‘Our Kids Are the Least Flourishing Generation We Know Of’
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From New York Times Opinion, this is The Ezra Klein Show. In March of last year, the social psychologist Jonathan Haidt published this book called The Anxious Generation, which caused a stir. The subtitle of this book says it all: How the great rewiring of childhood is causing an epidemic of mental illness. I don’t think anybody can dispute that. What he says is controversial. Oh my God, enough with the panic about kids using smartphones, facing enormous pushback from other researchers. You cannot disentangle cause from effect. Jonathan Haidt is telling a scary story that many parents are primed to believe.
I always found the conversation over this book a little annoying because it got to me at one of the difficulties we’re having parenting, one of the difficulties we’re having in society, which is this tendency to instrumentalize everything into social science. Unless I can show you on a chart the way something is bad, we have almost no language for saying it’s bad. It is, to me, a collapse in our sense of what a good life is, what it means to flourish as a human being. So I stayed a bit out of that debate because, on the one hand, I couldn’t settle it. And on the other hand, I didn’t think I should come in and say it wasn’t important.
We’re a year later, though, and two things have happened. One is, Haidt’s book has never left the bestseller list. That is rare. It has struck a chord. The other is that policy is moving in Haidt’s direction. Well, the governor of Utah has signed a sweeping bill to limit children’s access to social media. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has signed one of the most restrictive social media laws in the country. This asshole Ron DeSantis might have done something I agree with. The no cell phones in schools movement is going national. Florida classrooms, all schools in the Buckeye State, Michigan, South Carolina. This morning, Virginia. We’re talking statewide at all Arizona schools. And now nine other states are considering the bans as well.
How are your phones owned? We are seeing a genuine policy revolution happening in places governed by Republicans, governed by Democrats, in how we treat children in this era of social media. I feel a lot more confident as a parent we’re going to figure this out by the time my kids are old enough for it to matter. And then, of course, the truck of AI is about to T-bone whatever consensus we socially come to, which scares, to be quite honest, the hell out of me. So I wanted to have Haidt on the show to talk about it. He is a professor at New York University Stern School of Business. He is also the author of The Righteous Mind, which I think is one of the best books on political psychology, as well as a bunch of other books. He is also the author of The Righteous Mind, which is free, where he and some co-authors are continuing to prosecute the case and think through the research around social media.
As always, my email is Ezra Klein Show at NYTimes.com. John Haidt, welcome to the show. Ezra, it’s great to be back with you. So I want to just begin with the big question: What is childhood for? Childhood is evolution’s answer to how do you have a big-brained cultural creature. You have to play a lot. You have to practice all sorts of things, all sorts of maneuvers, all sorts of social skills in order to tell your brain how to wire up to have the adult form.
So if you focus on brain development, especially for a big-brained cultural species like ours, there’s a plastic period, a period where stuff comes in and it shapes who you are. And then once you’ve got that, now you’re ready to convert to the adult form, be reproductive, have a baby. But if you don’t have play in childhood, you’re not going to reach the adult form properly. You had one statistic in the book that I think I’ve actually read before, but every time I read it, it shocks me anew. And maybe now because I have a five-year-old who just turned six. But that at five years old, the human brain is 90% of its adult size and it has more neurons than it will when you’re an adult.
That’s right, because we’re used to thinking of bodily growth as just time equals bigger. But the brain is this amazing thing that has all these neurons that have the potential to connect in all kinds of ways. And as neuroscientists say, neurons that fire together wire together. So if you repeatedly climb trees or do archery, systems will form in your brain that make you really good at that. Whereas if you repeatedly swipe, tap, swipe, tap, and just respond to emotional stimuli, your brain’s going to wire to do that.
So almost everybody over 35 or so, I guess you’re an older millennial. How did you grow up when you- I am among the eldest of millennials. The elders, the millennial elders. Tell me when, at what age, you could go out on your bicycle with your friends and go around the neighborhood. I don’t remember exactly, but I do remember I spent a lot of time. I lived on a cul-de-sac in a suburb. And I do remember I spent a lot of time as part of just a roaming pack of kids who lived on my street. And we would be playing kickball on somebody’s garage door.
And the other thing I remember about it that I feel like I see less of now is that it was highly age diverse. Exactly. That’s right. So this is what human childhood has always been. There are periods, like the Industrial Revolution, where maybe kids didn’t have a childhood. But Peter Gray, a developmental psychologist who co-founded Let Grow With Me, he has some writing on hunter-gatherers. Hunter-gatherers raise their kids in that way. There’s no thought that the mother has to be supervising the four, five, six, seven, nine-year-olds. They’re all off playing with the other kids, and there are nine- and ten-year-olds there.
And so they learn to look out for each other. The older kids learn to care for the younger kids. And the younger kids, remember, they’re trying to wire up their brain to, like, what is a functional member of this society? And the best role models for them are not kids their age. It’s kids a few years older. And so in America, in the West, we’ve got these factory kind of schools where we put all the eight-year-olds together, and then all the nine-year-olds together. But the healthiest is what you just said.
And so my point is, everyone before the millennials had this childhood. The millennials are the transitional generation, so you’re on the elder side. You got it. Even though the rates are microscopic in this country, and even though crime was plummeting in this country in the 90s, that’s the decade. You can see it in the charts. That’s the decade when we really pulled our kids in. We thought, you know, they’ll get abducted. We can’t let them go in a different aisle of a supermarket or a man with a white van. I mean, all this crazy stuff comes in in the 90s.
Something you mentioned about the 90s in the book is I am familiar with the statistic that parents today, despite working two jobs much more often than they did in the past, despite fathers being more involved, spend much more time with their kids than they did before. I hadn’t realized that that was not a sort of steady increase over the decades, that it’s a sharp increase in the 90s. That’s right. There’s this weird graph that I have in the book, which shows the number of hours that women spend in parenting, you know, what you would consider time with your kid doing something.
And the astonishing thing is that in the 50s, 60s, and 70s, women were not spending five hours a day parenting because the kids were raised the way that you just said. It’s not the parent’s job to socialize the child all along. It’s the parent’s job to provide the right environment, to provide certain kinds of moral frameworks. But the real work of brain development doesn’t happen when you’re with your parents. Your parents are home base. They’re your attachment figure. When you feel securely attached, then you go off and explore.
And that’s the mammal way. That’s what other mammals do. You go off progressively further from your home base, and that’s where the learning happens. It’s playing kickball, trying to decide, what do we do today? Oh, he broke the rules. No, he didn’t. I want to get a tension in there with at least the culture of modern parenting. I think a lot of parents believe that the simplest way to ask, were you a good parent this week, is how much time you spent with your children.
Quality time. Quality time. Yeah, that’s right. I feel that. And you’re saying here that’s not true. It’s not true. It’s definitely not true. You want to give your kids a quality childhood. You want to be a quality parent. But that doesn’t mean that you have to spend a lot of quality time with your kid. You need a warm, trusting, loving relationship. You need to provide structure and order and discipline.
But this is what changed in the 90s, and it’s in part because we stopped trusting our neighbors. If you think of all the Robert Putnam stuff about bowling alone and the loss of social capital, we used to at least trust that if our kids were out playing without us, other adults would look out for them. If something really went wrong, they could knock on a door. Like, someone would help. But we began losing that trust. And this is really bad for the kids because the kids don’t grow as much if their attachment figure is there.
And it’s really bad for the adults, especially the women. The mothers pick up a lot of this, even though they’re working outside the home. So, yes, modern parenting is not good for the kids and certainly not good for the adults. So, if you’re tracking dynamics here, you have the 90s, we’re getting more afraid of danger. You’re having this deterioration in social trust, this deterioration in, is the whole community parenting your kid? Right. And it’s right about now that you begin having an explosion in screen possibilities.
Yeah, that’s it. So, I remember when I was younger, I remember Nickelodeon emerging. Okay. Right? Before then, there wasn’t a TV channel that was programming for children at all times. Right, right. Before then, it’s like there were cartoons sometimes. There were kid shows sometimes. Saturday mornings. But not all the time. Right.
And obviously, from there, you get an explosion of cable channels, eventually the internet, eventually, you know, iPads and iPhones and video game consoles and all the rest of it. So, talk about the sort of handoff. So, it’s the conversion over to this smartphone-based, tablet-based childhood. That’s when all the indicators of mental illness start rising around 2012, 2013. Now, I focused on the 2010 to 2015 period, but I think your question points out something I hadn’t really thought much about, which is cable TV.
I was born in 1963, so I grew up in the late 60s and early 70s on, you know, I Dream of Jeannie and Gilligan’s Island. You know, I showed those shows to my kids, and I said, this is so stupid. Like, they were really simple plots. But that’s all we had. Whereas, you had cable, which was more engaging. And console video games. Okay. I got a Nintendo, the NES, not the Super Nintendo, the first mass-available console and mass-adopted.
You know, you could argue about the Atari or whatever. But the Nintendo Entertainment System. What year was that? I don’t remember now, but I was young. You’re talking about late 80s? Yeah, okay. To me, that’s a big dividing point because the things that Nickelodeon and the NES do is they make it possible to put something on the television at any second of the day.
Yeah. They’ll entertain a child intensely. Yeah, that’s right. That’s a good point. I’ve been more focused on the arrival of the internet, but the Nintendo didn’t require the internet, right? No. Right. Okay. You were not a gamer, John.
Well, I was because when I was a kid, the game was Pong. Like, you know, they were—this is 8-bit Mario, man. This is, you know, this is the early stuff. Okay. So, the early stuff was great fun, but it was not multiplayer. Your friend had to sit next to you to play, right?
Mm-hmm. Right. So, I hope this will be a theme that I’m thinking a lot more about this. Like, don’t just think about screen time. Think about what is it that makes it good or bad? Because I remember, like, just as video games were coming in, and you’d hook it up to your TV, so, like, my friends and I would get together and we’d say, what do you want to do? Play video games? Like, okay, we’ll do that for a little bit. And then we’d go off and do something else. Nothing harmful about that.
What happens in the 2000s, once you begin to get the multiplayer games, because this requires not just the internet, it requires high-speed internet in order to have these amazing graphics shared in multiple screens at the same time without a lag. So, that’s only, you know, like 2008, 2009, it begins to get popular. But then it’s in this great rewiring period, 2010 to 2015, this is when everyone’s trading in their flip phones for smartphones.
This is when high-speed internet is increasing greatly. So, by 2015, boys are all on these multiplayer games. My son played Fortnite. I didn’t let him on until he was 13, but they laughed their heads off. The boys at least had that synchronous laughter. They’re not in the same room, so it’s not as good. But they at least had that, whereas the girls are each alone on their own Instagram account. They might laugh at something, but they’re not having shared laughter.
One of the reasons I felt myself, like, a little put off by the debate that emerged around your book with this sort of, like, endless back and forth on the identification strategy of, you know, was this really the cause of anxiety or a correlate of anxiety and what’s going on in South Korea? It’s got at this feeling I keep having, which is that we have lost any kind of independent, and I would positively say paternalistic, idea of what we want human beings to be.
And we have allowed it all to be dominated by metrics. So, on the one hand, there is, are you getting good grades? If you’re getting good grades, then you’re fine. It’s not really true. We definitely see it’s not true now because we’re watching kids, I mean, partially through grade inflation, get plenty of good grades, not get pregnant as teenagers, not do a bunch of drugs, and they’re doing terribly.
The other side of it, though, is that then there’s this, I would call it the logic of capitalism, the logic of the consumer economy, which is that if you enjoy doing it, if you want to do it, then we need to have a very high bar for a reason to stop you, right? Our view is that kids should not freebase crack all the time. We’ve decided, like, that’s not something we should let them do.
But if they’re playing mouse and multiplayer online games all the time, and they enjoy it, and their grades are fine, like, what are you really going to say? And somewhere in this, some texture is lost, like I think that I associate more with classical education or something, but we’re trying to develop certain facilities that are part of being a human being.
Yeah, yeah. I always think about attention as one of them, right? What kind of attention? We hear all this concern now that kids are graduating high school, even kids going to good colleges, can’t read a full book, can’t read a book, can’t watch a movie. But there’s more than that. I think we care about if our children are nice or kind. We sort of have that. But there’s a lot about all kinds of virtues that we’ve just lost the way to talk about and that we’re not comfortable saying.
I mean, I see it with parents all the time. You need some great reason to say the kid shouldn’t be on the iPad. And maybe it’s that you think their grades will be bad or their anxiety will be high. But you can’t just say, like nobody feels that comfortable saying, it’s just bad. I just don’t want you looking at the screen all the time. I think it’s bad. I think it’s not the way to be a human being.
That’s right. What you’re describing is the loss of any moral framework. And if you try to raise kids without a moral framework, it’s not going to go well. So that’s what I’d like you to talk a bit about. You have one chapter on this in the book. It’s a little shorter; it’s about spirituality. But your first book is all about moral frameworks. Connect these for me because we lost paternalism.
I do think parenting lost an idea that it is confident about what we are trying to raise people towards. And while I want to stay away from politics in our talk in general, what you’re bringing up is one of the divisions that I talked about in The Righteous Mind between left and right. And that is that, in general, the right conservatism conserves what we have. There’s a wisdom to our ancestors. This is Edmund Burke.
And so the right tends to see they have what’s called a constrained view of human nature. If kids don’t have structure and order and punishment for bad deeds, they’ll come out badly. Whereas the left tends to habitually question existing arrangements and pull things down if they seem unjust. And the left is much more afraid to make value judgments and to impose a moral order on kids. That’s why it’s always the right that’s concerned about the garbage being placed on TV because the right is very concerned about the moral diet coming in.
Now, I think in the modern era, parents should be more like the conservatives in that respect. And here’s why. We already talked about the way the neurons are growing, they’re wiring up. You learn to run, climb trees, do all sorts of things. But a big thing you’re doing, especially in later childhood, is you’re learning the moral order. And humans evolved within a moral order.
And I’m a secular Jew. I was always on the left. Now I’m nothing. I’m not on any team. But when I was writing that book, I was really sort of exploring ancient wisdom and discovering, wow. I mean, every other society, they had this rich moral framework. They have a conception of the gods. There are reasons why you have to do things. And when you raise kids within a moral order, they have a sense of their place in the world and a sense of meaning.
And when you take all that out and you say all that matters is what feels good or all that matters is rights or all that matters is some measure of material success, basically what you have is what Emile Durkheim called anomie or normlessness. And there’s a question on the monitoring the future study where since the 70s, we’ve asked high school seniors, my life feels useless. Do you agree or disagree with that on a five-point scale? And until 2010, it’s like around 9% say yes.
And then all of a sudden, 2012, it shoots up. It doubles within five or ten years. And so I think part of this is if you’re immersed in stories that have a moral order to them, which is what I was immersed in when I was a kid. All the stories had some sort of moral. Even I Dream of Jeannie. I mean, you know, there was a moral framework put in by the adults who made the show. But what you see on TikTok and Instagram, they’re not really stories. They’re really amoral or immoral. A lot of them are just horrible things.
The boys are seeing lots of videos of people getting in accidents or violence. And so a long way to answer your question, kids need moral formation. They need a structure, a shared moral framework. Morality only works like language. You can’t have your own language and you can’t have your own morality. It only works as a shared system, an order. And once kids move on to social media, it’s just a million little fragments of nonsense. There’s no moral order.
I think it was you. I was listening to a conversation with you some years ago. And you said something like, it is just bad for teenage girls to be endlessly posting pictures of themselves on the internet for other people to rate. I stand by that bold assertion. I remember thinking that’s so unbelievably obvious and so much not how we actually just talk about it, right? Because what you’re making there was fundamentally an immoral judgment. I know behind it there is evidence.
But I do find that within the conversation about social media and the way we’re constructing childhood, there is this demand to bring the studies. Right? And I’ve said this before. I think if you could prove to me that it doesn’t matter at all for anxiety at 16 or earnings at 23, whether or not kids spend 2.5 hours or 3 hours a day on TikTok, I think it would change my view of whether they should do that 0%.
Okay. Because I just think it’s a bad way to live. And it’s a bad way to live for other reasons, right? I think it’ll create, by nature, it creates self-obsession, right? By nature, it creates this management of the personal brand. And even if I couldn’t find correlates there of bad outcomes, I have a view on what it means to be like a flourishing human being that should not include too much of that, right? That wants to keep that boxed up a little bit in the human psyche.
And this is where things feel like they ran aground to me in a lot of the debates. I feel like parenting and the culture parents come from now, unless you are in some form of church, basically, is incredibly insecure about making these judgments. That’s right. That’s right. I don’t fully understand why. I don’t think it is just a loss of trust thing. Yeah. I think it is some set of forces that I don’t really understand.
But I don’t feel like it was like that as much when I was young. And it definitely wasn’t like that as much in the past. That’s right. And sort of separate almost from everything else, I think this is a huge failure in parenting culture. There’s just an inability to say we have views on what is good or bad. That’s right. And they don’t require 16 years of randomized controlled trials. They’re just actually our views on virtue.
And there I see this generational change. You can see sort of the tight moral order of the 1950s. When you look at old movies, like from the 30s and 40s, there was a really tight moral order. And like it would be dramatic whether a woman could like go into a man’s apartment. That was like a, you know. So there was a really intense moral order, including around gender, around all sorts of things. And that, of course, begins to loosen up in the 60s.
And there are many good things that happened because of that. But one of the concerns about sort of modern secular society has been you gradually lose this moral framework within which to raise children. And I’m really aware now of how we each – we’re all influenced by our parents and just maybe a little bit by our grandparents. Culture has always sort of come down vertically through generations. But that link is getting weakened.
So I think there is a progressive weakening of a sense of a moral order, which affects how you parent. And then we end up with a kind of an amoral focus on grades and I guess be nice and a few other things. But it’s a very thin moral gruel, I’d say. And you can, I think, see this spreading throughout society. The idea that this is just about the kids is wrong.
I know you don’t want to be political, and I know that the John Haidt agenda is being adopted in red and blue states alike, and we will talk about that. But you were saying earlier, look, liberals and conservatives have these different moral foundations and conservatives care a lot more about the moral inputs. And maybe that was true. I look around, I don’t see it. I’m not asking you to say whether Donald Trump is a moral or immoral person.
But what I will say is that the Republican Party under him has become unconcerned with what was traditionally understood as vice in a very different way. So some of that is politeness and etiquette. But some of it is what should the policies be about sports gambling? Right. There is a massive deregulation of sports gambling. It’s horrible. Which is so bad for boys, consuming young men. Yes. Right. It’s destroying so many.
Crypto is an adjacency of that. Right. There’s perfectly fine things about crypto. But what we are specifically permitting is crypto as a casino. I was somebody who was very supportive of marijuana legalization. And I think it’s gone terribly. Yeah, I agree. And it’s gone terribly, I mean, among other things, because we have just allowed capitalism to get its hooks into it and create more and more potent products that are advertised everywhere.
I don’t know if either side is particularly concerned with the vice right now. But the right has embraced a lot of this too. And I think part of that is just a collapse, right? There is no one left who has political power in this society who feels confident making, I would say, judgments to go against the market, right? There was a market for sports gambling, so we’re going to allow it. There’s a market for crypto.
I think about a lot of things in modernity as capitalism is itself a kind of moral logic. And it is a moral logic built on individual expression of wants in the moment. And it was counterbalanced by much more potent religious logics. And these two sort of forces held each other at a rough equilibrium for much of 20th-century America. And at some point, the religious counterforces weakened so much that the system fell out of equilibrium.
And now the religious forces are just not very powerful at all. I am not myself highly religious, but I do think that these were countervailing players. And we just don’t have them anymore. And the evidence of that being a problem is actually all around us. No, I think that’s exactly right. I’ll just bring a couple of points to bear. One is there’s an incredible book called The Age of Addiction by David Courtright.
And he chronicles how people have always wanted sugar and they foraged for fruit. But then you learn to refine sugar and now you get sugar-based products and then you get candy. And then so once we have a market-based economy in the Industrial Revolution, we find more and more ways to make these products that our brains evolved to crave. But now they’re limitless. You can have limitless quantities effortlessly. And the same is true for, you know, opiates. You get opium to heroin to fentanyl. A free market society, the best definition of it I heard was from a philosopher who said, a good free market society is one in which you can only get rich by making other people better off. And for the most part in our economy, that is still true.
But now let’s look at the products we’re talking about. If you’re a sports betting company, if you’re a crypto company, if you’re a video game company, if you’re a social media company, are you making your money by making people better off? Or are you playing on addiction, manipulating social forces? Are you spreading enormous negative externalities around society? And I would argue that’s what’s happening. And partly it is due, I think, to the deregulatory impulse, to the fact that we have lost the ability to regulate things in a smart way.
And so one principle I really want to make clear in all of this is we have to distinguish between children and adults. So we are a generally libertarian country compared to Europe where they’re happy to ban anything. When we’re talking about adults, I think we’re generally right. Generally, we should let adults do what they want unless there’s compelling evidence for some reason. But when we’re talking about kids, it’s entirely different.
And when you have entire trillion-dollar industries, where do they make their money from? I didn’t pay them a penny. You didn’t pay them a penny. Our kids didn’t pay them a penny. That entire value is created by breaking up the day into tiny little bits and sucking out the attention and selling it to advertisers and selling the data.
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I want to think about this, and I guess I’m going to make this next point a little bit to be provocative. I’m not sure how much I believe it. I understand, argumentatively and politically, why you want to just say, look, it’s fine for adults to do basically anything they want. But kids, kids are, the children are our future. We’ve got to do something very different there. Fine. I think in practice it doesn’t work. Why’s that?
Because if you are going to allow something to be both highly morally and legally permissible the moment somebody is 18, or frankly, in a lot of your frameworks, 16, I’m not saying it is literally impossible that you will implement such a hardcore age verification system that it will be impossible to do beneath that. It’s probably going to be pretty hard. Now, I think there are places where it works, but typically you want friction that is both moral and structural. It’s a little bit more of a gradation throughout society.
So what we have lost in a lot of places is friction. And there are things that you want to have some access to, but there’d be friction, right? We had access to things like sports gambling, but you had to drive to Vegas, you know, at least on the West Coast where I grew up. Taking away all the friction, making it available virtually everywhere and online has just then made it very, very, very dangerous to people because some percentage of people are going to develop a gambling problem. What we have done, and I mean, this is the genius of capitalism, what it does is it seeks out how to make the thing more interesting, more potent, more seductive, more alluring.
And that’s really great until a certain point. Yeah, that’s right. At which point the friction between you and the thing becomes too low. And then it’s very, very, very hard for the limited software of the human mind to regulate the wants, at least in some people. And so there’s something about the loss of friction. And I suspect that, and again, this is partially moral frameworks, if we’re going to be completely fine with it at 19, it’s going to be very hard for it to not be too present at 17.
Okay, all right, hold on a second here. So in general, I agree with you that the technology makes everything easy. And for adults, that actually is often good, not always, but often good. But for kids, it’s disastrous because kids need to learn to do hard things. And the technology makes it easy for them to not do hard things.
But if I could just add on, you started this off by saying, oh, you don’t think that we’re not going to get an actual age verification system. The one real obstacle that I have faced, and once I put the book out, you know, parents love it, they’re embracing it, teachers are embracing it. The main objection I get is resignation. It’s just people saying, oh, what are you going to do? You know, the technology is here to stay. You know, the kids, they’re going to have to use it when they’re adults, might as well learn when they’re kids. You know, you can’t put the genie back in the bottle. But actually we can, and we’re doing it.
So I just really want to make the point that we don’t have easy age verification now, but if we incentivize it, we’ll have it within a year. So my colleague at NYU, Scott Galloway, gives the example of how the social media companies, this industry, they put a lot of research and money into advertising. And so they figured out a way that when you click a link anywhere on the internet, when you click a link and then the page loads, in between that time, there has been an auction among thousands of companies for the right to show you, this particular ad.
This is a miracle of technical innovation. And they did that because there was money in it. And now the question is, do you think maybe they could figure out if somebody is under 16 or over 16? Also, that auction knows how old it thinks you are. Yeah, that’s right. Exactly. They know everything about us. And they’re saying, oh, you know, what are you going to do? The kids are going to lie. Like, what are we supposed to do? So we’re going to get age verification. Australia is pushing it. It’s going to work. It doesn’t have to be perfect at first, but within a few years, it will be very good.
So I will stop just trying to be provocative because I do believe you can do age verification. One reason I wanted to have you on right now is it feels like the world is tipping in this. So run me through. Let’s stay not in Australia, but in the U.S. I feel like every day I turn on the news and I see some other governor or mayor announcing no phones in schools. Tell me the scope of this at the moment.
So the way to understand why it’s changing so quickly is to go back before COVID. So Jean Twenge comes out with her famous article in 2017, “Have smartphones destroyed a generation?” Now, at the time, the empirical evidence was not clear at all. And she was savagely attacked by other researchers that, oh, this is just a correlation. No, you have no evidence. It’s not causal. So that’s 2017. With 2019, we’re beginning to see, actually, wait, there is some evidence. And everybody’s now seeing something’s creepy about this. And we’re seeing our kids drift away.
And then COVID comes in. What happens? What kids desperately need in 2019, Jean and I were saying, was more time outside playing, less time on screens. What happens? We freak out. We put in way too strict restrictions. We say, no, you can’t. In New York, they closed the playgrounds. They closed down the ball fields. So no playing outside. You might catch COVID. So things get far, far worse over the next couple of years. But the kids have to be on screens.
So it’s only as COVID began to clear away, people are sort of coming back to their senses about this. And that’s why everybody’s sort of ready to act. And that’s why when my book came out a year ago, it came out in late March of 2024. I didn’t have to persuade anyone. Almost everybody saw, wait, something is going terribly wrong here. And so what’s happening around the world is that legislators are mostly parents. And they’ve seen it. And they’re uncomfortable with it. It doesn’t matter if they’re Democrat or Republican. Heads of state mostly are parents.
The way the Australia bill got started was in South Australia. One of the states, the wife of the premier was reading “The Anxious Generation” in bed. And she turns to him and says, Peter, you’ve got to read this book. And then you’ve got to effing do something about it, is the way that he described it, at least. I think mothers have felt it more keenly than fathers. Mothers just, they’re more emotionally connected in ways they could feel the kids being pulled away. So that’s why it’s happening everywhere, because it’s obvious. It’s common sense. Most people see it.
What is happening everywhere? So I would say it’s a parents’ revolution saying we’re sick and tired. We’re not going to take this anymore. All over the world, family life has turned into a fight over screen time. We’re all fed up. We want to do something about it.
Okay, what do we actually do? I wrote the book as an American, assuming that we’ll never get help from Congress. Now, I hope I’m wrong. There are some bills that could get through. But I was just sort of assuming we have a dysfunctional Congress. Let’s try to do this the way Tocqueville said that we do it. Let’s get together. Let’s figure out how to do this. And so that means action among families and at schools and at states. I am finding states are incredibly responsive. States in the United States are either mostly red or blue. But this is a bipartisan issue.
So the number one step that they’re all taking is so easy and so obvious. And it doesn’t cost anything, which is phone-free schools. Check your phone in the morning. What are some of the states that are doing it? Well, Florida was one of the first, but they did it just during instructional time, which is worthless because then everyone rushes for their phone. They’re on their phone in between classes. They don’t talk to each other. So I’m not sure where they are now. Arkansas, Utah, but it’s-
And Utah is interesting here because that of every state has still the strongest religious culture. Because of the Church of Latter-day Saints. And they have by far the strongest regulations on social media around children. That’s right. I mean, you sort of see the way those two things, that sort of moral framework. And that willing to regulate what feels like a vice is happening there.
That’s right. They also have a really excellent governor. Governor Cox has been just superb. He wants to make Utah the most family-friendly state. And many states want to. And, you know, if we feel that we can’t let our kids out and our kids are rotting away on screens and there’s screens all day in the school, that’s not a family-friendly place. So, yeah, Utah has been great on this.
Oh, here we are in New York. Governor Hochul has been great on this. We’re going to get phone-free, bell-to-bell legislation here in New York. New Jersey is moving that way. Connecticut. So we’re seeing it all over the country. That’s the phone-free schools.
So in the book, I say there are four norms. With four norms, we can roll back the phone-based childhood. The first is no smartphone before high school. Do not give your kid a touchscreen. This includes an iPad. Don’t give them their own touchscreen before high school or age 14. And that’s not a law. That’s a norm that we’re trying to promote.
The second is no social media until 16. And that could be sort of a norm. I mean, if enough of us do it, it gets easier. But we really need law. That’s where we really need law. And that’s why I’m so excited about Australia. Indonesia is, I believe, planning on it. A whole bunch of nations. If it works in Australia, it’s going to go global very quickly.
I’m just, the clarification, and I actually don’t know. Australia is no smartphone or no social media before 16? The key is the age of internet adulthood. At what age are you old enough to sign a contract with a giant corporation to give away your data and your rights and let them stuff stuff into you chosen by their algorithm? At what age? And current American law says as long as you’re old enough to lie, you’re old enough to do this. If you’re 10, just say you’re 13 and the companies can do whatever they want for you.
Oh, and we can’t sue them. They’re freed from that by Section 230. So that’s the current law is that there is no age of internet anywhere in the world. Like, you just lie. But what Australia is saying is you’re going to, the companies are going to have to figure out how to do this, that you have to do some sort of age assurance so that if you’re 16, you can sign this away without parental consent. Your parents don’t have to know.
And right now, 10-year-olds are getting on Instagram and TikTok, even 8-year-olds. So this has to stop. And Australia, they finally put their foot down and said, this is going to stop here. Okay, so that was the second. The third is phone-free schools. And that, I think we’re going to, I don’t know how many, but I think it’s going to be the majority of kids. The majority of American kids are going to be in phone-free schools within two years. Phone-free, away for the day.
So many states have done it already, and I think a lot of the rest are going to implement it by next September. So that one has moved. That’s the main norm where there’s been spectacular change around the world. And then the fourth is far more independence, free play, and responsibility in the real world.
Because what I urge people to do is don’t just focus on taking away the screens. Focus on restoring a fun childhood, as we were talking about before. A human childhood, a childhood spent not under your parents’ gaze doing homework or on a screen, but a childhood where you’re having fun with your friends in mixed-age groups.
So one of the things that I think is interesting and important about this, and it’s very present in your book, is how hard it is for parents to do it individually. Yes. And it feels like it’s why it’s such an interesting and important place for legislation, because it really is hard to be a parent saying your kid can’t have what all the other kids have and be on these messaging systems that they’re all using to plan things.
And right, like you actually do at a certain point isolate your child at this moment that you’re trying to figure out a way to give them deeper social bonds. So legislation here, I mean, I find it very, very encouraging. It would be freeing. That’s right. What you’re describing is a collective action trap. And so the reason why we have to give our kids phones and Instagram is not because we like it, but because they say, Mom, everyone else has it. I’m excluded. I’m being left out.
So the way you get out of a collective action trap is with collective action. And so that’s what I’m really urging in the book. It can be as simple as just talk to the parents of your kids’ friends, agree that you’re all going to have these norms, and then they’re not the only one. And especially if you get the kids together a lot, then they have a fun childhood.
Two horrendous statistics that I can’t get out of my mind. The first is 50%, which is the percentage of American teens that say that they’re online almost constantly. Almost constantly. You know, they’re not necessarily looking at the phone 16 hours a day, but if they’re talking to you, they’re actually thinking about the drama going on that they can’t wait to check. So half of our kids are basically, their consciousness, their lives are owned by a few big social media companies.
Here’s the other stat that I just learned last week. 40%. That’s the percentage of two-year-olds, two-year-olds in America who have their own iPad, their own iPad. Because we’ve all discovered, just give the kid an iPad or give them your old phone that you traded up from, and she’ll be quiet. And you can do your email, and you can cook dinner, and you can do what you want. And so it’s become normal to give kids this little babysitter, which is really like, I think, giving them morphine or something like that.
I remember when I gave our kids an iPad to use. And I remember what age it was, you know, called three or four, probably one of them was sick. And I realized pretty quickly that YouTube was terrifying. Yeah. And I don’t just mean because it would end up in weird, computer-generated garbage that sometimes turned very creepy, although that happened too. But that it was the endlessness of it. They would never even watch a full thing, basically, because they were always hitting the next thing under it.
Because there’s always something more interesting. And this was sort of when I began thinking a lot more about friction. Yeah. Because the difference between me putting a movie on for them, right, a Pixar movie or something, and then having access to the algorithm.
Yeah, that’s right. You could really tell the difference in it, the difference in what it asked of them, right? I think there’s a place I want to bring in something that obsesses me, maybe just strangely, which is attention. When I think about what it is, I want to try to parent in my children. Yeah, I want them to be kind. I want them to be interested and curious about the world. But I want them to have healthy, attentional faculties. I want them to have healthy bodies and healthy attention. And I don’t really know how to do it. I have some theories.
But this is one of these things that just terrifies me, right? When I read these things about, you know, these kids graduating who can’t read a book, it’s not because they’re stupid. It’s because we have raised them on technologies that have deranged their attention to develop the attention necessary to read a tale to sit.
Yeah. That is, you’re developing an attentional faculty that changes the literal shape of your brain. And I think that was good. I think that the written word and creating the literal brain was good. And we are uncreating it now.
So, two things. The first is, in the anxious generation, I think I grossly underestimated the harm that’s happening because I focused on mental illness. But the bigger damage, I think, is the destruction of human attention in millions, possibly tens or hundreds of millions of kids around the world. You know, when you talk to pre-K teachers, they say the kids are coming with language delays, social problems because they were raised on iPads.
So, let me give a suggestion to parents like you with your young kids. I wish I understood this when my kids were young. Let’s distinguish between a pretty good use of screens and a really, really bad use of screens. So, a pretty good use of screens is to put on a long movie, like 90 minutes. They’re going to pay attention to a long movie about characters in a moral universe. So, there’s issues of good and bad and norms and betrayal. And it’s part of their moral training, their moral formation.
And they’re watching it with another person. Now, that can be you, ideally. But it’s okay if it’s a sibling or a friend because it’s social. Here’s what’s really, really bad. iPad time by yourself. Because that’s exactly the opposite. It’s solitary. It’s not stories. And if they are stories, there are 15-second stories that are amoral or really immoral, really disgusting, degrading things. And people doing terrible things to each other.
And then the other thing that I really want parents to understand is that this is not like TV. TV is a good way of entertainment. TV puts out a story. But a touchscreen is a behaviorist training device. A touchscreen, you get a stimulus, you make a response, and then you get a reward, which gives you a little bit of dopamine, which makes you want to do it again and again and again. So, a touchscreen can train your child the way a circus trainer can train an animal. TV isn’t like that.
So, iPad time, iPhone time for your three, four, five-year-old is just not a good thing. Well, it trains us all. I mean, to go back to something I was saying earlier, one reason I am skeptical of this very sharp cut between kids and adults is I think adults’ attentional faculties are being deranged, including, by the way, mine. I professionally need to keep my attention healthy.
Right. And it is a day-to-day struggle. That’s right. And so, for adults, too, and also kids become adults, right? All these kids are talking about from this generation you’re talking about. I mean, 24-year-olds were 16-year-olds not very long ago, right? They were growing up in this. And this is one of the things I worry about it for democracy, but I just worry about it.
I think there are more and less healthy forms of attention. And I think that we have tipped, at some point, into a societally less healthy form of attention. And we don’t really know what to do about that. And we don’t want to scold people about it. We barely even have the language for it.
Yeah. But I think we’re developing it because everyone feels, most people feel what you just said. I feel it. We all feel it. I’ve focused on kids because, in terms of policy, the ability of our country or states to put limits on kids for their own protection is very, very high. As soon as you turn 18, it’s an entirely different game.
So, I don’t think we’re going to ask for a lot of legislation to protect us adults from the things on our phone. Johan Harry has this wonderful book, “Stolen Focus.” And I believe he’s right when he says, if we adults clear it out. Well, take the Shabbat, although, you know, a Sabbath is one day. That’s not enough. You need a couple of weeks, actually, to get the dopamine circuits to readapt to normal levels.
But if we adults clear it out, then we can regain our attention. I think he’s right in saying that. Whereas, if you go through puberty doing this, if we have 10-year-olds on TikTok and they stay on it until they’re 18, there’s a possibility. We don’t know, but there’s a possibility that it will cause permanent changes and that they will permanently be less able to pay attention, to read a book.
This is a way in which I think we have trouble talking about it. Take the fight we’ve been having about TikTok. We are willing to have this debate about whether something as attentionally important as TikTok, right? TikTok is, I would call it, critical attentional infrastructure, should be owned by a Chinese company.
Yeah, that’s right. It’s the greatest demolisher of attention in human history. Well, you know, whether you even want to go that far, which I would too, but it is something that is capturing an almost unfathomable amount of the attention of Americans every single day. So, we can have this conversation about, do we think it should be owned by a Chinese company?
We are not willing to really have a conversation about, is it good that so many people are training themselves to have such fast attentional change? For many of them, hours a day, right? The stickiness of TikTok use is extraordinary if you look at it, if you look at SurveyDead on its user base. And I mean, it’s built to be that way. It is successful because it is sticky. And we’ve unleashed this or allowed this to be unleashed on the entire country.
I teach a course at NYU Stern called “Flourishing.” These are all business students. They’re mostly sophomores, 19 years old. And I say, do you want to be successful? And they all say, yes. I say, well, if you give away all of your attention, I can almost promise you, you’re not going to be successful. You’re not going to do anything. So, step one in this course is you must regain control of your attention.
And the students who are heavy social media users, who cut down from four hours a day to less than one, they get transformative results. They have so much time. They can do their homework. They’re not as distracted. They’re more open to other people. But something you just said, it goes back to this question that sits for me about what are we connecting our judgments to? Because you said, well, look, these are business school students. You’re telling them you can’t be successful and not have control of your attention.
I would say you absolutely can be successful and not have control of your attention. Give me a layout of that. Elon Musk is highly successful and is a man who is clearly attentionally deranged. You don’t think, wait a second. Yes. Okay. But you don’t think that when he was building these businesses, you don’t think that he sometimes went hours at a time focusing on a problem?
I think probably when he was building, but this is a bit of what I mean, that everybody who is in these worlds can see people now who are by any measure successful, in part by dominating the attentional sphere and posting constantly. I don’t think Donald Trump, in part because of these systems, in part because of these systems, these platforms are building themselves to reward it, right? They are encouraging this.
You know, you have to post enough or you’re not going to get into the algorithm and get what you want out of it. I’m not sure it’s healthy. I’m sure it’s not healthy. Well, I’m sure it’s not healthy. But I think that part of how Elon Musk became the richest man in the world was harnessing all this attention, much of it negative. Part of how Donald Trump became the president of the United States twice is harnessing all this attention, really embodying the attentional ethic of these sites.
Even in a smaller way, there are fewer stable jobs in institutional media. In many ways, it’s probably more likely that you can become an independent creator, certainly than it was like 20 years ago. Is there a danger that the sort of way you want us to raise children is actually suffused in nostalgia for an economy, for a politics that no longer exists? It’s not being deformed, it’s being adapted.
Right, right. In theory, yes, there is a danger of that. And history would suggest examples of it. Every generation is wary of the technology that comes in that the kids are using. So if it turned out that our kids were flourishing, then I would just be an old man shaking his head at the clouds. But our kids are the least flourishing generation we know of ever, certainly in modern times.
If it was the case that our kids love this stuff and they said, no, we love TikTok, no, let us keep TikTok, then maybe I just don’t understand it. But we did a survey with the Harris Poll, and 50% of Gen Z said they would prefer that TikTok was never invented, never invented. They feel trapped by it.
So if you’ve got the kids themselves, they don’t want to give it up, which is the paradox. But they don’t want to be the only one. If we could all give it up, then actually most of them would do it. Well, but the idea that it’d be banned was not greeted with flowers and chocolates. No, but guess what? There wasn’t much objection. There were creators. There were people making money from it. But I was surprised. There was not a youth rebellion saying, no, let us keep…
I think you’re not on TikTok and you’re not a legislator getting letters about this. Well, right, because TikTok motivated a lot of them to write to their legislators. But the point is that when you survey them, they feel trapped and they’re looking for an escape. They’re just terrified of being the only one. So in theory, you know, I could be wrong and we will adapt this. But I think the way you described it, well, no, they’re just, you know, they’ve adapted to it. I would say they’ve been deformed by it.
So there’s a sense in which they fit, but they fit not as agents. They fit not as full human beings who are making a future of themselves. They fit as human fodder that has been sucked into the machine and molded to what the machine wants out of them, which is their attention. This is one of the tricky things about success right now, because visible success is almost definitionally constantly present, which is very different than the kind of success of a tremendous physics researcher whose work you can’t read.
Right, that’s right. Because it’s very complicated, and they’re not posting a lot of memes about it. So what you’re describing is a path that opened up to prestige. So teenagers are desperate for prestige. And what the social media companies did, and we know this from things that insiders have said, is they hacked that. They said, you know, normally throughout history to become prestigious, you had to become a good archer or a good leader or a good basket weaver. You had to do something in the world and then people would respect you and you would gain in social status.
That’s the way it always used to be. And what social media is able to do is say, you don’t have to do anything. Just do whatever it takes to get people to follow you and bingo, you’ve got prestige. And where does it end? I’ll tell you where it ends. In one of the most disgusting apps I’ve ever seen. Well, there are lots of competition, but there’s a thing called Famify. And the idea is lots of young people are lonely. They’re not able to get followers. They’re putting stuff out there. Nobody’s watching.
Well, that’s really crushing. Imagine your nine-year-old not getting any followers. But if you give her Famify, Famify will generate as many followers as you want. You want millions? You got it. Millions of followers. And you can see them. You know, they’re praising you. They’re giving you hearts. So Famify is a way to take what you just said that, oh, well, yes, well, they actually, they are searching for a way to be successful without any attention. No need. Just give them Famify.
And this is AI followers? AI followers. That’s right. Oh, this is the most Black Mirror shit I’ve ever heard. Exactly. And this is why I am so passionate about how we have to move quickly this year, 2025. This is really our last year before AI really has a big impact on life. You know, now that we’re moving not just from you can know everything to now we have agents, you can do everything. I mean, the internet in a sense gave us omniscience, but now AI with agents is going to give us omnipotence. And that would be horrible for children.
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Let’s talk about AI. If you ask me, do I think that by the time my three and six-year-old are in middle school, we will figure out the smartphones and social media in schools question? I think we will. We will. What AI is, is functionally the collapse of all friction between you and any desire that can be fulfilled on a computer. That’s right. So, relationships are the one I actually think about the most. I’ve said this many, many times before.
I’m a believer in transformational artificial intelligence. I think it’s coming very, very fast. If you ask me if I think we will see economic super growth anytime soon, I would say no. I think it is going to be more evident in its upheaval of relationships before it transforms our economy. Because our economy has all kinds of friction in it. It’s very hard to rebuild firms around AI. But what about when you can have any kind of digital friend you want? Or, for that matter, a digital lover? Yep.
And that friend, that lover, there’s a really good daily on this recently about AI sex bots. Yeah, I listened to that. That was great. The sound in that, though, is frightening to me. Because you got why the AI was a good partner. More responsive than any man, probably. More responsive than any man. And it is so much worse at doing that right now than it will be in two years. Yes, that’s right. Like, it is going to be so good. And it’s going to endlessly adapt to what you want from it.
And I think the friction of relationships between human beings is really, really important. It’s good for me as a person that my wife just does not adapt herself into whatever I want her to say. Right? It is part of being a healthy human being that other people exist with friction to you. I was a very lonely kid. I did not have many friends. What if I’d had a lot of AI friends? That began to pattern my expectations of other human beings. And then when they did not fulfill them, then that was a frustration to me.
And it made my AI community that much more alluring. This scares the hell out of me. I’m not saying that on a 20-year time frame we won’t adapt, but on a 5 or 10, we don’t even know how to think about it. The way we adapt is by preventing kids from having these friendships. So here I’ll draw on a really insightful analysis from a Christian writer, Andy Crouch. I did a session with him at NYU. We had a conversation mostly on Chapter 8 of The Anxious Generation on the spirituality chapter.
And he said something so powerful. I always bring it up because it’s so helpful. He said, what is magic? Magic is instant, effortless effect on the world. Snap your fingers, something appears. It’s always been the human dream. And technology is essentially magic. Technology allows us to do things. You want a car to come pick you up? Press a button. Hey, here’s this car. So the technology is magic. And he says, now let’s look at how children are formed.
How do you get an adult? And again, he’s coming from a Christian perspective. So they care a lot about the moral formation, the religious formation of their children. And he says, the three areas of formation for children are home, school, and church. Or any religious organization. So he says, those are the three areas. And he says, all three of those areas are now colonized by tech. All three of them. And all three of them, kids have magic available to them all the time.
Even in church, I’m hearing from pastors. They’ll say, pull out your Bible. They pull out their phone. They look at the passage, but then they go on and do something else. So I think we have to stop. This is not even about the content. We have to stop saying, oh, we just need better content moderation. No, we don’t. We need to realize kids have to go through a childhood in the real world with other kids within a moral universe where they experience the consequences of their own action.
And they have to learn how to deal with real people who are frustrating. And if we give them AI companions that they can order around, that will always flatter them, we are creating people that no one will want to employ or marry. So we’ve got to stop. As I alluded to, I was a pretty friendless kid. I had a lot of trouble socially. I would often have like one or two friends, but for a lot of my childhood, I alienated people.
And I remember at one point, my mom saying she wanted to, this is kind of a sad story, but wanted to pay this nice older kid on the street to sort of watch me function to be my friend. I sort of had the embarrassment or the presence of mind to say no to that. Okay. I try to imagine though, as I was like moving school to school to get away from bullying and was having that much trouble. My parents had no answers for me because they did not.
Trying to keep that kid as that kid’s parent from disappearing into the computer, right? Disappearing into this world where, well, somebody will be, something will be his friend, something will be his companion. And of course, what’s going to be the thin edge of the wedge is AI tutors, right? Which are going to be very effective. Very powerful, that’s right. And are going to be positive too. It’s not that this technology will have no good adaptations.
Even now, I sometimes use ChatGP with my kids and we sit together and we make up stories and it illustrates them, which is like a really fun thing to do. It’s great. It’s all easy to sit here and say, well, I don’t want my 13-year-old having a sex bot or an array of sex bots in their pocket, but it’s not going to come in like that. Much in the way that the internet came in more benignly before it got jacked up to 11.
It’ll come in for kids who are having a lot more trouble socially, but now there’s somebody for them to talk to. For kids whose parents work multiple jobs, neurodiverging kids, and a lot of it will be good. It will be good for some kids. But the more adoption there is, and the more these companies are already in the door and competing with each other for your kids’ attention, the more the sort of darker side of it will begin to flower. That’s right.
And that’s what worries me here. It’s all so new, but it’s all so adaptable. I was talking with somebody who works at one of the big AI companies about this, and he was saying to me, oh, but the good thing about AI is that it’s really flexible. You can tell it, you can give it whatever value prompt you want to give it, right? If you want to tell it to not just do whatever your kid wants, right? You could do that. And yeah, it’s sort of always true that you could.
But when I look at the way the markets actually work here, that eventually what’s going to happen is we’re going to give people what they want, not what we think they should want. And that’s the part. I can imagine negotiating structures on this over a long period of time, as we have with social media maybe, but we’re not going to understand it for a long period of time. That’s right. We’ll never catch up with it. And it’s going to be evolving very rapidly during this period of time. And it really frightens me as a parent.
Yeah, as it should. So a couple of concepts here. One is the concept of entanglement. So Tristan Harris of the Center for Humane Technology points out that social media has gotten so entangled in our world that it’s really hard to roll it back. Many schools communicate on Instagram. They require the kids to have smartphones. So it’s really hard to rip it out once it’s already taken root.
Both of my kids’ schools communicate with me by app. Yeah, that’s right. It’s like hard not to have a phone. It’s by app. It’s not even by the computer. It has to be on my phone. It has to be your phone. That’s right. So social media is so entangled, it’s very hard to rip it out. It’s going to be very hard to get it out of our kids’ childhoods, but that’s what we’re working on. AI is not yet entangled. AI is just coming in, and in two or three years, it will be entangled.
And as you say, there are many good applications. Khan Academy uses AI very well. And if we could have a device that just did Khan Academy and nothing else, that I can see would have a positive impact on education. Maybe we don’t have to throw out all the iPads from the schools. Maybe we could use them if we can reduce them to one function. The one thing I worry about with using the AI to draw everything my kid wants to draw is that does it reduce the interest in actually drawing?
Oh, yes. Yeah, that’s right. It does. I mean, you know, kids are losing the ability to draw, to write. These technologies, so far, Silicon Valley has a horrible track record at living up to its promises, especially for kids. So social media is going to connect everyone. No, it actually disconnected everyone. So when the purveyors of AI say, oh, it’s going to be all these amazing uses. And AI, there clearly will. And there already are.
I’m finding that Claude and ChatGPT are just really helpful adjuncts to research. So I love AI as an adult. But we have to understand, children are not adults. And given the track record so far, we have to assume that these AI companions will be very bad for our children. That’s what the Silicon Valley people themselves say, in the sense that they have already voted to keep their kids away from social media and technology. They send their kids to the Waldorf school.
So we have to approach all of this with a really skeptical eye, especially for our children. Start by assuming it’s harming your kids. And then you can bring in some uses where it’s not. Let me ask you about another dimension of this, which I’ve found myself obsessing over recently. So you’re a professor at business school. And you’re a professor at an elite school. And we were talking about instrumental education earlier.
I think that it was a pretty reasonable expectation. I think parents would raise their kids and push them to study with the sort of expectation that, you know what, if they could get to the NYU Stern School of Business, they’re probably going to be okay out there in the economy. And then you mentioned how good AI is getting at being an adjunct to your research. And I already see that.
You know, I’ve been playing around with deep research. And I can already see how good that is getting at research and how quick it is. And it would change what I needed in terms of research. It feels like an event horizon to me. Yes, it does. Of what should my children be educated towards. In many ways, I would say it’ll be much safer to be educated towards being an electrician than to be educated towards being, you know, a contract lawyer.
And I doubt there has been a moment as a parent when what society, the economy will want or value or reward in people in 15 or 20 years has been as liquid. Yeah, that’s right. How would you think about this? So the way I think about it is that I often hear the argument, well, you know, this is the world the kids are in. And for them to be successful, they need to master the technology. And it’s going to be in the workplace.
And my answer is very simple. I’m teaching these kids, if you want to send me someone who’s going to do well at NYU Stern, don’t send me someone who has mastered Instagram. Send me someone who has homeschooled, never had any of this garbage. They’re able to pay attention. They’re able to read a book. They’re, you know, in a sense, our brains are LLMs in a sense. And so don’t send me kids whose LLMs were filled in by TikTok.
Send me a kid whose LLM was figured in within a stable moral community. And that kid is going to be adapted for the future because he didn’t have the current technology when he was growing up. The current technology is a giant obstacle to human development. And so if you want to prepare your kid for the future, think very carefully about the technology you immerse him in. I do feel like this is a connecting thread in a lot of your work, which is that human beings need to develop as human beings around other human beings in little human societies.
Yep, that’s what we evolved for. The more we, particularly in childhood, pull them away from that, the worse they will turn out in terms of mental health, but probably a lot of other things. I would never say that as a blanket rule. We don’t have to raise our kids the way Hunter Gatherers did. There are many aspects of modern life that are improvements. So I would not endorse a blind sort of, you know, well, this is the way it used to be, so this is what we should do.
But when we begin to see evidence, and it’s just kind of obvious, what do you think? Do you think kids should be raised around other kids or around screens? Like, it’s just kind of obvious. So yes, I’ve always studied morality, but I’ve always done it from multiple perspectives. I’ve always been a developmental psychologist, a social psychologist, an evolutionary psychologist. I read anthropology.
So you put all these together and you get this view of this amazing, amazing species that developed culture. No other species has culture. I mean, chimps have a tiny bit. And the miracle of our ability to develop these skills and the ability to communicate. And then we come in and we radically change childhood and we think, maybe it’ll be okay. Well, it’s not okay. It’s pretty clear it’s not okay. We didn’t radically change childhood.
We didn’t think about radically changing it. A few companies did. A few companies have radically changed childhood and we’ve accepted it. And we feel we can’t stop them and they’re able to stop bills in Congress and they’re able to, they have giant PR budgets and they’re able to manipulate the narrative behind the scenes. So yeah, it’s a hell of a struggle. But what we’re seeing is a parents’ revolution around the world. And I think if most parents rise up and say no more, I think we’re going to win.
It’s interesting that you’ve had to sit down and ask, what is a syllabus on flourishing? Yeah. What is a syllabus on flourishing? Oh, I can tell you in just a few words. The course is organized around making you stronger emotionally. So stronger, smarter, and more sociable. Because if we can do that together, if we can, you have to cultivate new habits, make changes to your routine. If you can become stronger, smarter, and more sociable, then you are likely to be more successful in love, broadly construed relationships, in love and in work.
And that’s the modern formula for happiness, success in love and work, as Freud originally said. And if you are more successful in love and in work, then you will be happier. That’s almost guaranteed. So that’s what the course is about. What that you assign connects the most? Oh, this, well, I know you’re going to ask me about the three books. You know what, let’s just do the three books right now because this is the three books, okay?
The three books, for the undergrads especially, and this is what I would recommend to any member of Gen Z, any young person in their 20s, anybody who feels their attention has been fried and they want to get it back. Here are the three books. The first is The Stoic Challenge by William Irvine. It really makes stoicism just so accessible. When you get setbacks, the students learn to say, oh, I just missed the subway, now I’m going to be late.
Like, Stoic Challenge, you just say, Stoic Challenge, it’s as though they’re stoic gods, and they’re testing me to make me strong. And yeah, I missed my train, but am I going to also hurt myself by stewing for 20 minutes? Nope. I’m going to be calm about it. And so you develop that habit of more stoic reactions, and they get stronger. They’re not so anxious. They don’t get angry or irritated at other people so much. So Stoic Challenge.
The second book is by Cal Newport. It’s called Deep Work. And this is why I’m so passionate about attention. Without your attention, you can’t do anything. And as Newport says, a deep life, where you do a lot of deep work, a deep life is a good life. It is a rich life. And so Cal Newport, we work on that to regain their attention. We work on turning off almost all notifications on moving social media off your phone onto your computer, and then for some, deleting it from the computer.
So that’s a wonderful book. And then the third book is Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People. It is timeless. He is writing in the 30s, and he is such a great social psychologist. So I urge everybody, listeners, if you have not read Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People, I urge you to read it. Ideally, in the 1936 edition. It’s so charming. Don’t get the modern one for the digital age. It’s completely rewritten.
It’s not, the writing’s not nearly as good. But those are the three books. So the first one makes you stronger. If you do the Stoic Challenge over a couple months, you get stronger. You’re not as reactive to negative things. If you read Deep Work and take it seriously, you’re going to spend a lot less time on social media. You’re going to take control of your time so you have time for deep work. And if you read Dale Carnegie, you’re going to be just much more effective in conversation and maintaining relationships.
That’s it. Those three books. Jonathan Knight, thank you very much. Thank you, Ezra. This episode of The Ezra Clown Show is produced by Jack McCordick. Fact-checking by Michelle Harris with Mary Marge Locker and Kate Sinclair. Mixing by Isaac Jones with Afim Shapiro and Amin Sahota. Our supervising editor is Claire Gordon. The show’s production team also includes Roland Hu, Elias Iskwith, and Kristen Lynn.
We have original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Christina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.
This is an experimental rewrite
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Ezra Klein: From New York Times Opinion, this is The Ezra Klein Show. Last March, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt released a book titled The Anxious Generation, which sparked considerable debate. The subtitle reveals much: How the great rewiring of childhood is causing an epidemic of mental illness. It’s hard to argue against that. However, Haidt’s conclusions are controversial. He’s pushing back against the panic surrounding children’s use of smartphones, facing significant criticism from fellow researchers who argue that cause and effect can’t simply be disentangled. Jonathan Haidt presents a frightening narrative that resonates with many concerned parents.
I always found the discussions surrounding this book a bit frustrating because they highlight one of the challenges we encounter as parents and as a society: the tendency to reduce everything to social science. Unless I can provide data proving something is harmful, we often struggle to articulate that it might be bad. To me, this signals a decline in our understanding of what constitutes a good life and what it means to thrive as a human being. So, I largely avoided that debate; on one hand, I couldn’t definitively address the issue, and on the other, I didn’t want to dismiss its significance.
A year later, though, two noteworthy developments have emerged. First, Haidt’s book has maintained its place on the bestseller list, which is quite rare. Clearly, it has struck a chord. Second, policy changes are aligning with Haidt’s views. The governor of Utah has enacted a sweeping bill to restrict children’s access to social media, while Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has signed one of the most stringent social media regulations in the country. This controversial move by DeSantis might have actually resonated with me. Additionally, the movement to ban cell phones in schools is gaining momentum nationwide, with states like Florida, Michigan, South Carolina, and Virginia adopting similar measures. We’re seeing it extend to all schools in Arizona, with nine other states considering similar bans.
So, how are your phones being owned? We’re witnessing a genuine shift in policies regarding how we approach children in this social media era, under both Republican and Democratic leadership. As a parent, I’m increasingly confident that we will navigate this complexity by the time my children are old enough for it to impact them. Yet, the looming presence of AI threatens to disrupt any consensus we reach, which honestly terrifies me. That’s why I wanted to invite Haidt onto the show. He is a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business and also the author of The Righteous Mind, a standout work on political psychology, along with several other publications. He continues to explore and analyze the research surrounding social media.
As always, feel free to reach out to me at Ezra Klein Show at NYTimes.com. John Haidt, welcome to the show.
John Haidt: Ezra, it’s great to be back with you.
Ezra Klein: Let’s start with the big question: What is childhood for?
John Haidt: Childhood is evolution’s way of forming a big-brained cultural creature. It requires extensive play and practice of various skills, both social and physical, to prepare the brain for adulthood.
Childhood features a developmental period where experiences shape who you become. Once you reach a certain point, you’re ready to transition to adulthood, become reproductive, and eventually have children. However, if play is absent from childhood, you won’t develop properly into adulthood. There was a statistic in your book that startled me every time I read it, especially now that I have a five-year-old who just turned six. It states that by age five, the human brain is already 90% of its adult size and possesses more neurons than it will have as an adult.
John Haidt: That’s correct. We often think of physical growth as a simple function of time correlating to size. Yet, the brain is a remarkable organ, filled with neurons capable of connecting in countless ways. As neuroscientists say, “neurons that fire together, wire together.” For example, if you repeatedly engage in climbing trees or practicing archery, specific systems will form in your brain, honing those skills. Conversely, if you spend your time swiping, tapping, and responding to emotional stimuli, your brain will adapt to that experience.
Ezra Klein: Almost everyone over 35 has this shared experience. How did you grow up?
John Haidt: I am one of the older millennials. I don’t remember the exact age I was allowed to ride my bike around the neighborhood, but I recall spending a lot of time as part of a pack of kids living on my street. We played kickball using someone’s garage door as a backboard.
Ezra Klein: That’s interesting. I also noticed that those experiences seemed to have a significant age diversity.
John Haidt: Exactly. That’s how childhood traditionally was. There were periods, like during the Industrial Revolution, when children didn’t have a proper childhood. Developmental psychologist Peter Gray discusses how hunter-gatherers raised their children with minimal supervision. In those communities, children played and learned from one another without strict parental oversight. Older kids took care of younger ones, and the younger ones learned what it meant to be a capable member of society by observing slightly older peers.
In America and elsewhere in the West, we’ve implemented school systems that group children strictly by age. This organized approach not only disrupts natural childhood experiences but may also hinder development. Everyone who came before the millennials experienced a different childhood; millennials represent a transitional generation. Yes, even though the rates of crime during the 90s were microscopic and declining, that era marked a significant shift in how we managed our children. We began to fear abductions or dangers, leading us to restrict their freedom.
One statistic you brought up in the book really struck me: Despite parents today often working multiple jobs and being more involved, they spend far more time with their children than in previous decades. I hadn’t realized that this increase wasn’t gradual but rather sharp in the 90s.
John Haidt: Indeed, there’s a surprising graph in the book showcasing how parenting time shifted dramatically. In the 50s, 60s, and 70s, women did not spend five hours a day actively parenting because kids were, as we’ve discussed, socialized in a different way. It wasn’t solely the responsibility of parents to socialize their children. Instead, parents established a conducive environment and moral framework, allowing children to learn and grow independently.
The real brain development occurs when children explore beyond their immediate home environment, often referred to as the “home base.” As mammals, the process involves gradually venturing further from this base. This is where significant learning happens—through activities like playing kickball and negotiating rules within their peer group.
Ezra Klein: I’m noticing a connection there with the modern culture of parenting, where many parents equate good parenting with the quantity of time spent with their kids.
John Haidt: Exactly—that’s what many refer to as “quality time.” But simply spending a lot of focused time together doesn’t guarantee that children are having a rich childhood. Instead of measuring time spent, it’s vital to foster a warm, trusting relationship and provide structure, order, and discipline.
The change initiated in the 90s can be partly attributed to a growing distrust in our communities. If we consider Robert Putnam’s concept of “bowling alone” and the decline of social capital, we’ve shifted from relying on our neighbors to help oversee our children. Parents once had faith that if kids played outside unsupervised, other adults in the vicinity would look out for them. The atmosphere has changed, leading to diminished growth opportunities for children when their primary attachment figure is always present, which negatively impacts both the kids and the parents.
In this setting, mothers often shoulder an overwhelming responsibility, even while balancing jobs outside the home. It leads us to the realization that modern parenting dynamics tend to be detrimental to both children and adults.
Ezra Klein: So, we see this cultural shift beginning in the 90s—growing fears around personal safety, decreasing community trust, and simultaneous increases in threats posed by screen time.
John Haidt: Absolutely, that’s when we saw the emergence of dedicated children’s programming like Nickelodeon. Prior to that, programming for kids was sporadic, with cartoons or children’s shows airing primarily on Saturday mornings.
From there, we encountered an explosion of cable channels, followed by the dawn of the internet, iPads, iPhones, and video game consoles. How does this transition to a smartphone and tablet-centric childhood affect mental health?
Around 2012 and 2013, we began noticing a rise in mental illness indicators, particularly during this new phase of technology adoption. While I initially focused on the 2010 to 2015 period, your question highlights a broader context that includes cable television’s impact.
I was born in 1963 and spent my childhood in the late 60s and early 70s watching shows like I Dream of Jeannie and Gilligan’s Island. I showed these to my kids, and they seemed so simplistic. But that was all we had.
Ezra Klein: Your experience contrasts sharply with what children have now.
John Haidt: Right. With cable, programming became more engaging. I remember getting my first Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which revolutionized gaming with its availability and mass adoption.
Ezra Klein: What year was that?
John Haidt: I can’t recall the exact year, but it was during the late 80s. The NES changed the game, allowing access to entertainment at any time.
Ezra Klein: It could hold a child’s attention intensely.
John Haidt: For sure. While I’ve focused more on the arrival of the internet, it’s important to remember how gaming didn’t even require it before high-speed internet became ubiquitous around 2008 or 2009. With that shift, a new era began in social gaming.
As multiplayer games grew in popularity, it changed the dynamics. Suddenly, social interactions became possible without being physically together, creating a different kind of experience. However, it also meant that boys engaged significantly with multiplayer games. My son, for instance, played Fortnite—I didn’t let him start until he turned 13—but he and his friends shared laughter in their online engagement, even though they weren’t in the same room.
Meanwhile, girls often found themselves isolated, each managing their own Instagram accounts. They might find humor in something, but there wasn’t that shared laughter. Reflecting on the debate surrounding your book, I’ve noticed a tendency to endlessly dissect whether social media is a cause or correlate of anxiety. It leaves a feeling that we’ve lost a coherent vision for what we want to cultivate in young people.
We’ve defaulted to metrics to assess child development, with measures like grades becoming the primary gauge of wellness. Despite kids achieving high grades—often through inflation—they may still struggle internally.
On the other side, there seems to be an acceptance of consumer choices, wherein experiences that kids enjoy become permissible, provided they aren’t overtly harmful. However, this raises questions about how children are learning to navigate the moral complexities of life.
John Haidt: I believe attention is one of the vital virtues we neglect. We often hear about concerns that kids today struggle to focus—having trouble reading books or engaging with films. This isn’t just about academic success; it’s about cultivating kindness and nurturing other virtues that are becoming increasingly difficult to articulate.
Ezra Klein: There appears to be a hesitation among parents to assert that certain behaviors are simply “bad.”
John Haidt: Exactly! What you’ve identified is a loss of moral grounding. When raising kids without guiding principles, it’s bound to go awry. You’ve mentioned that you explore this theme in your book, touching on spirituality and moral frameworks.
Ezra Klein: Yes, it’s as though parenting has lost touch with a clear vision of what we want youth to become.
John Haidt: You’ve brought up a central divide I discuss in The Righteous Mind, where conservatism tends to preserve existing structures and wisdom passed down through generations. The right generally adheres to a constrained view of human nature, believing that without structures and rules, children may not thrive. Meanwhile, the left often resists imposing a moral order.
In the modern era, I believe parents could benefit from adopting more conservative principles regarding moral inputs. Children develop within a moral framework, and without that, they lack a sense of meaning and purpose in life.
While I am a secular Jew and was once staunchly on the left, my perspective has evolved. When I wrote The Righteous Mind, I discovered that every society historically had rich moral frameworks that provide individuals with a sense of belonging. Removing that framework leaves kids feeling adrift—a condition noted by sociologist Émile Durkheim as “anomie” or normlessness.
Surveying high school seniors since the 70s, we found that the percentage of those agreeing with the statement “my life feels useless” remained around 9% until 2010 when it suddenly surged, doubling over the next five to ten years.
I believe that immersion in morally structured narratives can significantly impact children’s development. The stories we grew up with often had clear moral lessons. Even simplistic shows like I Dream of Jeannie contained underlying moral messages. In contrast, the content kids consume on TikTok and Instagram lacks depth and can even be immoral, often centered around negative topics like violence.
Kids require moral formation and a shared framework to develop a sense of right and wrong. Morality operates like language—it must be a collective system to function effectively. Social media fragments those narratives into disjointed bits, devoid of cohesive moral guidance.
Ezra Klein: I recall you made an emphatic statement about how it is fundamentally harmful for teenage girls to constantly share images of themselves online awaiting approval.
John Haidt: I still stand by that assertion. It may seem self-evident, but our discussions often miss the mark by framing it in terms of empirical evidence rather than moral judgment.
Ezra Klein: Absolutely. It seems there’s pressure to justify every opinion with studies. But even if it were proven that spending time on TikTok doesn’t lead to greater anxiety or poorer future outcomes, my instinct would remain firm against it.
My view on living fully as a human being suggests that such behaviors shouldn’t dominate one’s life. The consequences of excessive screen time extend beyond immediate concerns; they cultivate self-obsession and an obsession with personal brand management—that’s not conducive to a flourishing existence.
This underlying uncertainty within parenting culture today is distressing. Parents, unless they are part of a religious community, often seem hesitant to express their beliefs on what constitutes good or bad behavior.
The moral clarity that previous generations had appears to be lacking now.
John Haidt: There’s been a noticeable erosion of that moral confidence. This impedes individuals from articulating meaningful judgments without relying on extensive research, leaving us in a thin moral framework.
As society becomes increasingly ambivalent about forming moral judgments, our collective ability to guide children falters, creating a culture defined by insecurity and an undefined moral landscape.
Ezra Klein: There’s been a shift towards commercial values—I notice that in both parties and how they approach major societal issues, such as how the Republican Party under Trump seems less concerned about traditional moral values.
John Haidt: Yes, under Trump, the party’s stance on many issues, including deregulation in areas like sports gambling and crypto, reflects a shift away from long-held moral positions.
The growing acceptance of potent products in the market, including marijuana, raises similar concerns. The allure of profitability appears to push aside thoughtful consideration of moral implications, be it in terms of children’s welfare or societal health.
So, in this vacuum of substantial moral guidance, we observe a troubling trend across society. The detachment from moral reasoning leaves us vulnerable to unchecked impulses.
As capitalism drives us forward, its logic now predominates, promoting individualism without the necessary counterbalancing forces that once existed.
John Haidt: I think you’re right. The evidence of this shift is everywhere. You might find it interesting to dive into The Age of Addiction by David Courtright, which explores these dynamics in depth. John Haidt: He chronicles how people have always craved sugar and foraged for fruit. However, as we refined sugar, it led to the creation of sugar-based products and eventually candy. With a market-based economy established during the Industrial Revolution, we discovered more and more ways to produce products that our brains evolved to crave, but now those products are limitless and can be accessed effortlessly. The same can be said for opiates; think of the progression from opium to heroin and now to fentanyl.
The best definition I’ve heard of a free market society comes from a philosopher who said, “a good free market society is one in which you can only get rich by making other people better off.” For the most part, that remains true in our economy.
But let’s examine the products we’re discussing. If you’re a sports betting company, a crypto firm, a video game developer, or a social media enterprise, are you genuinely making your customers better off? Or are you exploiting addiction and manipulating social forces while contributing enormous negative externalities to society? I would argue that’s what’s happening, and part of this stems from the deregulatory impulse that has emerged—we seem to have lost the ability to regulate things effectively.
One crucial principle that needs clarification is the distinction between children and adults. Generally, we are a more libertarian country compared to Europe, where restrictions might be imposed more willingly. When it comes to adults, I believe we’re generally right to give them the freedom to do what they want unless there’s compelling evidence to suggest otherwise. But with kids, the situation is entirely different.
Consider these trillion-dollar industries. Where does their revenue come from? It’s not from you or me; our children aren’t paying for it either. The whole value is generated by breaking the day into tiny, digestible bits to capture attention, which is then sold to advertisers, alongside the personal data collected.
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Ezra Klein: I want to delve into this a bit more. I’m going to make a provocative point; I’m not entirely sure I believe it. I understand the argument for allowing adults to do basically whatever they want. But when it comes to kids, we have to do something different. Fine. Here’s the issue: In practice, it might not work.
If we allow something to be both morally and legally permissible for those who are 18, or in some frameworks, even 16, it’s not impossible that we can implement an age verification system that’s airtight, but it’s probably going to be quite challenging. There are instances where it works, but ideally, we want friction—both moral and structural—throughout society.
What we’ve lost in many areas is that friction. There are certain things we want to monitor access to, yet we’ve taken away all the barriers, making products available everywhere and online. This has become extremely dangerous because there will always be a percentage of people who develop a gambling problem. The ingenuity of capitalism seeks to make things more interesting, more potent, and more seductive.
Ezra Klein: Absolutely, that’s right. Once that friction is lowered, it becomes incredibly difficult for individuals, especially those with limited regulatory capacities in their minds, to manage desires—some people struggle more than others. The loss of friction is significant. And I suspect that as a society, if we’re going to accept certain things at 19, it’s going to be nearly impossible to keep them away from 17-year-olds.
John Haidt: I agree. Generally, I believe technology simplifies things, which can be beneficial for adults—in many cases—but it’s disastrous for kids. Children need to learn to tackle tough challenges, whereas technology makes it easier for them to avoid doing so.
But adding to what you’ve said, I want to address something you mentioned earlier about skepticism regarding the real possibility of an age verification system. Once I published my book, I received significant support from parents and educators, but the main objection I encountered was resignation: people saying, “Well, technology is here to stay. Kids will have to use it as adults, so they might as well learn to use it while they’re still young. You can’t put the genie back in the bottle.”
But actually, we can, and we are doing it.
Ezra Klein: Could you elaborate on that?
John Haidt: Sure! I want to emphasize that while we don’t currently have effective age verification, if we establish the right incentives, we could have a system in place in less than a year. My colleague at NYU, Scott Galloway, points out that social media companies have invested immense resources into advertising. They figured out a way to conduct auctions among thousands of companies for the right to display ads every time a user clicks a link.
This is a marvel of technical innovation driven by profit. So, the question is: Could they also develop a way to determine if someone is under or over 16? It might be worthwhile to invest in the research. They already know so much about us; the argument that kids will just lie about their age doesn’t hold much water.
Ezra Klein: Interesting point.
John Haidt: Australia is currently making strides in this area, and if they succeed, similar regulations will likely spread rapidly across the globe.
Ezra Klein: Just to clarify: is Australia looking at implementing no smartphones or no social media until 16?
John Haidt: The focus is on establishing an age for internet adulthood—a contract age with major corporations where users can sign away their data rights without parental consent. Currently, American law allows ten-year-olds to lie and say they’re thirteen to access these platforms. What Australia is trying to change is the need for companies to provide some sort of age assurance.
Ezra Klein: How important is this for the United States?
John Haidt: It’s crucial because, right now, ten-year-olds are getting access to platforms like Instagram and TikTok—this has to stop. By establishing a law, Australia aims to regulate the internet space better.
Then there are the other three norms we must adopt to successfully roll back the phone-centric childhood. The first is no smartphones before high school. Do not give your child a touchscreen until they’re at least 14—that’s a norm we need to promote.
The second norm is to delay access to social media until age 16. We need to establish laws in that regard, similar to Australia’s approach.
And the third norm is implementing phone-free schools, which I believe will be the majority of schools in America within two years.
Ezra Klein: What about the fourth norm?
John Haidt: The fourth is fostering independence, free play, and responsibility in the real world. It’s important to focus not just on restricting screens but also on restoring a fun, human childhood—a time spent outside, playing with friends in mixed-age groups, rather than always under parental supervision doing homework or glued to screens.
It’s important to recognize how hard this can be for parents to navigate on their own. It often puts them in a position where they have to restrict their child’s access to things that other kids are enjoying, which can be isolating.
Ezra Klein: That seems crucial. If we would push for legislation, it could be a collective action that frees parents from that burden.
John Haidt: Exactly. What you’re describing illustrates a collective action trap. Parents want to set boundaries for their children, but since all the other kids have smartphones, they feel pressured to comply to prevent their kid from being left out. The solution lies in collective action—parents discussing with each other and agreeing to uphold these norms, creating an environment where it’s easier to stick to those principles.
There are two statistics that continue to haunt me: First, 50% of American teens report being online almost constantly. They may not be looking at their phones for 16 hours a day, but they frequently think about the social dramas they are missing out on. Half of our children essentially have their consciousness dominated by a few large social media companies.
The second statistic is staggering—40% of two-year-olds in America own an iPad. Parents often find it convenient to hand over a device to keep their child occupied. It’s become normalized to provide these tech babysitters, akin to handing them a substance that alters their state of mind.
I recall when I first gave my kids an iPad; one of them was sick at around three or four years old. I quickly realized that even innocent platforms like YouTube could be unsettling. Not only was there the risk of encountering bizarre and creepy content, but the endless stream of short clips meant they rarely engaged with a full story.
Ezra Klein: Yes, that difference is profound.
John Haidt: Right! When it comes to tech usage, the distinction must be made. Long-format media like a 90-minute movie is generally a pretty good use of screens; it’s social, and gives moral context to the characters. Watching it with someone else enhances its value. In contrast, solitary iPad use is extremely detrimental.
A touchscreen can turn into a conditioning tool—stimuli create responses which then lead to rewards; it’s designed to build habits through dopamine triggers. This is vastly different from traditional TV consumption, which offers a story without engaging users in a behaviorist loop.
Ezra Klein: And the concern isn’t just about children—adults are affected too.
John Haidt: Absolutely. Adults also struggle to maintain their attention, and many people are becoming detached from reality as they navigate adult life after growing up with these technologies. It’s a collective issue impacting everyone.
The societal idea of healthy attention has undeniably shifted. We’re finding it increasingly difficult to articulate what “healthy attention” means now as technology has reshaped our ability to concentrate. There’s a broader context to address regarding both children and adults: what are the implications of this technological influence on our attentional capacities?
Ezra Klein: And this impacts everything, from personal wellbeing to democratic engagement.
John Haidt: Right. Children growing up immersed in these products could potentially undergo permanent changes to their capacity for attention and focus.
Engaging in debates about technology’s societal effects brings us to broader implications—is it acceptable that so many people routinely train themselves to engage with fleeting, attention-altering content?
Ezra Klein: That highlights the fundamental changes in our shared social fabric.
John Haidt: Yes, and it’s unsettling to see this pattern emerge. The ways we consume content today—particularly platforms designed for maximum engagement—force us to question our relationship with attention and focus, and what that means for future generations. John Haidt: I teach a course at NYU Stern called “Flourishing.” My students are mostly business majors, around 19 years old, and when I ask them if they want to be successful, they all say yes. I respond with a caution: if you give away all of your attention, I can almost promise that you won’t be successful. You won’t accomplish much at all. So, the first step in this course is regaining control of your attention.
Students who use social media heavily and manage to reduce their usage from four hours a day to less than one see transformative results. They suddenly have more time for homework, they feel less distracted, and they become more open to others. However, this brings us back to a pressing question: what are we connecting our judgments to? You mentioned that these are business school students and that I’m telling them they can’t succeed without controlling their attention.
Ezra Klein: Right. But can’t you be successful without that control? For instance, look at Elon Musk. He’s incredibly successful, and it seems like he’s attentionally deranged. There must have been times when he focused intensely on building his businesses.
John Haidt: True, I can see your point. Certainly, in the early days of building, he must have dedicated hours to solving problems. But now, we’re in a world where many successful individuals are thriving by dominating the attentional space and posting constantly on social media. Look at figures like Donald Trump; he’s managed to harness all that attention and embodies the attentional ethic of these platforms.
Ezra Klein: But doesn’t it feel unhealthy? I know it’s not a healthy way to be.
John Haidt: I agree entirely. Part of Elon Musk’s success was indeed because he captured this attention—much of it negative. And you’re right, one of the unfortunate byproducts of this attention dominance is that it shapes how success is perceived—translating it into social media presence rather than substantial achievements.
Ezra Klein: There’s a risk in what you’re saying, though. The way you want us to raise children might be rooted in nostalgia for an economy and politics that no longer exist.
John Haidt: In theory, yes, I see the danger. Throughout history, every generation has been wary of emerging technology. If it turned out that our children were flourishing, I would just be an old man shaking my fist at the clouds. But the reality tells a different story; our kids today are the least flourishing generation we’ve seen in modern times.
Ezra Klein: You mention surveys that indicate Gen Z prefers that TikTok never existed, yet kids still utilize it. It appears they feel trapped.
John Haidt: Exactly! The paradox is they don’t want to give it up, but they also don’t want to be the only ones who give it up. It’s a collective feeling of being trapped. Even if there’s talk of banning TikTok, the response isn’t filled with youth rebellion.
Ezra Klein: Perhaps you’re not on TikTok yourself, which could explain your perspective—it might be more nuanced than you think.
John Haidt: True. TikTok has indeed sparked engagement among many youngsters, which could lead to them writing to legislators. However, the surveys indicate a broad sense of entrapment—they’re seeking an escape but are terrified of being left out.
Ezra Klein: So, in essence, if they didn’t feel isolated, they might collectively agree to get rid of it?
John Haidt: Yes, that’s the dilemma. They may feel a sense of normalcy when everyone is connected through the platform—they have adapted, but they’ve adapted in a way that’s deformed them.
Ezra Klein: And what you’re suggesting sounds a little dire. You’re calling them mere human fodder for the machine, molded into what it wants from them.
John Haidt: Exactly. Visible success today often requires constant presence on social media, unlike the more complex journeys of individuals in fields like physics or research, where success isn’t advertised through memes or social media.
Ezra Klein: Given that landscape, how safely do you think we should be preparing our children for the future—should we be cautious and consider socio-economic changes and the shifts in prestige?
John Haidt: Right. Every teenager seems desperate for prestige, which has been hacked by social media. Historically, gaining respect required meaningful achievements—like being a skilled archer or craftsman. Now, social media tells kids that they don’t need to work hard; they can just gain followers for attention.
Ezra Klein: And where does that path lead us?
John Haidt: It can lead somewhere quite frightening. For instance, there’s an app called Famify that generates fake followers for kids desperate for attention. Imagine a nine-year-old who comes to rely on AI to inflate their self-esteem by gaining popularity artificially.
Ezra Klein: AI followers? That sounds unsettling.
John Haidt: Yes! This plays into the fears I have regarding AI and its impact on children. With AI’s rapid evolution, we could find ourselves facing a world where children grow increasingly detached from genuine human relationships.
Ezra Klein: That idea really scares me. And I can only imagine how quickly these changes will come to affect our social dynamics.
John Haidt: I share that fear. The notion of “instant gratification” that technology promises raises critical questions about healthy relationships. Children growing up alongside AI could develop expectations that don’t align with reality, and that worries me deeply.
Ezra Klein: As a parent, how should one guide kids through these times?
John Haidt: It all comes down to keeping them grounded. Children ought to experience childhood alongside real peers and learn to manage the friction of human interactions. If they become accustomed to AI companions that always please them, we risk creating individuals that might not fit well into society, either personally or professionally.
Ezra Klein: That sounds valid. Is the idea that social interactions help create more rounded individuals as adults?
John Haidt: Precisely. As I mentioned before, if they are distanced from genuine human encounters, the repercussions can be severe. We can’t operate under the delusion that these tech innovations will clarify or improve childhood experiences if we allow them to persist unchecked.
Ezra Klein: Adapting technology seems like an uphill battle, especially given how entrenched it has become in our societal fabric.
John Haidt: Absolutely, and parents are already grappling with this difficult dynamic. While many adult tech aficionados may steer clear of these social media platforms, they also influence their children’s upbringing using mobile devices and AI. We need to mobilize parents into collective action—we can shape the future, provided we rise up and demand change before it’s too late. John Haidt: We have original music by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy was managed by Christina Samulewski and Shannon Busta. The executive producer of New York Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.