I suspect getting to be old enough to take charge will be the fun part.
It does seem the whole house of cards is currently coming apart.
While technology has evolved exponentially, much of the underlaying sociology is still stuck in the dark ages.
Consider time;
As mobile organisms, this sentient interface our body has with its situation functions as a sequence of perceptions, in order to navigate, so our sense of time is the present going past to future.
Yet the evident reality is that activity and the resulting change turns future to past. Tomorrow becomes yesterday, because the earth turns.
There is no dimension of time, because the past is consumed by the present, to inform and drive it. Causality and conservation of energy. Cause becomes effect.
It's like a tapestry being woven of strands pulled from what was woven.
The problem is that culture and civilization are based on that narrative flow of history. Human knowledge is a function of building on what came prior. For those who spend their lives in classrooms, studying prior thinkers, this flow is foundational. So while this point might seem obvious to the average 15 year old, it tends to explode the heads of those with a lot of advanced education.
Consider religions;
They are like the childhood memories of culture. The initial events around which everything after tends to form. Yet all totally muddled.
Remember democracy and republicanism originated in pantheistic cultures.
To the Ancients, gods were metaphors. Love, beauty, war, seas, etc.
Israel was monotheistic because it was tribal. One people, one rule, one god.
Ancient Israel was also a monarchy. The Big Guy Rules, like the religion.
The Romans adopted Christianity for the monotheism, as the Empire was coming together, brushing aside the pantheism of the Trinity. The young god born in the spring to the old sky god and earth mother.
The big problem with Catholic monotheism, the "all-knowing absolute," is that ideals are not absolutes.
A spiritual absolute would be the essence of sentience, from which we rise, not an ideal of wisdom and judgement, from which we fell.
More the light shining through the film, than the stories playing out on it.
People who seriously think their god is absolute tend to be obsessive compulsive, if not psychotic.
I can think of a fair number of other ways our society is still buried in nonsense, but these are a couple of ideas to consider.