    These phrases are not meant to be clearly translated, so they aren’t. They stem from experiences that someone who wasn’t born with an iPhone in their hand will never fully understand,” explains Balan.

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    Gen Z plays for the camera.
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    Slang that signals peer approval

    Historically, slang remained consistent long enough for people outside a generation to eventually understand. Today’s slang is far more situational, shaped by online culture and social context. Words like “radical” once meant something was cool. Meanwhile, a term like “sick” not only signals it’s good, but also conveys social meaning, such as admiration from peers.

    This helps explain why adults often find Gen Z slang harder to decode. The challenge is not only vocabulary, but the combination of context, irony, emotional layering, and rapid evolution. Slang words now mean looking past the surface of the reference and paying more attention to the weight of the feelings underneath.

  • A Cornell study says smart people are less likely to hide behind corporate buzzwords
    Photo credit: CanvaA man meditates at the center of a work meeting.

    If you ever sat through a business meeting where someone calls out, “We need to circle back and socialize this cross-functionally,” and thought, “You could have just said let’s talk more before deciding anything,” congratulations: science is on your side.

    A new study from Cornell University suggests that people who are less impressed by corporate jargon may actually think more clearly and make better decisions. Cognitive psychologist Shane Littrel introduced something called a Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale (CBSR), which is exactly as amazing as it sounds.

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    A woman leading the business meeting is unimpressed.
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    Strongest thinkers in the room

    The study, published in the Journal of Personality and Individual Differences, examined how workers responded to vague corporate language intended to sound impressive. The research revealed that people who rate jargon-heavy phrases as especially “profound” or “informative” also tended to score lower on analytical thinking and workplace decision making.

    In other words, the people most impressed by phrases like “all hands on deck” and “this is mission critical” probably aren’t the strongest thinkers in the room. Anyone who’s ever rolled their eyes during a meeting full of corporate buzzwords and thought, “This is nonsense,” the findings are validating.

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    Why some people are impressed by buzzwords

    The CBSR scale was created to measure how easily people are impressed by polished but meaningless corporate language. In a story for the Cornell Chronicle, Littrell described this workplace talk as “a specific style of communication that uses confusing, abstract buzzwords in a functionally misleading way.” He added, “Unlike technical jargon, which can sometimes make office communication a little easier, corporate bullshit confuses rather than clarifies. It may sound impressive, but it is semantically empty.”

    What’s perhaps more troubling is that coworkers, the most susceptible to the BS, rated supervisors higher. They also reported improved job satisfaction and were more likely to spread it themselves. A reality that helps explain why this language survives.

    Every profession has terminology that serves a purpose. Doctors or engineers use specialized language because precision matters. However, language designed to sound strategic only makes the feebleminded happy, according to the study.

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    The study validates relatable frustration

    The Cornell study validates a frustration that many workers have struggled with throughout their careers. People can tell the difference between someone trying to explain something and someone trying to sound important.

    A 2022 study in Springer Nature Link found that clarity improves comprehension. Experts who truly grasp a topic are far better at translating it. The people who communicate the most clearly are often those who understand what’s going on the best.

    The World Economic Forum shared a survey of 1,000 American workers, which found widespread irritation with corporate buzzwords. More than a quarter of the workers reported hearing corporate jargon every day. People generally found these interactions more annoying and less professional.

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    Celebrating at work with a High 5.
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    Potential benefits of implementing CBSR

    Implementing tools like CBSR may help companies recognize communication habits that aren’t working. It offers a measurable way to examine how incorporating shorthand speech affects decision-making. In theory, the scale could encourage workplaces to prioritize clarity over sounding impressive.

    If organizations become more aware of how often buzzwords replace direct communication, they can reduce misunderstandings while building trust between employees and leadership. Language influences the perception of leadership. When the critical thinkers secretly revolt over current expectations and practices, that’s probably a real problem.

    For people exhausted by an endless procession of buzzword-filled meetings, the research suggests that the annoyance probably comes from valuing plain English and practical thinking. Simply put, sometimes the smartest response is asking people to say what they really mean.

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