Asche, I wish there were anything I could say that could lessen the pain you're feeling, but I know that words don't change any of it.
I believe I have felt everything you're describing and, underneath the contentment and the joy that I feel today, I still feel all of that, too. The world is unjust, and the human world feels brutally, pointlessly so. The challenge for those of us who feel it so acutely is how to accommodate those feelings and still experience peace and joy within ourselves.
Many years ago, at a particularly difficult time in my life, I stumbled across this quote from Joseph Campbell:
"Participate joyfully in the sorrows of the world. We cannot cure the world of sorrows, but we can choose to live in joy. The warrior's approach is to say "yes" to life: "yea" to it all."
At the time, I grumpily thought, "That's absurd, insane even." Within a few years, as Life piled the hardships onto me and the people I loved, I grew to understand it. It took me several more years to learn to embody it.
It's hard to say whether things are worse today than they have been in the past, because we are increasingly exposed to more and more "news" from everywhere in the world, and negativity is what is popular. (I believe that, in turn, promotes negativity, but that's another subject altogether.) In the past, we didn't "know" so much about all of the injustices, and we were happier and better off for it. You could say that it's callous to prefer to be ignorant, but I think it's basic survival. These creatures that we inhabit didn't evolve to absorb this intensity of abuse. Literally none of us is equipped to handle it, and there's no compelling reason why we should. We can't do anything to change it - other than by countering it with love and compassion in our daily lives. No, it's not likely that my doing that will put a stop to atrocities across the globe, but it will condition peace within my heart and possibly in the hearts of the people I encounter. And maybe some of them will choose to do the same. Yes, it can be seen an act of defiance, but I prefer to think of it as reclaiming my sovereignty, my equanimity.
What our society is pushing is not joy or peace. If we want those, we must pursue them ourselves with determination.
This is hard, and you are not alone.
With love,
Pema