The Joe Rogan Experience - #2121 - Jonathan Haidt
Episode Date: March 19, 2024Jonathan Haidt is a social psychologist, professor, and author. His latest book, "The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness," will be availab...le March 26. www.jonathanhaidt.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Hello Jonathan.
Good to see you sir.
Good to see you again Joe.
The same problems that you talked about when you were here last that I've referenced many
times since on the podcast have only exacerbated,
unfortunately. And that's why you wrote this, The Anxious Generation. And it could not be
more true how the great rewiring of childhood is causing an epidemic of mental illness.
I don't think anybody can dispute that.
Yeah. When I was on last time, there was a dispute. There were some psychologists who said,
oh, this is just a moral panic. They said this about video games and comic books and, you know,
no, I think, you know, this is this is not a real thing. They said now they don't.
Yeah, I think it was pretty obvious. I think it was only their preconceived notions that were
keeping them from admitting it before or at least looking at it before. Or maybe they don't have children.
Could be that.
I think a lot of older people, particularly boomers,
they're a little bit disconnected from it
because they're not, unless they're addicted to Twitter,
they're not engaging in this stuff.
And they're often thinking, you know, when I was a kid,
we watched too much TV and we turned out okay.
But part of the message of the book is that social media
and the things kids are doing on screens are not really like TV.
They're much, much worse for development.
Yeah.
And even watching too much TV, I don't agree that they turned out okay.
I think it had a pervasive effect.
It did.
But nothing like this.
Yeah.
Well, that's right.
Because when we were watching TV, I'm a little older than you.
I was born in 1963. So I grew up watching a lot of TV, you know, maybe, you know, an hour or two a day, weekdays,
and then two or three hours on the weekends. But it was a bigger screen. You're watching with your sisters or with your friends.
You're arguing about things. You're eating. So it's actually pretty social.
But now kids are spending the latest survey, Gallup finds that it's about,
are spending, the latest survey, Gallup, finds that it's about, what's five hours a day, just on social media, just social media, including TikTok and Instagram. And when you add in
all the other screen based stuff, it's like nine hours a day. And that's not social. It's
private on your little screen. You're not communicating with others. So, you know, in
all these ways, the new way that kids are digital is really not like what
we had when we were on watching TV.
It's also an extraordinary amount of wasted resources.
I'm always embarrassed when I look at my phone.
I want to see my screen time, like, four hours.
That's four hours I could have done so many different things with.
That's right.
And so that's the concept of opportunity cost is this great term that economists have, which is the cost of, you know, if you buy something, you know, if you
invest an hour of your time and $100 to do something, how much does it cost? Well, you
know, $100, but you could use that $100 and that hour for something else. So what are
the things you gave up? And when screen time goes up to now it's about nine hours a day in the United States,
nine hours a day, not counting school.
Average?
Average, average.
Is that for a certain age group?
We're talking teenagers, yeah, not little kids.
But you know, 13 to 15, 17, that range, that's when it's heaviest.
It's around nine hours a day.
And so the opportunity cost is everything else.
Like imagine if somebody
said to you, Joe, you know, you've got a full life here, you have to do this thing, this
additional thing for nine hours. Like that's insane. That would push out everything else,
including sleep.
Yeah. When you are now talking to people that agree that this is an issue. What changed?
So you mean what changed? Like why is there now more agreement?
Yes.
Yeah. So in 2019, when I was last here with you, my book, The Coddling of the American
Mind had just come out. And back then, people were beginning to sense that, you know, this
internet, the phones, the social media that we are all so amazed by, you know, there was
a very positive feeling about all this stuff in the early part, you know, like in the 2000s.
It was beginning, sentiment was beginning to turn, but there was a big academic debate
because when you look at studies that look at how, you know, do kids who spend a lot
of time on screens, do they come out more depressed? The answer is yes, but the correlation
is not very big. So there was a big argument among researchers, and that's when I got into this around 2019,
really getting into that debate.
And I think that Gene Twenge and I really had good data showing, you know, there is
an issue here.
And then COVID came.
And that confused everything.
Because you know, basically, when I was on with you last time, 2019, I was saying, you
know, what kids most need is less time on their devices and more time
outside playing unsupervised.
Let them be out unsupervised.
That's what we needed in 2019.
COVID comes in, boom, exactly the opposite.
What do kids get?
No more time unsupervised.
You can't even go out.
I mean, in New York City, they locked up the playgrounds.
They locked up the tennis courts.
It was insane.
No time outside with your friends.
Oh, spend your
whole day on screens. So that made everything worse. But people thought, oh, yeah, the kids
are really messed up now from COVID. But they were wrong. COVID was terrible for a lot of
kids. When you look at the mental health trends over the last 20 years, COVID was a blip.
COVID actually, you know, I've actually got some, I've got some chart, you know, if you
don't mind, I'd like to actually show these COVID actually, you know what, I've actually got some, I've got some chart, you know, if you don't mind, I'd like to actually show these.
Did you send the data to Jamie so he could pull it up?
I haven't sent it yet, but I'll, oh right, because you want, do you want to stop and do that?
Yeah, let's pause real quick so Jamie will give you the email address.
Okay, we're back.
Alright.
What are those things?
Oh, so these, these are stickers for your kids.
So as part of the book, I'm trying to launch a movement called Free the Anxious
Generation. Here you go. You have two younger kids. And so I've teamed up with
the artist who did the book cover, Dave Ciccarelli, who's created these
incredible artworks. There's gonna be billboards that he's putting together a
12-foot tall milk carton, which is gonna be traveling around different cities
with this. Missing childhood. Do they do that anymore?
The milk carton thing? I don't think so. Yeah so I don't know if you're I don't
know what your kids think about social media and whether they think it's a good
thing or bad thing but we are hopeful that members of Gen Z are going to start, and they are
starting to advocate that, you know what, this is messing us up.
Okay, so here's the graph.
Okay.
So this is the graph that I showed last time I was on, and what it shows, because I know
most of your listeners are probably just listening to the audio, it shows that from 2005 to 2010, the rates of depression in girls was about 12% of American
girls had a major depressive episode in the last year, and for boys it was about 4 to
5%.
And it's flat, there's no change.
And then all of a sudden, around 2011, 2012, 2013, the numbers start rising, especially
for girls, and it goes all the way up to 20% for girls.
So that was a huge rise, and that's what I showed you last time. What is the difference between
boys and girls? So girls suffer from more internalizing disorders. That is, when
girls have difficulties, they turn it inwards, they make themselves miserable.
So girls suffer from higher rates of anxiety and depression. That's always
been the case, especially once they hit puberty.
Boys, when they have psychological problems, they tend to turn it outwards.
They engage in more violent behavior, deviant behavior, substance use.
So boys, it's called externalizing disorders.
But you can see both boys and girls are getting more depressed.
It's just that the effect is bigger for girls.
So boys have gone up to about 7 percent and girls are way up to 20.
That's right.
And that was 2019.
So one out of five girls.
That's what it was.
That's right.
It was.
It was.
That's right.
And then COVID comes in.
So if we can have the next slide.
So then COVID comes in.
And now this is the exact same data set, just this federal data.
Just got a few extra years
of data.
And what you can see is that it goes way the hell up.
And if you look at the 2021 data point, you can see that little peak at the very top there.
That's because of COVID.
That is, COVID was, COVID did increase things.
It did make kids more depressed.
But as you can see, it's a blip.
COVID was just a tiny effect
compared to this gigantic increase. And so, you know, on the last slide, it was 20% of
girls. Now it's almost 30, almost 30% of girls who had a major depressive episode in the
last year. And for boys, it's up to 12%, which is still quite a lot. It's more than a doubling,
although much less than for the girls. It's still, even if you look at boys, or excuse me, if you look at girls from 2018 pre-COVID,
that ramp is very steep, the upward ramp.
That's right. And that might be TikTok. That is the, you know, what, so what happens is
a lot of things change around 2011, 2012. 2010 is when you get the front-facing iPhone, it's when Instagram
is founded, it's when kids around, when kids are getting high-speed data plans. So, you know, my
argument in the book is that we had a complete rewiring of childhood between 2010 and 2015.
In 2010, most of the kids had flip phones. They didn't have Instagram, they didn't have high-speed
data. So, they would use their flip phones
to get together with each other.
They communicate with each other.
By 2015, about 80%, 70, 80% have a smartphone.
Most of them have high speed data,
unlimited plan, Instagram accounts.
And this really messes up the girls.
So that's what I think happened between 2010 and 2015.
TikTok becomes popular only really more 18, 19, 20.
And it's so new, we don't have good data on just TikTok.
But I suspect that that sort of extra acceleration
might be due to TikTok.
What specifically about TikTok?
So this is something I'm just really beginning to learn.
I don't even have much on it in the book. Watching... so kids love stories and stories are great all around the
world. People tell children stories, there are myths, you know, we see plays, we see
television shows, and so just... and so I asked my my undergrads at NYU, I said, how
many of you use Netflix? Almost everybody says yes. How many of you wish Netflix was never invented? Nobody. Nobody. Watching stories is not a bad
thing. TikTok is not stories. It's little tiny, tiny bits of something. And they're short,
they don't add up to anything, they're incoherent. They're often disturbing and disgusting. I mean,
people, you know, people are being hit by cars, people being punched in the face, and it's much more addictive
and with no nutritive value. They're not really stories. And so it seems to be much more addictive.
Kids really get hooked on it much more so than Netflix or anything else. And I said,
and depends on what you're watching, but I suspect that so many of them are consuming
stuff about mental illness. It has a variety of effects that we don't even understand yet.
Now I know that there's some push right now currently to ban TikTok, and there's a lot
of people that are very torn on this because they don't want to give the government the
ability to ban social media. What is the argument about banning TikTok? What specifically
are they talking about? The main thing they want to do is separate them from the company
ByteDance that owns them and just make them an American company. Yeah. Like it's still operate,
I suppose. So it's a data issue? Well, it's a national security issue. So yeah, right. So
thank you. Let's separate the national security issue from the mental health issue. I have a lot of libertarian friends. I have a lot of libertarian sympathies.
I would be uncomfortable about the government banning a company or a product because it's
harmful to children. I personally think we should just have age verification. We should
not have kids on certain things. But if we just, if it was just a question of, you know,
this is really bad for children, let's ban it. Like, no, I don't think I would support that.
But TikTok is different because it is a Chinese owned company. And as many of your listeners
will know, China, it says in whatever not it doesn't have a constitution, I don't think.
But by law, every Chinese company must do what the Chinese Communist Party tells it to do.
And that's what's so scary that this is, you know, Instagram reels and YouTube shorts,
they might have similar effects to TikTok, but the Chinese government can literally tell ByteDance
to change what kids are seeing. And they do that in China.
They tell them in China, you have to have this kind of content and not that kind of content. There was an incredible
episode of you had Tristan Harris on. Tristan Harris has this amazing podcast episode where
they go into the national security risks. And they show that the day that Russia invaded
Ukraine, TikTok in Russia changed radically. Like the government was on, like
the, you know, TikTok was on it. Like, yep, we're going to do what, you know, what Putin
wants us to do. Or, you know, so the idea that the most influential, the most influential
platform on American children, the idea that that must do what the Communist Party tells
it to do at a time when we have mounting tension with China and the possibility of a war.
I mean, as Tristan says, imagine if in the 1960s, the Soviet Union owned and controlled,
you know, PBS, ABC, NBC, you know, all the kids' programs.
You know, we would never have allowed that.
So I hope listeners, I really strongly support this bill.
I think Rep. Mike Gallagher, I think, was one of the ones proposing it, or at least certainly advocating for this issue. I hope people will not see
it as a TikTok ban, but they'll see it as an urgent national security move to force
ByteTance to sell to a non-Chinese owner.
And specifically, what are they pointing to when they say national
security risk? What specifically have they seen? So a lot of it seems to have
to do with the data question. Like all the you know Facebook pioneered this
model in which the person using the product is not really the customer they
don't pay the money. They're you know they're the product the the the user is
the product not the customer.
And they give them data, and the data can be used
for all sorts of purposes,
especially marketing and advertising.
And so TikTok has enormous amounts of data,
and they can get all psychological on it
because they know exactly how long you hesitated,
how much you liked certain kinds of videos.
Many people have written articles on how TikTok
seems to have known they were gay
before they did that sort of thing. So TikTok has extraordinary amounts of data
on most Americans, certainly most young Americans, and they say, oh, but we don't share it. It's
in a server over here in Singapore, I don't know where, but it's not in China. Come on,
come on. There's no way it could possibly be the case that
the data is really separated and not available to the Chinese Communist Party.
What are they pointing to in terms of the danger of this data that makes them want to
have it sold to an American company?
I don't know whether the motivation behind the bill, I don't know whether it's that the
Chinese would have some access to data on American citizens or whether what most alarmed me
when I heard the Tristan Harris podcast was the ease of
influencing American kids to be pro this or pro that on any political issue.
Right, you're seeing that with Palestine and Gaza. Yeah, I think so.
You're definitely seeing that now.
It's very obvious.
Well, it's very obvious with many things with TikTok.
Trans stuff, and there's a lot of different things that they're encouraging.
And people that are opposed to that are being banned, which is also very odd.
And specifically like female athletes, we had Riley Gaines, who was the female athlete
that competed against Leah Thomas.
And she has said that male, biologically male athletes should not be able to compete with
biologically female athletes because they have a significant advantage.
And she was banned from TikTok just for saying that.
Yeah, that's right. So this relates to the larger issue that we talked about last time and that I hope we'll athletes because they have a significant advantage. And she was banned from TikTok just for saying that.
Yeah, that's right. So this relates to the larger issue that we talked about last time
and that I hope we'll continue to talk about today, which is that social media has brought
us into an environment in which anyone has the ability to really harm anyone else. There's
an extraordinary amount of intimidation available via social media. And so this has led the leaders of all kinds of organizations to run scared.
Greg Lukianoff and I saw this in universities.
Why don't the university presidents stand up to the protesters who are shouting down
visiting speakers?
Why don't...isn't there a grownup in the room?
And then we saw it in journalism, newspapers and editors who wouldn't stand up for journalistic
principles.
And so I think what has happened here is that social media allows whoever is angriest and
can mobilize the most force to threaten, to harass, to surround, to mob anyone.
And when people are afraid to say something, that's when you get the crazy distortions
that we saw on campus or that Riley Gaines
was seeing too, just that people are afraid to speak up. And in a democracy, in a large,
secular, diverse democracy, we have to be able to talk about things.
And so that's part of why we're in such a mess now is I've argued that it's when social
media became super viral after 2009-2010 you get the like
button, the retweet button. Social media wasn't really bad or harmful before, it wasn't terribly
harmful before then. But by 2012-2013 it had really become as though everyone had a dart
gun, everybody could shoot everyone. And that's when we began sort of like teaching on eggshells
in universities because our students could really do a lot of damage if we said one word
they didn't like.
And it's not just the students, which is really disturbing.
We've talked about this before.
There was an FBI security specialist who estimated that somewhere in the neighborhood of 80%
of the Twitter accounts were bots.
Which is very strange, because that means that they're mobilizing specifically to try
to push different narratives.
Yeah, that's right. So if you think of, you know, people say, well, you know, now Twitter
is the public square or things like that. You know, it's not a public square. It's more
like the Roman Coliseum. It's more like, you know, a place where people say things and
the fans in the stands are hoping to see blood. To move our discussions onto platforms like that,
that can be manipulated,
that anyone, it doesn't have to be
a foreign intelligence service,
it could be anybody who wants to influence anything
in this country or anywhere in the world.
They can, for very little money,
they can hire someone to create thousands,
millions of bots.
And so we're living in this sort of fun house world where everything is weird mirrors.
And it's very hard to figure out what the hell is going on.
Have you ever sat down and tried to figure out a solution to this other than trying to encourage people not to use it?
Jimmy, does something happen to the volume just dropped lower?
Okay. So what was I just saying? We're talking about solutions other than
asking kids to not use it, which is very hard to do. Yeah, that's right. So when
we're talking about the democracy problems and the, you know, manipulation
of politics or anything else, those are really, really hard. I have a few ideas
of what would help and we're not gonna do them because, you know, all of them
are like the left legs and the right doesn't or vice versa. What are those ideas though?
Oh, it's things like you know, like identity authentication
If if large platforms had something like know your customer laws
That is, you know
If you want to open an account on Facebook or on on X
you have to at least prove that you're a person and
I think you should be able to have to prove that you're a person in a particular country, I think you should over a certain
age.
You prove those to the platform, not directly.
You go through a third party.
So even if it's hacked, they wouldn't know anything about you.
You establish that you're a real person, and then you're cleared.
Go ahead, you open your account.
You can post without, you don't have to use your real name.
If we did that, that would eliminate most of the bots.
That would make it much harder to influence.
That would make us have much better platforms for democracy.
Is that possible to do internationally?
Well, the platforms can certainly require whatever they want for membership.
Right now, they are legally required to ask you if you're over 13.
If you're 13 or over, they ask it and then they accept whatever you say and that's it, you're in. So those rules could be changed and
they could be required to do more and you know they're based in you know
the United, most in the United States, but their users are all around the world so
yeah that could be done. So one of the things that people are nervous about
when it comes to authentication is that if you
could do that, then you could target individuals that wouldn't be allowed to be anonymous.
So you eliminate the possibility of whistleblowers.
No, no, no. The point is that you just have to establish that you are a person. It doesn't
mean that you have to post under your real name. And even if
you want ultra-high security, you could just have dissidents in repressive countries. They
could just communicate by secure channels with a journalist who posts for them. So I
understand the concern, and there are values to having anonymity, but I think what we're
seeing now is that the craziness, the way it's affecting, it's making it harder for democracies
to be good, vibrant democracies,
and it's making it easier for authoritarian countries
like China to be powerful and effective
with authoritarian countries.
So I think we have to start weighing the pluses and minuses,
the costs and benefits here.
Right, but how would you ramp that up?
Like how would you implement that internationally?
Like say if you're talking about people in
Poland, just pick a country.
Yeah. Well, the platforms can do whatever they want, but then, yes, how would, if a
company starts in Poland, then the US Congress would have no influence on that.
Right. Like, China could pretend that they could falsify the data that shows that these
are individuals.
Oh, I see.
They wanted to empower a troll farm.
Oh, I see.
You're saying even if American companies did this, the Chinese could still get around it.
Yeah, that's true.
You're never going to have a perfect system.
But right now, it's just so easy and cheap and free to have massive influence on anything
you want.
But the larger question here was you asked me,
what can we do?
And what I'm saying is there are some things
like identity authentication that I think would help.
But yes, there are implementation problems.
There's all kinds of political questions.
So my basic point is, man, those problems,
I don't know that we can solve.
But we can do better.
Oh, and I should point out, a lot of these
have to do with the basic architecture of the web.
When we move from web one, which was put up information, it's amazing, you can see things
from everywhere, to web two, which was directly interactive.
Now you can buy things, you can post stuff.
And it's the web two that gave us these business models that have led to the exploitation of
children and everyone else.
And I'm part of a group, Project Liberty, if you go to projectliberty.io, that's trying
to have a better Web 3, where people will own their own data more clearly.
As the architecture changes, it opens us up to new possibilities and risks.
So there are some hopes for a better internet coming down the pike.
But I wanted, actually, I just wanted to like put all this stuff out there about democracy to say this is really hard. But when we talk about kids and mental health,
this is actually amazingly doable. Like we could do this in a year or two. And the trick,
the key to solving this whole problem with kids is to understand what's called a collective
action problem. So there are certain things where, you know, like if you have a
bunch of fishermen and they realized, oh, we're overfishing, we're overfishing, you
know, the lake, let's reduce our catch. And if one person does that and no one else does,
well, then he just loses money. But if everyone does it, well, then actually you can solve
the problem and everyone can do fine. With social media, what we see over and over again is
kids are on it because everyone else is. And parents are giving their kids a phone in sixth
grade because the kid says everyone else has one and I'm left out. And over and over again,
you see this. When you ask kids, you know, how would you feel if I took your Instagram
or TikTok away? You're like, oh, I'd hate that. I'd hate that. But then you say, Well, what if it was taken away from everyone? What if no one had
it? And they almost always say, That would be great. I did this. There's an academic
article that showed this with college students. I did I did it as a test with my students
at NYU and a review of the book of the anxious generation in the Times of London, and the
UK Times. the woman ended by
asking her 16 year old, would you have liked there to be a social media band
till you were 16? I think the daughter was like 18 at the time. This was last
month. And the daughter says, would everyone else be off it too? And she says
yes. And then the daughter says, yeah I would have rather liked that. And so you
have this consumer product that the people using it, they don't see value in it.
They're using it because everyone else is.
And there's evidence suggesting
it's messing up their mental health.
So anyway, this is a solvable problem if we act together.
And that's really what the book is about.
How would you do that though?
How would you get all the parents to do it?
Would you get the social media companies to do it?
How would you do that? Yeah, I'm not counting on the social media companies or Congress
I'm assuming we'll never get help from either one now. I hope I'm wrong about Congress
But as a social psychologist, I'm trying to point out, you know, we can actually solve this ourselves
And so let's work the simplest one is is this so I propose four norms
If we can enact these four norms ourselves as parents and working with schools, we can
largely solve the problem.
We can certainly reduce rates of mental illness a lot.
The first norm is the simplest, no smartphone before high school.
Now people say, oh my God, but my kid needs a phone.
Sure, give him a flip phone.
The millennials had flip phones and they were fine.
Flip phones did not harm millennials' mental health.
They're good for communication. You text, you call, that's it. So the first rule is no smartphones
before high school, and as long as a third of the parents do this, well then the rest
of the parents are free to say when their kid says, Mom, you know, I need a smartphone,
you know, some other kids have one. Then you can say, well, no, here's a flip phone, you'll
be with the kids who don't have one. Oh, and by the way, you're also going to get a lot more freedom to hang out with the other kids.
So we don't need everybody, but we need to break the feeling that everyone has to have
one because everyone else has one.
Yeah, that sounds great on paper. I just can't imagine that most parents would agree to it
because of the most... There's just so many parents that don't pay attention. That's true. Especially to two families
where two people are working. Yeah, no, you're right. You're right. Just when we
look right now, it's, you know, kids with married parents are trying harder to
keep the kids off. These things are good babysitting devices in the sense that
the kids are off doing their thing. You don't have to think about them. So it is true that this would not be adopted
universally at first. But I think we could still develop a norm that it's just not appropriate
for children to have a smartphone. They should have flip phones. And I think that any community
that wants to do this, because what I find over and over again is that most parents are really concerned about this. And this is across
social classes. Most parents are seeing the problems. And so I don't have to convince
parents to change their minds about something. What I'm trying to do with the book is show
them here are four norms that are pretty easy to do if others are doing them, and these
are gonna make your kids happier, less mentally ill.
Yeah, it sounds, like I said, it sounds like a good suggestion.
I just don't imagine that with the momentum that social media has today
and the ubiquitous use that kids are gonna give it up.
They're not gonna wanna give it up.
I think there's a lot of kids that have had problems that if you talk to them alone and you say, wouldn't it be better if social
media didn't exist, if they've been bullied or what have you, they'd say yes. But the
idea of getting a massive group of people to adopt this is highly unlikely.
Well, you know, you may be right, but I'm encouraged because whenever I speak to Gen Z audiences,
and you know, I've spoken to middle schools, high schools, college audiences, I always ask,
you know, do you think I got this wrong? Or do you think this is a correct description of what's
happening? They agree. They've never, they're not in denial. They see the phones are messing them up.
They see that social media is messing up the girls, especially. So, you know, even in middle
school, certainly high school,
the kids actually agree that this is a problem.
And so if it was offered to them, you know what,
let's do the other three norms.
Let's get them all off the table.
Okay, yeah, please.
All right, so the first is no smartphone before high school.
Second is no social media until 16.
That one's gonna be a little harder to do.
But the big platforms like Instagram,
the place where
you're posting and the whole world is seeing and strangers are contacting you, you know,
I think the age is currently 13 and it's not enforced. I think that needs to go up to 16.
Here it would be nice if Congress would raise the age to 16 and make the companies enforce
it. But even if they don't, parents, as long as many other parents are doing it, me, I as a parent, you know, my kids are 14 and 17, as long as many other parents are saying 16 is the age,
then it's very easy for me to say that also. That's the second norm. Yeah, if you,
again, if you could get them to say it. And I think the kids would push back so
hard because so many other kids are on it and that's how they interact with each
other. You're just reiterating the social, the collective action problem. You're just saying they react because all the other kids are on it and that's how they interact with each other. It's an app chat. Right, but Joe, you're just reiterating the social, the collective action problem.
You're just saying they react because all the other kids are on it.
Yes.
So it does require a big push.
But I think we're ready.
I don't think we were ready in 2019.
It wasn't as clear.
But now that we're through COVID, now that the numbers are through the roof, I think
we're ready.
And if it starts in some places, not others, that's okay with me.
That's the way it's going to be.
And then we'll see whether it spreads.
And then we'll see the data.
Yeah, because look at smoking. You know, smoking is highly addictive. It was very common up
through the 1990s. And now it's very rare in high school, very few high school kids smoke.
So it's possible to change norms.
And what was the third?
The third is phone-free schools. And this one is happening. This is already happening. So I've published articles in the Atlantic and on my on my sub stack, after babble.com, bringing together the
research. When kids have a phone in their pocket in school, they're gonna be
texting. Because if anyone is texting during the day, during the school day,
they all have to check because they don't want to be out of the loop. They
don't want to be the one who doesn't know. So when kids started bringing smartphones into school instead of
flip phones, academic achievement actually went down. Kids are stupider today than they
were 15 years ago. I mean stupider meaning measuring their academic progress. After 50
years of improvement, it turns around after 2012. And this is true in the US and internationally.
So there's just no reason why kids should have the phone on them. They should come in the morning, put it in a phone locker or yonder pouch, go about their
day and guess what? The schools that have tried it, after a week or two, everyone loves
it. The kids are like, oh wow, we actually talk in between classes. We have five minutes
in the hallway, we actually talk. And you hear laughter. Whereas right now in a lot
of schools, it's just zombies looking at their phones in between as they're walking from
class to class.
Yeah.
So, the assumption is that from 2012 kids are just much more distracted.
Oh my God.
I mean, look, Joe, I think I heard you say in one of, yeah, it was a conversation you
had a few weeks ago with a comedian friend of yours, and I think this was a direct quote
from you.
My fucking phone runs my goddamn life. Does that sound like you?
Yeah, it sounds like me.
Okay. So, you know, as adults, you know, we have a fully formed prefrontal cortex. You
and I had a normal childhood. Our brains developed. We have the ability to stay on task. And man,
it is hard. With notifications coming in, there's always so many interesting things
you could do instead of what you need to do. So it's hard enough for us as adults. Imagine if you
didn't have a normal childhood where you developed executive function, where you
developed that ability as a teenager, because puberty is when the
prefrontal cortex, the front part of the brain, that's when it rewires into the
adult configuration. So the fact that we're scrambling kids' attention at the
time when they're supposed to be learning
how to pay attention, I think is terrible.
Mm-hmm.
Where do you think this is going?
This is my concern, is that this is just the beginning of this integration that we have
with devices and that the social media model, and it's been immensely profitable and incredibly
addictive and there's a massive, massive amount of capital that's invested in keeping us locked
into these things. Where do you think this goes from here? Have you paid attention to
the technology?
Like AI?
Yeah.
Yeah. Yes. So let me just draw a very, very sharp, bright line
between adults and children. I'm very reluctant to tell adults what to do. If adults want
to spend their time on an addictive substance or device or gambling, I'm reluctant to tell
them that they can't. So when we're talking about adults, I think where this is going is, well, where it's gone so far is
everything that you might want becomes available instantly and for free with no effort.
And so in some ways that's a life of convenience, but in other ways it's messing us up and it's
making us weaker. So you know, you want sexual satisfaction, okay, here you go, free porn. And it gets
better and better and more and more intense. You want a girlfriend or boyfriend who you
can customize? You have that already. Advances in robotics are such that it's just a matter
of time before AI girlfriends are put into these incredible female bodies that you can
customize. So I think the adult world, for young adults especially, is going to get really really messed up.
And again I'm not saying we need to ban it now, but what I'm saying is for God's
sakes don't let this be 11 year old children's lives. Let's at least keep
children separate from all this craziness until their brains develop and
then they can jump into the whirlpool of the tornado.
But the fact that our 11-year-old girls are now
shopping at Sephora for anti-wrinkle cream
or all sorts of expensive skin treatments,
this is complete insanity.
So let's at least protect the kids
until they're through puberty.
Well, that would be nice.
That would be nice. That would be nice.
Kind of essential, I think.
It's just the way I see adults being so hooked on these things.
There's so many adults that I know that are engrossed in this world of other people's
opinions of everything they think and say.
And it just doesn't give you enough time to develop your own thoughts and opinions on
things. So many people are dependent upon other people's approval and there's just
so many people that are addicted to interacting with people online and not
interacting with exceptional people in the real world.
That's right. One way to think about this is let's look at junk food,
which became very popular after
the Second World War.
You know, the manufacturing of food became very good.
There were science labs.
At Frito-Lay, they studied the exact degree of tensile strength that a chip should have
before it snaps.
And, you know, how do you make this?
What's the perfect crunch?
So they designed the foods to be as addictive as possible.
And in the 70s and 80s, Americans switched over to a lot of junk food and we became obese, like
huge increase in obesity. And that kept going on for a few decades. As I
understand it, obesity has finally turned around a little bit and many people are
still eating huge amounts of junk food but at least some people are beginning
to say, you know what, I'm going to resist that deep evolutionary
programming for fat and sugar. The companies played to that. They hijacked those desires
and they got us hooked on junk food. But after 50 years, we're making some progress in pushing
back and having healthier snacks and eating less.
What's the root of that progress?
I don't actually know the numbers.
I just know a few years ago I saw something
that for the first time obesity actually went down
in the United States.
I don't know that that's still true today,
but this was like three or four years ago,
before COVID I saw something.
Do we know what caused it to go down?
I don't.
I'm just assuming that this is an issue
that we dealt with as a society
and we didn't know what we were doing at first and we got hooked and the efforts to you know efforts to
educate people and to develop healthier alternatives so again I don't know I
haven't I you know I I should have looked at the data before I came here
but I'm just using this as an analogy we're sure Jamie can find something
okay yeah look it up online is it is obesity still rising the United States We're sure Jamie can find something that points to it or doesn't point to it.
Is obesity still rising in the United States or is it actually a little lower than it was
10 years ago?
That's the question.
I mean, I quickly found this study here, but I haven't even got a chance to look at it
yet.
This is the second time I've done this.
Something about this is giving me anxiety.
I'm spilling this.
Anxious podcaster.
Update on the obesity epidemic.
After the sudden rise is the upward trajectory beginning to flatten.
Okay, so it's a question. And what year was this?
So do you think it's people recognizing that they're developing health issues and they're
taking steps to discipline themselves and mitigate some of these issues? Or is there
some sort of information push that's leading them in that direction?
That I don't know because it's not my field, but I would say that that is a probably
necessary precondition, like understanding the problem and developing a people a desire
to change it. And then it's hard to change. You know, I love chips, I love chocolate,
I love ice cream. It's hard to change. But over time, a society adapts. And now the question is, will we adapt to social media?
Because the desire for sugar and fat and salt is very deep.
The desire for others to think well of us,
to hold us in esteem, I would say,
is just as deep and much more pervasive.
It's much stronger, I would say.
And so because as adults adults we're very concerned you
know when I like when I put out a tweet you know I know all this stuff I know
how terrible this is for me to check I'm busy I've got things to do but I'll go
back and I'll check how the tweet is doing 30 seconds later like I'll go you
know and then I'll check again five minutes later and ten you know so it's
hard for me to me to resist that like what are people saying about the thing
that I just said?
But the question is, will we adapt to it in some way
so that we begin, as with junk food,
we're still going to be consuming junk food,
but maybe we'll keep a lid on it.
I don't know.
I don't know.
But what I can say with not confidence,
but I think is the case, is as long as our kids are going
through puberty on social media and video games,
and they're not developing executive control I do not think they will be able to keep a handle
on this as adults. I do not either. Again as you're saying we are adults we grew
up without the internet and we grew up without all these problems and it is hard. I try to
tell all my friends to use my strategy which is post and ghost. Okay. I don't
read anything. I just post things. and ghost. I don't read anything. I just post things.
I post things, I don't read comments.
It's made me immensely more happy.
It's a massive difference.
I very rarely use Twitter.
The only reason why, or X, whatever,
the only reason why I use it is to see information,
to see things.
I don't read anything about myself,
and I certainly don't, I very rarely post at all.
And if I do post, I certainly don't read what,
because first of all, I'm aware of this number,
this FBI security specialist, the 80% of it,
and I see it all the time.
There's so many times where I'll see any social issue,
any political issue, anything that's in the zeitgeist.
When you see someone post about it,
you'll see these people posting. And I'll look at it, it's like a couple of
letters and a bunch of numbers, and I'll go, okay, is that a real person? And then I
go to their page, nope, nope, not a real person. How many of them are there? There's a lot of them, man.
There's a lot of them, especially when it comes to things like Ukraine, Israel, Gaza.
Right, because those are areas where various actors are,
various parties and actors and countries
are trying to manipulate us.
Yes, and they're doing it.
They're doing a great job of it.
They're very focused.
It's really incredible.
It's incredible to see the impact that it has.
When you see 50 posts on us, 50 comments, and 35 of those
seem to be not real people. That's right. I
think your strategy is very wise and and for this reason when social media began
you would put something up and then people could comment on it. Okay that was
that goes until about 2013-2014. I think it's 2013 when Facebook introduces
threaded comments. So now you put something up, someone
says some horrific, nasty, racist, whatever thing in your comment thread, and now everyone
can reply to that comment. And people can reply to that. So you get basically everyone
fighting with each other in the comment thread. And what social media is good for is putting
out information quickly. I'm a professor, I'm a researcher,
I am engaged in various academic disputes and debates.
And Twitter is amazing for finding current articles,
for finding what people are talking about.
So the function of putting information out is great,
but the function of putting something out
and then watching everyone fight in the comments,
that's why I use the analogy of the Roman Coliseum, like with the gladiators. That's just sick. There's nothing good comes from that.
Right. My concern is that we are paddling upriver and that there's a raging waterfall
that's powering this whole thing that you cannot fight against and that we are moving in a direction as a society
with the implementation of new more sophisticated technology that's going to make it even more
difficult unless you completely opt out and some people are going to opt out but it's going to be
like my 600 pound life you know people that are realizing like oh my god what have i done
my 600 pound life, you know, people that are realizing like, Oh my God, what have I done? I've ruined my, my body, I've ruined my life. How do I slowly get back to a normal state?
And it's going to take a tremendous amount of effort. Think about the amount of effort,
amount of focus that people have on comments and things. If you're addicted, if you're
currently deep into it right now,
where you're tweeting constantly. There's people that I follow that I know they're tweeting
12 hours a day.
Yeah, that's right. It's sad. It's so sad.
Yeah, they're addicts. Like how, where, my fear is that this is only going to get greater.
Yeah, I share that fear. And, you know, if current trends continue, you know, it's really not clear how we get
out of this.
Something might break in a big way.
Humanity has faced many crises before.
That doesn't mean, you know, as they say, you know, past performance is no guarantee
of future success.
So we face many crises and we've always come out stronger.
But we've never faced anything like this.
That's right. This is a rewiring. That's anything like this. That's right. This is a category...
This is a rewiring.
That's right. Exactly. That's right. So we face many external threats. We face diseases.
We faced wars. Those have come and gone. But this is a rewiring of the basic communication
network of society in ways that link up with so many of our deepest motivations. This is
a challenge unlike any we've ever faced. And
you know, so I think, you know, what we really need, I'm speaking as a university professor,
is we really need great social sciences. We need great sociologists. We need people really
studying this. But, you know, it's all happening so fast. And then the problems in universities
of, you know, political concerns
sweeping in. So I feel I fear that we're sort of heading towards this. Well, you said like
going upstream to a waterfall. I think it was like going like downstream. We're about,
you know, at the top of waterfall going to go over the edge.
That too. Yeah. Well, we're trying to paddle, but that's the direction that we're moving
in. Yeah, that's right. That might be the That might be the case. So yeah, we live at a very interesting time in history.
In the 90s, the future looked so bright.
And yeah, now it doesn't.
My fear is that we are no longer going to become human.
We will no longer be human.
We'll be a different thing.
And I think the implementation of technology
is what's going to facilitate that.
I think we're how many years away from Neuralink and something similar to it that's going to
change how we interact completely.
And that it's not going to be a question of whether or not you opt out, whether you pick
up your device.
Your device is going to be a part of you.
And there'll be incentives that
whether it's performance incentives, whether it's you're gonna have more
bandwidth, whatever it is. Yeah that's the real fear of something
like Neuralink or whatever. If they can figure out a Neuralink that doesn't
require surgery, if they could figure out something that does that without surgery,
the advantage of having
that in a competitive sense in terms of like business and technology and industry, it's
going to be massive and it's going to be so difficult to get people to not do that, that
it's going to be like phones.
I mean, I remember when I moved to Los Angeles in 1994, I bought a Motorola StarTac,
and I was like, look at me.
I had a phone in 1989.
Oh wow, one of the big ones that went to a satellite?
It was actually connected to my car in 1989,
and it was very advantageous.
My friend Bill Bluenreich, he owned the Comedy Connection,
he owns the Wilbur Theater now in Boston,
and I got a lot of gigs from him because he could call me
when someone canceled.
You had an advantage.
Someone got sick and they said,
hey, can you get the Dartmouth at 10 PM?
I'm like, fuck yeah.
And so I got gigs from that.
We joke about it to this day that I was like the first guy
that he knew that had a cell phone.
It was a very, it was a huge advantage.
And I remember when I had one in 94,
I was like, this is
great. I can call my friends. I don't even have to be home. There was so many positives
to it. And it gave you an advantage. It gave you an advantage is you didn't have to be
home if there was a business thing that I had to deal with or something going on with
my career. I could, I could deal with it on the phone at Starbucks or wherever I was.
My fear is that this is
going to be that times a million. It's going to be, you have to have it in order to compete.
Just like you kind of have to have an email today. You kind of have to have a cell phone
today.
That's right. That's right. Yes, we are certainly headed in that way. And I think the word human
is a very good word to put on the table here. Some things seem
human or inhuman. And when you simply connect people, you know, Mark Zuckerberg
sometimes says, how could it be wrong to give more people more voice? If you're
simply connecting people, making it easier for them to contact each other, you know,
I think that's mostly gonna have good effects. And that happened with the
telephone, you know. We all got telephones and we could do all sorts of
things. We could coordinate with our friends.
Telephones are great.
But when it became not technology making it easier for this guy to reach you or me to communicate with you, but rather
it's a way to put things out to try to gain prestige from me in front of
thousands or maybe millions of people. now it changes all of our incentives,
it changes the game we're playing.
You know, what games are we playing as we go about our day?
And the more people are playing the game of,
I'm struggling to get influence in an influence economy
where everyone else is on these seven platforms.
So I have to be too, or they have an advantage over me.
That is the way that things have been rewired already.
Already we're there. Now you're raising the possibility that the next step is more hardware
based, that it's going into our bodies. And I think that is likely to happen. And so I
hope what we'll do now, and I hope my book, The Excess Generation, will sort of promote
a pause. Let's think where we are. Let's think what we've
done. Let's look at what has happened. When our kids got on phones and social media, we
thought, oh, this could be amazing. Like, they can connect. They can form communities.
It's going to be great. And now it's clear, no, it's been horrible. It's been really,
really terrible. As soon as they got on, their mental health suffered. You know, they might
feel like they have a community, but it's much worse than what it replaces. So I think what we're seeing is
the sort of the techno-optimists, the sort of the futurists who say, oh, it's gonna be amazing,
you know, we'll have Neuralink, we'll have all this technology, we'll be able to do everything.
Like, here's where we have to heed, I think, the warnings of the ancients,
of religious authorities, of those who warn us that we are leaving our humanity and we're stepping into an unknown zone where
So far the initial the initial verdict is horrible
So if we keep going without you know without putting on some breaks. Yeah, I think we're going to a horrible place
Yeah, my fear is that it won't be horrible. Oh, it'll feel good. Yeah, that it'll be amazing.
So my fear, my genuine fear, is the rewiring of the mind in a way that can enhance dopamine,
enhance serotonin, and do things that can genuinely make you feel better.
And that we will.
In the short run.
Yes, and that we will decide that this is a better thing.
Regardless of how you feel about SSRIs,
most people think that they're being dispensed too readily
and that too many people that get on antidepressants
could have solved that issue with exercise
and diet because this is a big part of the reason why people are feeling shitty in the
first place is their body is failing.
Yeah, and having less sex I read recently that the SSRIs are suppressing sex drive in
many people.
Yes, so there's that.
There's a lot of issues that come along with those and yet there's immense profit in making
sure that people take those and yet there's an immense profit in making sure that
people take those and stay on those. My fear is that if you can do something that allows people
to have their mind function, have their brain, their endocrine system, have all these things
function at a higher level, then everyone is going to do it. You would not want to just be natural and depressed
if you could just put on this little headset and feel fantastic. And maybe it could be
a solution to so many of our society issues. Maybe bullying would cease to exist if everyone
had an increase in dopamine. It sounds silly, but if dopamine increase by, look, if you have
an entire society that's essentially on a low dose of MDMA, you're not going to have
nearly as much anger and frustration, and you also are not going to have as much blues,
you're not going to have as many sad songs that people love, you're not going to have
the kind of literature that people write when they feel like shit.
You know, it's unfortunate, but also as a whole, as a society, it probably would be an overall net positive if people did not want to engage in bullying,
did not want to engage in violence, did not want to engage in theft, were more charitable,
you know, if more benevolent, if you
look at things in that direction, that's my concern is that the rewiring of the mind,
what we're essentially seeing right now is a rewiring of a mind that we didn't anticipate
it, it has negative consequences, we thought about it in a positive way, oh, this is going
to be great, we're all going to be connected. You know, what, how would it be bad that people could have more voices like Zuckerberg
says? But my fear is that it's going to just change what it means to be a human
being and my genuine feels that this is inevitable and that as technology scales
upward, this is unavoidable. Right now it certainly feels that way. And while I'm not optimistic about the
next 10 years, I share your vision of what's coming, but I'm not resigned to it. People always say to
me, I go around saying we need to do these four norms, we can do them. And people say, oh, that
ship has sailed, like, you know, the train's left the station. You know, but if a ship has sailed, like you know the trains left the station. You know, but if a ship has sailed and we know that you know it's gonna sink, we can actually
call it back. I've been on airplanes where they leave the, you know, it leaves
the the jetway and then they call it back because they discover a safety issue. So
we are headed that way, I agree. But I think there are, I think we can, I mean we humans are an amazingly adaptable species.
I think we can figure this out and there are definitely pathways to a future that's much better.
These technologies could in theory give us the best democracy ever, where people really do have the right kind of voice.
It's not just the extremes who are super empowered as it is now. So, you know, we're in a point in space and time, let's say right now, and I can imagine
a future that's really fantastic. But how do we get there? And are we able to get there?
Is there a path? Or is it like, you know, there's no path from A to B? So I don't know,
but I think we sure as hell have to try. And
the first thing we have to do is not be resigned and just say, oh, well, the world's going
to hell. What are you going to do about it? It's too big. So let's start. I have a proposal.
Let's start with the one area that we can all agree on, which is our kids. It's the
most amazing thing. In Congress, you can't, you know, any issue if the right likes it,
the left won't and vice versa, except for this one. This is the only thing in Washington that's really
bipartisan. The senators and congressmen have kids, they see it. So let's, you know, let's
test the proposition that all is lost and we're helpless. Let's test that proposition
and let's test it in the place where we can, we're most likely to succeed, which is rolling
back the phone-based childhood
and replacing it with a more play-based childhood.
Oh, so actually, I said there are four norms,
we talked about three.
So if you don't mind, I'll put in the fourth norm now.
So the first three are about phones.
No smartphone before high school,
no social media till 16, phone-free schools.
Okay, but if you take away the phones
and you don't give kids back each other and playtime and independence, what are they going to do? You're
going to keep them at home all day long without screens? So the fourth norm is more independence,
free play and responsibility in the real world. And this is a thing that you and I talked
about last time. I think we actually had a small disagreement where, you know, I'm a big fan of Lenore Scanesi, the woman who wrote
Free Range Kids.
She and I co-founded an organization called Let Grow.
Parents, please go to letgrow.org.
All kinds of ideas for how to help your kid have more independence, which makes them more
mature, it makes them less fragile.
So this fourth norm, this is the harder one. This is the
one that we have to really overcome our fears of letting our kids out. And so actually,
let me ask you, I think our disagreement last time was, I talked about this and like, and
I said, like letting kids go for sleepovers and spend more time with other kids and unsupervised.
And then you said, I think you said, no, I'm not letting my kid go to sleepovers because
I don't trust the other families. Does that sound familiar to you? I don't believe that's what I said. I think you said, no, I'm not letting my kid go to sleepovers because I don't trust the other families.
Does that sound familiar to you?
I don't believe that's what I said. I think our concern was with people wandering around with kids being free to walk home in cities.
Yes, you had that also. We did talk about sleepovers.
My kids have sleepovers. They've always had sleepovers. If you know the parents and you trust the parents, it's a great way to give the kids independence and have them interact with other people.
Good. Yes. So tell me, what was your policy with your kids, with your younger, with all
three, when you let them out like they could go out the door, get on a bicycle, walk seven
blocks to a friend's house without any adult with them? Do you remember what age or grade?
No, I don't. I mean, it's fine if you live in a good neighborhood. The problem is if
you're, you know, childhood predators are real.. Not really not anymore. What I mean is what do you
mean? Well when you and I were growing up there were childhood predators out there
in the physical world approaching children and I think you said there you
told the story about one who approached you when you were doing magic tricks so
there were child predators out there, that's true.
They're all on Instagram now.
The kids are in doubt, and Instagram,
and especially Instagram, makes it super easy
for them to get in touch with children.
So this is my point.
I can summarize the whole book with a single sentence.
We have overprotected our kids in the real world
and underprotected them online.
I would agree to that.
So that, you know, yes, child predators are terrible, but guess what? We actually locked
up most of them. You know, when you and I were growing up, they weren't all locked up.
They were just eccentric who were exposing themselves. Remember flashing flashers? You
know, that doesn't happen anymore because if you do that now, you're going to jail for
a long, long time. So we actually locked up most of the predators and they know, don't approach kids on a playground, approach them on social
media.
I don't know if we are doing that. And there's this new push.
Oh yeah. Once you're identified as a sex offender, you'll never, you know, you are gone for a
long time and then they're a sex offender. No, we've really done a lot since the nineties
to change the change, to make the real world safer.
But there is push against that. You're aware of this term minor attracted persons that's being
pushed. Disgusting. Disgusting and freaky. It's such a bizarre term that I gotta
imagine is only being done by people don't have children and they're
pushing this thing that it's an identity and that it's not the fault of the person who has this issue. Yeah
Where's what's the root of that? Have you investigated that? Yes, I not that specific issue
But I can I can you know from so look I study moral psychology
That's my academic discipline and I study the roots of it evolutionarily
historically and child development what is our moral sense and
evolutionarily, historically, and child development, what is our moral sense? And there are different moralities and in some ways that's good and, you know, left and right push against each
other. So I'm very open to different moralities. But when a group makes something sacred and
they say this is the most important thing and nothing else matters other than this,
then they can kind of go insane and they
kind of lose touch with reality. And I think, you know, again, I don't know the
history of this particular movement, that horrible term, but there is a certain
kind of morality which is all about, you know, oppression and victimhood. And once
you, you know, someone, I guess somewhere said, oh, you know, men
who are attracted to boys or, you know, little girls are being, you know, are victims of,
I don't know what, some, in some little eddy of weird morality, someone put that forward
as a new victim class because, you know, we've been trying to address victimhood all over
the place. Once someone puts that up as a new victim class, and you have to do that,
you have to change the terms. This is very Orwellian. You change the terms
and then some others who share this morality, which is focused on not making anyone feel
marginalized, not allowing any labels that will slander someone or make them look bad.
I think people who approach children for sexual goals, I'm
very happy to have them slandered and labeled and separated. But I suspect that some people,
once they lock this in as a group that's being marginalized, they say, well, we have to defend
them and we don't think about what the hell we're actually saying. It seems purely an academic thing.
It seems that this is something that with people that only exist in sort of an academic
space where they, it's almost like an intellectual exercise in understanding oppression.
That's not, it's, you can't apply it in the real world. It's just, it's too
fucked up. The consequences of it are horrific. Normalizing,
victimizing children. Now the one thing, so before we go any further with this
particular topic, I would want to point out one of the problems that our social
media world has given us, which is somewhere in all of the academy and
all the universities, some philosopher, let's say, proposed that term or raised an idea.
So this has been going on for thousands of years. Someone in a conversation proposes
a provocative idea. What if we think about this as a minor-attracted person? They put
that idea out, and then other people say, no say no that's really stupid and it doesn't catch on because this is not an idea that's going to catch on
even in the Academy. So but I think where we are now is I'm guessing someone
proposed this, somebody else got wind of it, posted it online, and now you're
gonna have a whole media ecosystem going crazy about this terrible idea. So maybe
can you look up a
minor attracted person? Is this just like a thing that was from one academic talk or
is this an actual movement?
Well, I've seen politicians discuss it.
No way. Wait, wait, wait. As like decriminalizing or destigmatizing?
Destigmatizing.
Oh, God.
There was a recent politician that went viral for this discussion.
Oh no.
Alright, there may be more.
There's more than one.
There was two specific women that were doing that.
And I didn't investigate what these women had families or what it was, but this is this
push to try to alleviate bullying or alleviate shame or
alleviate the stigma that's attached to what they're calling an identity. Yeah, that's right.
So actually so that that brings us to the issue of identitarianism, which I think is a useful term for us
these days. So
I think a lot of what's happened on campus
So I think a lot of what's happened on campus is the move to focus on identity as the primary analytical lens in a number of disciplines, not in most
disciplines, but in a lot of humanities, the studies departments. So putting
identity first and then ranking identities and saying some identities
are good, some are bad. This really activates our ancient tribalism.
And I think that the liberal tradition,
going back hundreds of years,
is really an attempt to push back against that
and to create an environment in which we can all get along.
And so, you know, as I see it from inside the academy,
it's, we've always been interested in identity.
It's an important topic.
There's a lot of research on it going back many decades. But something happened in 2015 on campus that really elevated
identitarianism into the dominant paradigm, not dominant in that most people believed
it, but dominant in the sense that if you go against it, you're going to be destroyed
socially. And that's what cancel culture is. That's what Greg Lukianoff and Ricky Schlott,
their new book, The Cancelling of the American Mind is about.
So yes, it's the people who are putting identity first and that's sort of their religion and
their morality.
You know, I mean, they're welcome to live in the United States, but when they get influence
in universities or in school boards, yeah, bad stuff will happen.
It's just bizarre the effect that it does have when people push back against identity politics.
It's a small, very vocal minority that pushes this agenda.
And it's not the majority of people.
The majority of people mostly disagree with these ideas.
Yeah, absolutely.
This is again, a really important point
about how our society has changed.
Those of us from the 20th century still think in terms of public opinion like do most people believe this or do most people not believe it? And most people are sane. Most people are not at all
crazy. Most people are pretty reasonable. And I think what's happened since social media became
much more viral in 2009, 2010, is that the extremes are now much more powerful
and they're able to intimidate the moderates on their side. So on the right, sort of the
center right, what I call like true conservatives or like Berkey and Edmund Burke conservatives,
they get shot and they get excluded and there's not many of them in Congress anymore. And
on the left, you have the far left, the identitarian left, you know, shooting darts into, you know, people like me and to, you know, anybody who is,
you know, anybody who questions. So they shoot their moderates. And what you have is even
though most people are still moderate and reasonable, our public discourse is dominated
by the far right, the far left, and all these crazy fringe, you know, I mean, it can be,
you know, neo-Nazis on one side and one side, and then these identitarians defending minor attracted
people on the other side. So don't lose faith in humanity. Recognize that we've moved into
this weird, weird world because of social media in which it's hard to see reality and
in which people are afraid to speak up. and so we get warped ideas rising to
dominance even though very few people believe them. And I think this is where
bots come into play. Yeah, because I think I really do believe that this is being
amplified whether it's by foreign governments or by special interest
groups or by whatever whoever it is is trying to push these specific narratives.
Absolutely and this can bring us right back to TikTok and the national security threat.
So Vladimir Putin was a KGB agent in the 20th century and the KGB going back I think it
was in the 50s. They had some sort of a meeting or something where they decided that they
were going to take I think it's called active measures. They were going to try to mess up
American democracy and they would you know they'd spray paint racial slurs. They were going to try to mess up American democracy. And they would, you know, they'd spray paint racial slurs. They put swastikas on synagogues. They saw
that we're a multi-ethnic democracy. We're making a lot of progress towards tolerance.
And the Russians were trying to, the Soviets were trying to put a stop to that and make
us hate each other. So they were doing that back since the 1950s. And it was expensive.
They had to fly people over or they had to try to win people over. You couldn't scale the operation. But that's the tradition that Vladimir Putin comes from.
Now, the Soviet Union falls in 1991. I think he's like in Berlin or I can't remember where
he was when, you know, but he was very influenced by this and the humiliation of the Soviet
Union. And so, you know, he rises to power again in the 21st century.
Do you think he suddenly no longer wants to mess with American democracy?
Like did he suddenly drop that desire?
You know, we basically handed him the tools.
We said, okay, you know, you can open as many Facebook accounts as you want, Twitter accounts,
open as many as you want.
There's no identity authentication.
There's no age verification.
Create bots all you want and have's no identity authentication. There's no age verification. Create bots all
you want and have them mess with us. And Renee DiResta has a book coming out soon. She really
did amazing work to get to the bottom of this. You know, they started running tests in 2013.
They created accounts on all these platforms long before, but they started running tests.
Could they, you know, could they get Americans to believe that an explosion had occurred at a refinery plant in Louisiana? Yes, they made it all
up and people believed it. Could they get Americans to believe some, you know,
extreme BLM post that was completely outrageous? Yes. And, you know, same thing,
you know, to enrage, you know, to enrage people on the left. So the right, we know
that the Russians are messing with us. We know that the Russians know our weak point. And by
Russians again, I don't mean the Russian people. I mean Vladimir Putin.
The government. So, you know, we're handing them the tools and the
instruction book for how to divide us, how to weaken us, how to make us lose our
resolve and our will. Have you seen Yuri Besmanov give a speech? Oh, is that the...
Yeah. Yes. I've seen that. That's incredible. That conversation about the ideological subversion. And he did this in the 1980s.
I think it was 84. And he was talking about how the work is already done. That's right.
And that is just a matter of these generations now going into the workforce
with Marxist ideas and with all this ideological subversion that the Soviet
Union has injected into the universities.
That's right. That could be right. I mean, it is chilling to watch and it is prophetic.
But, you know, they were playing a long game. I mean, the communists planning the communist
revolution, they were patient and they were playing the long game.
Yeah, as is China. Yeah, they're very smart. I mean, there's so much more,
Yeah, that's right. Very smart.
I mean, there's so much more...
Because they're dictatorships, they have complete control over what they choose to do.
They don't have to meet with subcommittees.
They don't have to have congressional hearings.
They just can just do it.
Oh, and that's...
Okay, that's a good point because that brings us to the big difference between democracies and autocracies. Back
in the 1930s when the West was in economic collapse and it was the Soviet Union and then
the Italian fascists and then Hitler, the German fascists, they were making rapid economic
progress. And the criticism of democracy has always been, it's chaotic.
There's no good leadership. They can't plan ahead. And that's all true. But why did we
triumph in the 20th century over all these other models? Because democracy gives us a
degree of dynamism where we can do things in a distributed way. We have people just
figuring stuff out. We have an incredibly creative economy and
business sector. And so democracies have this incredible ability to be generative, creative,
regenerative unless you mess with their basic operating system and say, let's take this
environment in which people talk to each other, share ideas, take each other's ideas, compete,
try to get a bigger, you know, a better company.
Let's take that and let's change the way people talk
so that it's not about sharing information,
it's about making them spend all day long,
nine hours a day competing for prestige
on social media platforms.
And in a way that empowers everyone
to complain all the time.
This I think really saps the dynamism. I think this social
media, what I'm suggesting, I haven't thought this through, what I'm suggesting is that
whatever the magic ingredient that made democracy so triumphant in the 20th century, Western
liberal democracy, American style democracy, whatever made it so triumphant is being sapped
and reduced by the rapid rewiring of our society onto social media.
Yeah, I would agree with that. And I think it's also being influenced again by these and reduced by the rapid rewiring of our society onto social media.
Yeah, I would agree with that. And I think it's also being influenced again by these foreign governments
that have a vested interest in us being at each other's throats.
Why wouldn't they? It's so cheap.
It's so cheap, it's so effective, and it seems to be the predominant way that people interact with each other.
That's right.
When you say that you've been attacked,
what have you specifically been attacked about?
Oh, it's just in the academic world,
if you say anything about any DEI-related policy,
you'll be called racist or sexist or homophobic
or something.
And if you, so I was always on the left,
I was always a Democrat, now I'm nothing.
I'm an extremely alarmed, patriotic American citizen
who sees my country going to hell.
I'm in that camp.
Yeah, a lot of us are, a lot of us are, you know,
politically homeless now.
Yeah.
But I sort of started my career in political psychology.
So my original work was on how morality varies across cultures.
I did my dissertation research in Brazil and then I did some work in India.
And it was only in the 90s that our culture were heated up.
And I began to see that left and right were like different countries.
We had different economics textbook, different American history, different US Constitution. It was
like different worlds. And I began actually trying to help the left stop losing elections
like in 2000, 2004. As a Democrat, I thought I could use my research in moral psychology
to help the Democrats understand American morality, which they were not understanding. You know, Al Gore and John Kerry did a very bad job. So I've all along been sort of critical of the left,
originally from within the left. And that's a pretty good way to get a bunch of darts
shot at you. Nothing, nothing terrible ever really happened. I don't want to, you know,
lots of people have been truly canceled, you know, shamed, lost their jobs, committed considered
suicide. So nothing like that has ever happened to me. But you know, shamed, lost their jobs, considered suicide. So nothing like that has ever happened
to me. But, you know, when there's some minor thing on, so, you know, people take a line
out of one of your talks, they put it up online with a commentary about what an awful person
you are, thousands of people comment on it or like it or retweet it, it hurts. It's frightening
in a way like nothing else I've ever known.
And how many of those people were even real people?
Yeah, that's right
This is the request right? That's right
Because it really is in dispute and what it was one of the major disputes
Oh, yeah, I mean one of the things that's come out of Elon buying Twitter and thank God he did
As much as people want to talk about the negative aspects, which are real which I've seen racism and hate go up on Twitter
I've seen it being openly discussed, which is very disturbing. But what we did find out is that the government
was involved in this, that the federal government was interfering with people's ability to use
these platforms for speech.
Over COVID. I mean, because of COVID. Yes, that's right.
Yes. But I feel like that's just a test run.
Being able to implement that for that,
then you can implement it for so many different things,
dissent about foreign policy issues,
dissent about social issues.
There's so many different ways they can do it
if they can somehow or another frame it in a way
that this is good, better for the overall good of America.
Yeah, that's right.
So that's why I never talk about content moderation
I'm not interested in it
There has to be some but most people focus on the content and they think if we can clean up the content or change the content
Or you know in those Senate hearings we saw a couple months ago
Do you know just you know if we can reduce the amount of you know suicide promoting or self-harm promoting content that our kids are
Seeing then all will be well.
Like, no, it's not primarily about the content.
I agree with you that the government
was influencing these platforms
to suppress views that they thought were wrong
and some of which turned out to be right.
I'm a big fan of my friend Greg Lukianoff, who runs the Foundation for Individual Rights
and Expression.
So I think we shouldn't be thinking about social media like, well, how do we keep the
wrong stuff off and only have it have the right stuff?
I think almost only about architecture.
How is this platform designed?
And can we improve it in ways that are content neutral? Can we improve it in ways that aren't going to advantage the left or the right,
but are going to make it more truth seeking? And so, Frances Haugen, the Facebook whistleblower,
when she came out, she had all kinds of ideas about settings, things that Facebook could
have done to reduce the incredible power of the extremes. The farthest right, 3%, the
farthest left, 3%, the farthest left, 3%,
and then a bunch of just random weirdos who just post a lot.
They have extraordinary influence.
And that's not about a left-right thing.
That's about, do we want an information ecosystem
that super-duper empowers the extremes
and silences the middle 80%?
Hell no.
So that's the kind of regulation that I favor,
focusing on making these platforms less explosive
and more useful.
And there's also this discussion that comes up a lot about algorithms.
Algorithms have essentially changed the entire game, because it's not just what's online.
It's what do you interact with more frequently.
And that's accentuated. And the problem with that is most people
interact with things that rile them up.
And so you're developing these platforms
that are immensely profitable that ramp up dissent
and ramp up anger and ramp up arguments.
And like in the case of yourself,
instead of just debating you on these issues and doing
it in a good faith manner, Jonathan Haidt believes this, this is why I disagree, I think
of this or that.
Instead, they'll label you as whatever.
That's right.
Racist, sexist, homophobic, Islamophobic, xenophobic, whatever they can say,
whatever pejoratives they can throw at you that essentially this reductionist
view of your perspective that makes it incredibly negative. That's right. And
then you'll get bots that interact with that, that push that. That's right. So
Twitter only went to algorithms I think in 2017. So before then, you know, people
who tweet a lot, you know, you, so I remember people talk a lot about
algorithms as that's the cause of the whole problem. And they're not the cause
of the problem, but man are they amplifiers. And I think that's what
you're saying. They're just super-duper amplifiers on whatever craziness would
be there even without them.
And so that certainly is shaping what we receive, what our children receive.
And so this is some of the stuff that I think, again, we have to really protect our children
from to have a company able to micro target their exact desires even when they don't know what their desires are.
It's a degree of control and influence over children in particular that I think they should
just be protected from.
Do you think that if you looked at algorithms, do you think that it's an overall net negative?
And could the argument be made that algorithms should be banned?
Yeah, no, I don't think.. I mean algorithms are there for a reason. You know, we all know
on Amazon, you know, if you look up a book, it's going to suggest some other books you
might be interested in. And it's pretty darn good. Like, yeah, you're right. I would be
interested in that. So no, I would never say, oh, we can't have algorithms. I mean, that's
that would just be a Luddite sort of move to make. You know, I think again, as a social psychologist who studies morality, I just see everything
going up in flames. So here's a metaphor that I sometimes use. Suppose you're the
California Department of Parks and you have a hundred years of experience
fighting forest fires. You know everything about the wind, the humidity,
you know what season. You've got it down to a science, you can do the best you can to keep forest fires under control. And then
one day, God decides to just mess with the world and changes the atmosphere from 20%
oxygen to 80% oxygen. And if we suddenly were in a world where 80% of the atmosphere was
oxygen, everything would go up in flames. Every electronic device would be burning right
now.
So that's kind of what happened after 2009, 2010.
That's kind of what happened once we switched over
to be about, so I would say the retweet button,
that move to virality, that I think is even more guilty
of causing the problems even than algorithms.
I don't know that it's necessarily one versus the other,
but that's the way I see it.
That we're in a world that is, the technology is so quick to ramp up whatever
will most engage us, and that's mostly emotions such as anger. So yeah, that's why it feels
like everything's burning.
And this doesn't seem like it's slowing down. It seems like it's ramping up and it seems like they've gotten more efficient at the use of algorithms and all these
different methods like retweeting and reposting and different things that sort
of accentuate what people are upset about and what people get riled up about.
Yeah. Yes, I think it is accelerating and for two reasons. One is that it's just the
nature of exponential growth. It's the nature of progress. I think in the 19th century, a guy named Adams gave
us the Adams curve. He was noticing like, wow, the amount of work we're able to do now
that we're harnessing steam and coal keeps growing and growing and growing. And at some
point it's going to be going up so fast that it'll go up an infinite amount every day or
something. You reach an asymptote. You reach a point at which it's insane. And yeah, so many people
think that we're now at the singularity, we're at the point at which things are
changing so fast that we just can't even understand them. And we haven't yet
mentioned the word AI. Now you bring in AI and of course, you know, AI could
unlock extraordinary material progress.
And Marc Andreessen has been arguing that.
But as a social scientist, I fear it's going to give us material progress in sociological
chaos.
It's going to be used in ways that make our already unstable social structures and systems
even less stable.
Well, what's very bizarre that we're seeing with the initial implementation of it, specifically
with Google's version of it, is that it's ideologically captured.
That was so horrible.
And that was so irresponsible of Google to do.
So no, I'm glad we have a chance to talk about this because I'm really horrified by what
Google did in introducing Gemini.
And just to give a little background here, so I'm sure many of your listeners know, Google
Gemini was programmed to answer in ways that basically the most extreme DEI officer would
demand that people speak.
And so if you ask for a picture of the founding fathers, they're multiracial or all black.
This is just-
Or Nazi soldiers.
Yeah.
Even Nazis had to be multiracial or black. So there's two things to say about
this. The first is that Google must be an unbelievably stupid company. Like, did nobody
test this before they released it to the public? And obviously, Google is not a stupid company,
which leads me to my next conclusion, which is if Google did such a stupid, stupid thing,
so disgraced its product that it's banking so much on,
I mean it depends a lot on the success of Gemini. And now they've alienated half the
country right away on the first day practically they alienated them. They couldn't be that
stupid. I think what's happening to them is what happened to us in universities, which
is what I've called structural stupidity. So you have very smart people. But if anyone questions a DEI-related policy on campus,
they would get attacked.
And that's what most of the early blowups were.
I think you probably had Bret Weinstein on here.
That's what Erica Christakis at Yale
and Nicholas Christakis at Yale.
People wrote these thoughtful, caring memos about opposing a policy, there
would be a conflagration, they'd be attacked, and they would sometimes lose their jobs.
So that's what happened to us in universities in 2015 to usher in our now nine years of
insanity, which I think might be ending. I think last fall was so humiliating for higher
ed that I think we might be at a turning point.
But my point is for Google.
I suspect that Google was suffering
from an extreme case of structural stupidity
because surely a lot of those engineers
could see that this is terrible.
This is a massive violation of the truth.
And part of Google's brand is truth and trust.
So I suspect they were just afraid to say anything. And that's why
Google made this colossal blunder of introducing, you know, woke AI at a time when we desperately
need to trust our institutions that are related to knowledge. And Google was trusted and now
they've lost a lot of it.
And it's not just Google. It's chat GPT.
But chat GPT is not as explicit. I mean, that-
It's not as explicit, but it does do certain things.
Like if you ask it to say something positive about Donald Trump, it refuses.
You ask it to say something positive about Joe Biden, it'll gaslight you.
No, that's right.
I'm not...
And there was recently...
Was it David Rosato or who was it who put out some listing of how far left each of the
different AI products are. So you can certainly say that chat GPT is not
politically neutral, but you wouldn't say from that
that the people at chat GPT or OpenAI are stupid.
You would not look at this product and say,
how could they be so dumb as to have it be left leaning?
But with Google, you have to say,
how could they be so dumb as to produce black Nazis
for us?
Right.
I just don't think they played it all out.
I think this ideological subversion, this thing that they've done with DEI and with
the universities and the education system, it just seemed like you had to apply that to artificial
intelligence because you're essentially, you're giving artificial intelligence
these protocols, you're giving it these parameters in which it can address
things, and if you're doing it through that lens, this is the inevitable result
of that. You're going to get black Nazis. Oh, no, I don't know about the black
Nazis. I don't think it goes that extreme extreme so to the extent that... But if you say DEI if
you apply that to everything across the board and don't make exceptions in terms
of like historical accuracy the founding fathers of America being all black. Yeah
yeah so large again I don't you know I'm not an expert in AI but large language
models are basically just consuming
everything written and then spitting stuff back out.
And so it might be that most stuff is written.
People on the left are dominant universities.
They probably publish more books, whatever.
Right, but there's nothing written about black Nazis.
That's right.
That's right.
So what I think is going on here is that I could see AI seeming
to lean left, even if it wasn't programmed to lean left. That might just be the data
input that it takes. But to get black Nazis, you need somebody had a program in those commands.
Somebody had to consciously say, you know, anything about representation is going to
everything's going to look like a Benetton. No, it's not even like a Benetton. Benetton
ads had much more diversity in the 1980s and 90s. So no, I would agree that the Gemini case clearly someone
deliberately programmed in all kinds of rules that, yeah, they seem to come from a DEI manual
just without much thinking.
Yeah. How do they come back from that?
I don't know. That's a good question. I don't know how deep the rot runs. I don't know how
bad things are. Google used to have an amazing
corporate culture.
Oh boy, look at this. Apple is in talks to let Google Gemini power iPhone AI features.
Oh my god.
Go back.
Oh sorry, I was adding that too.
Yeah, go back. Companies considering AI deal that would build on search packed. Apple also
recently held discussions with OpenAI about deal. Onificent 7 adds 350 billion on Gemini's reported iPhone deal.
So because Google has implemented AI into their phone, specifically Samsung,
Samsung's new Galaxy S24 Ultra has a bunch of pretty fantastic AI features,
one of them being real-time translation, your ability to summarize web pages
instantaneously, summarizing notes, bullet points, very helpful features. So because
of that, another one is your ability to circle any image and it automatically
will search that image for you like what ability to circle any image and it automatically will
search that image for you.
Like, what is that?
Circle it, boom.
The Samsung phone will immediately give you a result and tell you what it is.
So very, very helpful.
But now there becomes, this is something that Apple has to compete with.
So Apple's decided to try to implement AI, but it has to outsource.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
No, it is alarming.
I guess the point that I'd like to add on, which I hope
will be useful for people, is part
of what we're seeing across our institutions
is a loss of professional responsibility, a loss
of people doing their jobs.
And I don't mean base level know, base level employees, I mean
the leadership. Institutions have important roles to play, companies have missions, universities
must be completely committed to the truth, research, discovery, journalists must be committed
also to the truth and methods to find the truth. And what we've seen in the 2010s especially is many of these institutions being led away
from their mission, their purpose towards the political agenda of one side or another.
And so I think this is what we're seeing.
And if we're going to make it through this difficult period, we need some way to find
the truth. And the more we've gone into the internet age, the harder it is to find the truth.
We just look like, you know, something's incredible.
Like we just say, you know, hey, look this up and we got it.
But on anything contested, it's just very hard to find the truth.
And so that's why I'm especially disappointed in Google.
I always loved Google.
I thought it was an incredible company.
And for them to so explicitly say, you know, our mission is political, it's not to help you find the
truth, that I thought was so disappointing.
Yeah, it is disturbing when a large company decides their mission is political. Like,
to which side? To who? Is it the truth? Is that your main politics? Or is it you decide that one side is good overall, net positive, the other side is net
negative, and whatever you can do to subvert that other side is valuable?
That's right.
And so that's a mindset in which the ends justify the means.
And so part of the genius of American liberal democracy was to calm down those tribal sentiments
to the point where we could live together, we could celebrate diversity in its real forms,
we could get the benefits of diversity.
And that was all possible when we didn't feel that the other side was an existential risk
to the country, that if the other side gets in, it's going to be the end.
And that's a very powerful image.
And that's an image that helped Donald Trump win. There was an essay, what's it by Michael Anton, I think,
called the Flight 93 election. You know, if you're on Flight 93 being hijacked to crash
into the Congress, and you know, if you do nothing, you're going to crash into Congress,
you'll do anything. And so he framed it as a sort of a Hail Mary pass that patriotic Americans were supposed
to vote for Donald Trump.
That mindset of the ends justify the means,
the situation is so dire that even violence, even violence,
is justified.
That is really frightening.
And that's my concern is that we could be headed that way.
We have not had much political violence.
There's been an uptick, but you know, not very little compared to say
1968 to 73. That period was much more violent. So I'm hopeful we'll avoid that.
But this, you know, once you say the ends justify the means and we can cheat, we
can lie, we can subvert the company's purpose because the end we're fighting
for is so noble, well the other side's gonna do the same thing. And before
you know it, your culture war becomes a real war.
Yeah. And you're seeing that in the news, how it's implemented in the news. I mean,
I'm sure you're aware of this recent Donald Trump speech where he talked about a blood
bath.
Oh, God, yeah.
And what the actual phrase was. See if you can find that, Jamie, because it's actually important to highlight how not just
inaccurate, but it's just deceptive the media was in their depiction of what he said and
that they are taking this quote out of context and trying to say that there's going to be
a civil war if he doesn't get elected, which is not what he was talking about at all. See, pull it up because it's so disturbing that they
would, first of all, that they would think that they could get away with it
in this day and age with all the scrutiny and all the with social media
and all the independent journalists that exist now, which is one of the more
interesting things about the demise of corporate media, the demise in trust.
Trust in corporate media is at an all-time low and so this has led to a
rise in true independent journalists. The real ones out there, the Matt
Taibes, the Glenn Greenwalds, the people that are actually just trying to say
what is really going on and what are the influences behind these things and why
are these things happening. But this one was bizarre
When I saw it, then I saw the actual speech. Let's play the actual speech
I have the actual speech the headlines are different, but I'll just play this. Let's play the actual speech
Think to China if you're listening president Xi and this is it friends, but he understands the way I deal those big
monster car
Manufacturing plants that you're building in Mexico right now,
and you think you're going to get that, you're going to not hire Americans, and you're going
to sell the cars to us.
Now, we're going to put a 100 percent tariff on every single car that comes across the
line, and you're not going to be able to sell those cars.
If I get elected — now, if I don't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath
for the whole. That's going to be the least of it. It's going to be a bloodbath for the
country. That'll be the least of it. If this election, if this election isn't won, I'm
not sure that you'll ever have another election in this country. Does that make sense? I don't
think you're going to have another election in this country. If we don't win this election,
I don't think you're going to have another election or certainly not an election that's meaningful. And
we better get out of we better. I actually say that the date, remember
this, November 5th, I believe it's going to be the most important date in the
history of our country. I believe that. So that's what he said. Well that sounds
pretty bad. That sounds like the Flight 93 election argument. If I don't win, the country's our country I believe that so that's what he said well that sounds pretty
bad that sounds like flight 93 election argument if I don't win the country's
over but what he was yeah but what he's talking about is this subversion of our
economy and the the subversion of our democracy that we will never have an
election again I don't think he's saying that'll be a bloodbath in terms of a
civil war he's saying that economy's gonna be destroyed.
But there was no, I was listening for that. I was thinking maybe he meant it as a metaphor.
I didn't hear any, I mean the bloodbath is...
It's an unfortunate term, but he's not, I don't think he's saying it's a civil war.
It sounded to me like he was. It sounded to me like, you know, if he doesn't win there will be violence.
Right. You have to really give him a hell of a lot of benefit of the doubt.
Right, but he's talking about the economy.
He's talking about China, building plants, he's talking about all these things and saying
that if he doesn't get elected, it's going to be a bloodbath.
It's going to be a mess.
I don't think he's specific.
I mean, I think he would elaborate on that if he was saying there'll be violence.
I don't think that's what he's saying.
I think he's saying destruction of our economy, the destruction of our...
You know, he makes a lot of asides. So he was talking about the economy, that's true. And then
he said, if I'm not elected, and then he makes an aside about what would happen
to the country. So look, we might disagree on this, we might disagree,
surely disagree on our priors. It's surely the wrong surely we both agree on that yeah it's an unfortunate term to use for him to
yes that's right but it doesn't sound to me as though the media took that one out
of context well they sort I just rewatched the longer video in closed
captioning yeah cut it off the video we watched cuts it off right after he says
bloodbath continue to see it's gonna be a bloodbath for the whole that's gonna be the least of it's going to be a bloodbath for the whole... That's going to be the least of it.
It's going to be a bloodbath for the country.
That'll be the least of it.
But they're not going to sell those cars.
They're building massive factories.
A friend of mine, all he does is build car manufacturing plants.
Okay, so he's back on the economy.
Yes.
That's what he was talking about.
But he made an...
But the aside was not about the economy.
The aside was him making one of these typical asides about how important he is.
All right.
Joe, I think we're not going to settle this.
Look, I do agree that the media as a progressive,
left-leaning institution like universities
has violated its duty many times to the truth
and thereby lost the trust of much of the country. Most of
the people who work in these industries I think are wonderful and are trying to do a
good job. But the net effect, and this is my point about structural stupidity, during
our culture war, institutions that have had very little viewpoint diversity have been
subject to hijacking by those with a political agenda. So I agree with you about
that, although I disagree with you about what that comment from Donald Trump meant. It just
it sounded to me like it was not taken out of context.
Well, he was talking about the economy though.
Before.
Specifically.
I know, but in the aside he wasn't.
But even in the aside, he elaborates in the aside about the economy.
No, he just makes this aside about the bloodbath.
But that's the least of our problems.
Now back to what I was saying about the economy.
All right, look, we're not going to settle this one.
It's a terrible term.
It's a very unfortunate term.
If he said it would be a disaster instead of a bloodbath, that would have been the better
term to use.
Yes, that would have been a reasonable thing to say.
But he's filled with hyperbole.
I mean, he's talking about about he's trying to excite people
about the idea.
You're right.
Words matter when you're presidential candidate.
They do.
You're right.
But no argument there and no, I mean,
no way saying that that was the correct thing to say.
But the way they phrased it, the way they just
tried to make it seem like that was the only thing that he
was talking about. OK, I'm just not going gonna say anything else on this. I get it. But what you're
saying is that these people are good people but that they are ideologically
captured? Is that what you're saying? What I'm saying is that most people are
reasonable wherever you go but in the social media age it's no longer about
what most people are like it's about how much power do the extremists have because anyone now has the power to hijack,
threaten, intimidate. So that's my concern. And that means it's actually more easily fixable
because if it would be one thing, if 90% of journalists were rabid left-wingers who didn't
give a damn about journalistic integrity, and that's just not true. Right.
Most of the journalists I've met are really good journalists, like they really care about
sourcing and accuracy.
So you know, and it's the same with professors.
You know, many people, especially those who listen to conservative sources, might think
that professors are mostly tenured radicals who care more about Marxism than about educating
their kids.
That's just not true. What is true is that the minority that have extreme views now have a much bigger platform.
They have more power, but most people are reasonable wherever you go.
Is the issue that the reasonable people are afraid of pushing back against the radical people?
Exactly. That's it. That's the issue.
And because there really are consequences in terms of-
That's right.
And people say, well, you've got tenure.
What are you worried about?
And the answer is, yeah, we've got incredible security, but everybody is afraid of being
publicly shamed, humiliated, attacked, and mobbed.
And the people that go through it, I mean, it's really, it's incredibly painful.
They have to take sleeping pills at night.
They sometimes contemplate suicide,
and in one case, committed suicide that I know of.
So yes, that's exactly the problem.
That's, I think, the effect of not the original social media
platforms like MySpace or early Facebook,
but of the hyperviral ones that we got in the 2010s.
Yes.
And the result of that in terms of people terrified
about people attacking them is what you get
when you got those people from Penn, from Harvard. We're talking about the this
rampant anti-semitism on campus where people were actively calling for the
death of Jews, saying that this does not constitute harassment unless it's
actionable. Which is just stunning. Insane. Right, it's not wrong unless unless it's actionable. Which is just... Yes, that was stunning. Stunning.
Insane.
Right. It's not wrong unless they act on it.
What is that like as a person when, you know, you are an academic and you are a professor,
when you see that from these, especially from somewhere like Harvard? Like it just...
Yeah. So, yes, I'm a professor at NYU. I was at UVA for 16 years. I love being a professor, I love universities.
I'm also Jewish.
And I can understand the argument
that those presidents were making.
The argument was a very narrow technical argument
about whether students should be allowed to say
from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free.
And so I understand why it would have been reasonable for them to say, well, we're not
going to punish students for saying that.
That is political speech that's protected under the First Amendment.
So I understand the point that they were making.
But they were such screaming hypocrites in making that point because, and this is what
the Kotlin American Man was all about.
How did it happen that, you know, if it happen that if a professor or administrator writes a single word that a student objects to and
calls racist, suddenly this person is out of a job. Like really, you're going to fire
someone or let someone be tormented and fired because they said something that someone interpreted
in a certain way. And that led us to be super hyper crazy sensitive
about every word we say, because you never know when it'll explode and cause a scandal.
And so for the presidents to say, oh yeah, you know, anything anyone ever said between
2015 and yesterday would be punished if anyone was bothered by it. But from the river to
the sea, oh yeah, sure, that's constitutionally protected.
But it wasn't just from the river to the sea. It was the literal expression, death to Jews.
Yeah. Yes, that's right.
And that's what they were specifically defending saying, unless it's actionable, which is insane,
unless you commit actual genocide. Is that what you're saying?
That's right. No, I'm sorry, Joe, you're right. The question, right, the deeper question is
about political speech, but you're right that, as Stefanik, I believe, was asking them, it was about calls for genocide.
Yes.
And so, yes, calls for genocide, it seems to me, you know, again, I'm not a First Amendment
lawyer, maybe on the First Amendment legally, like you can't be arrested for it, but for
God sakes, on a university campus where you're trying to make everyone feel included, you
can't even comment, not just about the calls for genocide, but about the actual events on October 7th. So that, I think, is what
really brought Higher Ed to a really a nadir, a low point in public esteem, like literally
a low point in public esteem.
But I think it was a wake-up call for a lot of people that are kind of on the fence about
how big the issue is. Because these are the same people
that call for you being kicked out of the university
if you dead name someone.
Yeah, that's right.
These are the same people that if you use the wrong pronouns.
Yeah, that's right.
And so I'm actually, so last semester
was the worst one ever for higher education.
Data from Gallup and Pew show that the public, higher ed used to have an incredible brand, global brand,
we were the best, everyone wanted to come here, scientific innovation, all the top
academics were here in the United States. And in 2015, people on the left had a
very high opinion of higher ed, and actually people on the right had a
moderately high opinion of it. And then since 2015 it's dropped not just among people on the right but among centrists
and moderates as well.
So higher ed really lost the trust of most of the country.
And I was running an organization called Heterodox Academies.
I started it with some other social scientists that advocates for viewpoint diversity and
that's why I was kind of a target sometimes because you know here I am saying we need
viewpoint diversity. We need you know I was kind of a target sometimes, because here I am saying we need viewpoint diversity.
We need some conservatives, some libertarians.
We need to not all be on the same side politically.
Which is an amazing thing to fight against.
That's right.
Because viewpoint diversity, I mean,
we're the experts in why diversity is beneficial.
And the most important kind of diversity
turns out to be viewpoint diversity.
Well, it's also the most important aspect of an open and free society is the ability
to debate things.
Yeah, that's right.
Democracy is based on it.
And find out who's right or whose ideas resonate the most, who makes the most sense, who has
thought about this further and who has the more enlightened and educated perspective,
who has more information, Who has more balance?
That's right.
That's right.
So I think we hit a low point in the fall
in such a way that I'm actually optimistic
that things are gonna change
because I've been concerned about these issues
in universities, the culture issues,
since 2014, 2015 when Greg Lukianoff
and I wrote our first Atlantic article
titled The Coddling of the American Mind.
And every year it's gotten worse and worse and worse. There's never been a turnaround until last year. And
as with the Emperor's New Clothes, you know, people can see that something is
stupid and crazy and wrong, but they won't say anything. But then when somebody
does, then everybody can speak. And I'm feeling finally, for the first time since
2015, I'm feeling that people sort of understand, you know what? Wait, that was
crazy. What happened to us? That was crazy. People were saying crazy stuff.
Let's put our head above the parapet. Let's like start sometimes saying maybe that is
not right. So I think that things are actually going to turn around. Maybe not at the IVs,
although there are movements of faculty there saying, no, let's return to academic values,
the pursuit of truth. So I think what I'm hoping, what I think is likely to happen,
is we're going to see a split in the academic world.
That is, there are already schools,
like Arizona State University.
There are schools that already have basically said no
to all the crazy stuff, and they're focusing on educating
their students.
And I think we're going to see more students going that way.
The University of Chicago is another model.
So I think there were a few schools that
departed while almost all the other schools went
in the same direction.
But I think now that's going to change,
and it can change actually pretty quickly.
Because most of the university presidents
don't like this stuff.
They were, I've spoken to many of them,
all the crazy politics, the activist students,
it made their job very difficult.
So I'm actually hopeful that we're going to start,
and we are starting to see some university presidents standing
up and saying, you know, it's not
OK to shout down every conservative speaker.
Like, no, we're not going to allow that.
So we'll see.
A year from now, if I come back on a year or two, we'll see.
But I think things are actually beginning
to get better for the first time since 2015.
Well, I hope you're correct.
And I do agree that the pushback was so extreme
that some action is likely to take place.
I think the first step of that is
got to be to allow people with differing perspectives
to debate and not shout them down.
And also to show that that's shouting people down
and setting off fire alarms is shameful.
It's disgraceful.
That's right.
That's what we have to get to.
In the higher education institution.
That's right.
If there was any punishment, the students would change very quickly.
The students are very concerned about getting a job, about their futures.
And you know, what the early presidents who didn't do anything, what they conveyed was,
you can yell and scream all you want, nothing will happen to you.
You can bang on the glass and frighten speakers, nothing will happen to
you. You can throw rocks through windows, nothing will happen to you. And of course,
that just brought us more obnoxious behavior on campus and shame to higher ed in the eyes
of the country. So we had a brand that was based on extreme excellence and truth.
I think we damaged our brand very severely.
I think finally now there is a reckoning and a realization
of what we've done.
And I think we're going to see a recovery, an uneven recovery.
But I do think that a year or two from now, the mood,
the, well, who knows what's going
to happen with the election and whether there'll be a blood
bath. No, don't take that out of context. I just was referring to the early part of our conversation
that you're not quoting when you quote this.
Yeah, let's say disaster.
Yeah, disaster could be disaster. But I am actually, you know, about certain things,
I'm pretty pessimistic like you, but at least the future of universities, I do think for
the first time, I'm actually optimistic. I wasn't optimistic a year or two ago.
Well, that's great because you're on the ground so you you would really understand more than most and
Do you sense that with students? There's also a recognition that this is a gigantic issue
Like what was the reaction to students? Yeah, I mean not specifically Jewish students
But the Jewish students must have been the most horrified. Oh my god my god, yes, stabbed in the back is the way many of us feel.
What I've found all along, as I say, most people are reasonable. When all this stuff was breaking
out in 2015-2016, most students just wanted to get an education. They don't want to take part in this.
Right.
And now I find out, of course, I teach in a business school. I teach at NYU Stern.
Our students are pretty pragmatic.
They want to get a job.
Most of them are from immigrant backgrounds.
They're not here to protest the latest political.
They're here to succeed.
They're here to succeed, that's right.
So that is an aspect of Gen Z that gives me hope,
is that they see the problems.
They see the problems with social media.
They see the problems with the extreme activists.
So what we have to change is not the average student. What we have to change is the dynamics so that the average
student feels freer to speak up.
And how can that be done?
Well, so I founded two organizations to do that. One is Heterodox Academy. We need more
viewpoint diversity among the professors, or at least we need more toleration of people
who are centrist or libertarian or you know so that's one on
the faculty side what we need to do and also the culture on campus but I also
co-founded another organization called the constructive dialogue Institute with
a woman named Caroline Mel and what we did is we took some of the insights of
moral psychology and some of the content from my book the righteous mind and it's
it's now it evolved it's now it's six 30-minute modules that teach you about moral psychology, why are we divided, what do liberals believe, what
do conservatives believe, why do conversations go wrong, how can you start more skillfully,
how do you, you need to listen first. So there's a lot of like Dale Carnegie sort of wisdom
in there. And it's really effective. So if people go to constructivedialogue.org, the
program is called Perspectives. It's being used in, you know, I think more than 50 universities now. So there are things that we can do, but it's
going to take leadership and good psychology.
That's so important what you just said. And I think that if those programs gain momentum
and that people recognize that it's really beneficial to all to have these ideas debate. If you truly
believe that opposing ideas to your ideology are evil, you should be able to
debate those. The only way to do that is to have someone to have the ability to
express themselves and for you to counter those those points that they make.
Exactly. And this is what many commentators on the left have been
pointing out since 2015.
Van Jones has an amazing talk.
He's a progressive, democratic, well-connected, smart person.
And he's been pointing out, there's a great talk
he gave at the University of Chicago.
I have a quote on this in The Coddling of the American Mind,
where he talks about the move to protect students from bad feelings, the move to protect them for emotional safety is really bad for
the students. But then his talk goes on and he says, this is actually really bad for the
Democrats. It's really bad for young activists to drown out opposition, to not listen to the arguments,
to not get stronger. And so, you know, a lot of these, a lot of what's happened on campus,
I think, is what you might call a Pyrrhic victory. Pyrrhic victory is one where you
won the battle, but that made you lose the war. And so, you know, I think when institutions,
you know, when your side is able to wipe out opposition, it might feel like a victory at first, but
it's ultimately going to weaken you.
The same thing is going on in the far right.
There's a lot more fear and really bad consequences for people who dissent on the right too.
But if we're talking about universities, that's more an issue of what's been happening on
the left. Yeah, are there any
Universities that don't have a left-wing leaning perspective. Oh sure sure what universities?
Yeah, not in the top 20 or 50. Well, that is a problem. That's right. Yeah, it is well actually no
But but let put it this way first of all, I mean there are lots of religious universities Christian universities that don't have this problem
there are of religious universities, Christian universities, that don't have this problem. There are, let's
see, there are large state schools tend to have much less of it, because again, most
people are reasonable. The great majority of faculty want to do their research, teach
their classes. They don't want to get involved in this stuff. The problem is especially severe.
For some reason, the Ivy League schools, that's what's really surprising. I thought it was
just like, well, the elite schools. No, it's actually the Ivies are the place where the worst anti-Semitic actual,
you know, threats and intimidation and even some violence are happening or threats of
violence are happening. Something about the Ivies makes them more extreme.
What do you think that is?
Well, I think it's in part the region. So most of the shout downs, most, you know, Greg
Lukianoff and FIRE, they've really been tracking this for a long time. Most of the shout downs happen in the northeast
and along the west coast and then around Chicago. That's where most of the really nasty stuff
happens. This is not happening at the great majority of American universities. It's not
happening in the top schools in the south. It's not happening at top schools in the southwest.
So it is in part where it is. And then I think also,
the Ivy League is full of really rich kids. The statistic a number of years ago that the
top schools have more people from the top 1% of the income distribution than from the
bottom 60%. So there's a real concentration, especially in the Ivies,
of rich kids who don't need to worry as much about getting
a job and have the bandwidth to devote themselves to politics
while they're students.
God.
I just fear for the children that come out of that, too,
these young people that come out of that
that have these distorted perspectives
that have to kind of rewire their view of the world
once they get out.
It almost like taking someone from a cult
and trying to just delete the indoctrination.
That's right, and it's almost impossible to do that, especially if most of what's coming
in is coming in from TikTok, not from your parents or your friends or your teachers.
So again, back to the problem. That's right. So again, back to the question of the TikTok
ban. It's not, you know, the issue here is not should we ban TikTok. The issue is should
American law require a divestiture
of TikTok from a Chinese corporation
that is beholden to the CCP?
Which seems logical.
Yes.
You know, there's an issue that's
happening in Texas currently where one of the porn sites
has pulled out of Texas because they require age verification.
And so there's all this pushback about whether or not
they should be able to require age verification. And so there's all this pushback about whether or not they should be able to require age verification. You have to be 18 to use
porn websites, which I think is very reasonable. Yes, it's insane that we're
even debating it. Yeah, we're running a mass psychology experiment on
children by having smartphones with large screens and having instantaneous access to
porn.
That's right.
That's right.
I mean, I forget the exact number, but a very large number of boys are on PornHub or porn
sites daily, every day.
And again, as we were talking about before, in puberty, the prefrontal cortex, the brain's
really rewiring itself.
This is when you're supposed to be developing the ability for a boy to talk to a girl,
you know, for straight kids.
Right.
You know, and it's hard, like, because boys and girls,
they think a little differently, it's awkward,
they're always mistakes.
They need to be practicing, but instead,
they're exposed to this diet of just horrible,
horrible stuff.
And the girls see it too.
The girls are not on as much, but they're all exposed to it.
Right.
And so, you know, we now see that many more members of Gen Z, they don't want to get married, they
don't want to have children, they're not having as much sex.
I kind of understand it.
If that's what you think this sex stuff is, when you're an 11-year-old and you see this
stuff, you're not going to be like, oh, I want that to happen to me.
It's also so distorted, the relationships in these porn videos.
It's bizarre fantasy.
And about step siblings, like why is so much about step sisters?
It's a lot of step moms too.
Right, so the whole thing is sick and once again, I'm not going to tell adults what they should do with their spare time.
But for God's sakes, I am going to try to tell companies that they can't just have access to my kids from the age of 9 or 10 and do what they want with them. So, you know, I don't know the details of the Texas law, but I think we've got to do
something to age gate pornography.
Like I just can't see.
I mean, yes, there's a libertarian argument on the other side that, oh, we should never,
you know, require identification from anyone for anything.
Well, if that's the way you're going to go, no restrictions, no, no, no, you know, then
either we have
to keep kids off the internet, which is insane.
We can't keep them off of the entire internet.
Or we have to say, you know what, maybe some companies should be held liable.
Maybe Congress was wrong to grant them blanket immunity from lawsuits for what they're doing
to our kids.
I think we should change that.
Do you think at a certain point in time time all this is going to become more obvious?
And do you think the trend is that it's becoming more obvious to people, whether it's to politicians
or to parents or to... Yes.
Over time, the negative effects of it are just so obvious.
Yes, and I think that is happening right now. We're right at the beginning of the tipping
point. And I'm confident about this because the tipping point began in Britain last month.
So parents everywhere are fed up. They all see it. They don't know what to do, but they're all
frustrated. In Britain, you know, some parents put up a website, delay smartphones, people rush to it.
They had a WhatsApp group for parents to come together. You know, thousands and thousands joined right away.
In Britain, the government actually has mandated
phone-free schools, which is one of my four norms.
So whenever you have a situation where most people hate it,
but they're either afraid or confused,
that can change really, really quickly.
And that's like the fall of the Berlin Wall,
fall of the Iron Curtain,
we thought it was gonna be there forever.
But since most people hated it, I traveled behind the
Iron Curtain in 1987, everybody hated it. And so once the Berlin Wall fell, it fell
everywhere very quickly. I think the same is going to be true for social media and the
digital environment for children. I think that 2024 is going to be for the digital environment what 1989 was for Soviet communism.
Parents are fed up, the data is in, there's no doubt that there's an epidemic now.
The evidence that it's caused by social media is a lot stronger than it was a few years ago.
People are ready to act, Congress is ready to act. So I'm actually, again, you know,
I think universities are going to get, actually now they are now actually getting better now that they've been
through through that. And I think that the situation around kids and digital
media is going to change radically this year. That's my goal in that's my goal in
writing the book and writing The Anxious Generation. And I'm I have this amazing
collaborator, the artist Dave Ciccarelli. So these these stickers here that I gave you, I don't know if we can hold them up.
I'll just hold them with my camera.
It's a milk carton with a child on it and it says, missing childhood.
So my friend Dave Ciccarelli is a great artist in New York City.
He designed the cover for the book and he and I had a plan for some like guerrilla art
campaign with posters, you know, linking, you know, Instagram to cigarettes, that sort of thing a couple years ago.
So Dave had the idea to really go big. And so Dave has built a 12 foot tall milk carton of the thing you just showed. A 12 foot tall milk carton.
It's going to be on the National Mall in Washington this Friday. If you're in D.C, check it out. It's coming to New York City, the northeast corner of Union Square.
I'll be there on March 26th, 25th rather, 25th and 26th. I'll be there on the 25th.
We're starting a national movement. There are lots of organizations that are joining us here,
but we're starting a national movement to get parents, to encourage parents, to work together.
Because as I said, we can escape this if we work together. It doesn't have to be all of us. But if a lot of us say, we're not going to give our kids smartphones
till 14, we're not going to let them open an Instagram or TikTok account until they're
16, we're going to ask our schools to go phone free, and we're going to give our kids a lot
more independence of the sort that we had in a much more dangerous world. If we do those
four norms, we really can turn that around. And I'm confident we are at the tipping point right now. Even a
few months, even by July and August, or let's say by September, when school starts again
in the fall, I think there's going to be a different vibe about phones and the roles
of technology in kids' lives.
Well, I hope you're right, Jonathan. And I really appreciate you. And I really appreciate
you writing this and spending so much time on this and thinking about it so thoroughly.
The anxious generation, how the great rewiring of childhood is causing an epidemic of mental
illness.
It's available right now.
Go get it, folks.
Listen to it.
Read it.
Absorb it.
Take it in.
Thank you very much.
Really appreciate you.
Thank you, Joe.
It's always fun to talk with you. Fun to talk to you too.
Thank you.
Bye, everybody.