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Zack Kass posits that the internet exposed young people to an overwhelming amount of global suffering without providing the context or wisdom to process it. This has created a generation that is 'suicidally empathetic,' feeling deep despair and powerlessness, which manifests as anxiety and inaction.

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Younger generations aren't inherently weaker; they are reacting to an unprecedented volume of external voices from social media. Previous generations contended with a few dozen key influencers (family, teachers), not the thousands that now amplify the inner critic daily.

The human brain is wired to fear scarcity and solve problems. When technology and capitalism fulfill most basic needs, this problem-solving instinct doesn't disappear. It latches onto more abstract, often social or political, issues, fueling neurosis and creating a population that externalizes its anxieties onto the world.

Zack Kass observes a pronounced 'K-curve' where technology simultaneously enables unprecedented achievement and deep disengagement. Some youths use digital tools to become savants, while others fall into passivity. This divergence is driven more by personal agency than traditional factors like wealth or location.

Western culture's focus on hyper-individualism leads people to feel personally responsible for solving massive, systemic issues. This creates immense pressure and an illogical belief that one must find a perfect, individual solution to a problem that requires a collective response.

Young people face a dual crisis: economic hardship and a psychological barrage from social media's curated success. This creates a "shame economy," where constant notifications of others' fake wealth intensify feelings of failure, loneliness, and anxiety more than any other societal factor.

Unlike previous generations who grew up believing liberal democracy was the final political form, Gen Z entered a world with no clear answers. This void, combined with infinite internet access, fueled a competitive explosion of fringe ideologies as they searched for new models.

The sharp rise in teens feeling their lives are useless correlates directly with the smartphone era. Technology pulls them from productive activities into passive consumption, preventing the development of skills and a sense of purpose derived from contribution.

Marshall McLuhan's 'global village' was a warning, not a celebration. He argued villages are often dysfunctional, judgmental, and prone to manias (e.g., witch trials). Social media has turned the world into one such village, fostering a highly emotionalized, de-intellectualized culture at a global scale.

The core business model of dominant tech and AI companies is not just about engagement; it's about monetizing division and isolation. Trillions in shareholder value are now directly tied to separating young people from each other and their families, creating an "asocial, asexual youth," which is an existential threat.

The era of limited information sources allowed for a controlled, shared narrative. The current media landscape, with its volume and velocity of information, fractures consensus and erodes trust, making it nearly impossible for society to move forward in lockstep.