Ah, Youth: Smartphones Are Ruining Their Brains At Unprecedented Speed

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Reality is slipping away on a civilizational level. Young people, especially, are zombifying themselves. It's not just social media, attention-grabbing apps, or EMF radiation, but now it's adding AI on top of it all. Silicon Valley is thrilled to have killed a generation but gained a loyal horde of zombies in the process.

⁃ Patrick Wood, Editor. [/su_notei

Any parent with a kid addicted to TikTok or Instagram is familiar with the concern that it’s ruining their brain. I’m of a certain age where I heard that refrain regularly from my Dad as I settled in each summer afternoon to watch reruns of Gilligan’s Island, The Brady Bunch, and The Partridge Family. It was the Golden Age of reruns.

But what was once hyperbole has turned into science, and the results are beyond alarming. The universal addiction to smartphones is actively ruining our brains — especially Generation Z — and at a pace that should absolutely freak everyone out.

The Financial Times recently published a devastating analysis of American personality changes using data from the Understanding America Study, and the findings should stop you cold.

In less than a decade, conscientiousness — the trait most closely linked to responsibility, follow-through, and self-control — has collapsed among young adults. For those aged 16 to 39, it’s not a gradual erosion; it’s a plunge from respectability into the low 30th percentile. Older adults (who aren’t addicted to smartphones), meanwhile, remain essentially unchanged.

A graphic from the post recently went viral:

The FT write up generously sums up the findings, writing:

While a full explanation of these shifts requires thorough investigation, and there will be many factors at work, smartphones and streaming services seem likely culprits. The advent of ubiquitous and hyper-engaging digital media has led to an explosion in distraction, as well as making it easier than ever to either not make plans in the first place or to abandon them. The sheer convenience of the online world makes real-life commitments feel messy and effortful. And the rise of time spent online and the attendant decline in face-to-face interactions enable behaviours such as “ghosting”.

Other charts in the article reveal that attention deficits are not just at issue: a deeper commitment to a digital world over the real world is also evolving at an alarming rate, as is a sharp decline in trust and extroversion. If you need evidence of this just go to any public park and witness the vast majority of people staring into their phones.

Let me tell you why this isn’t just concerning — it’s civilizational.

We are living through a revolution bigger than the printing press. That’s not hyperbole. When Gutenberg’s press arrived in the 15th century, it rewired the world by making knowledge scalable. It took centuries for that transformation to ripple through every corner of human society. The smartphone has done something similar — only it’s moving at light speed, and in the opposite direction.

In less than 15 years, we’ve tethered billions of brains to an always-on, infinitely stimulating “meta-world” — a hybrid of the broader digital ecosystem, the AI-powered feed that tells you what is conventionally known, and social media platforms that distort reality by promoting the loudest, most self-promotional sliver of humanity. This is not a tool for quiet reflection; it’s a behavioral slot machine that lives in your hand.

And the cost is attention. Not just “I get distracted sometimes” attention, but the deep, sustained focus that conscientiousness requires. The skill of delaying gratification, resisting impulse, and staying the course is being replaced by an addiction to novelty, validation, and stimulation. The more we indulge, the less we can resist indulging — and the chart’s freefalling red line for young adults shows exactly where that road leads.

The speed of this shift should terrify us. The printing press transformed literacy, religion, and politics, but it did so over centuries, allowing institutions and cultures to adapt. The smartphone has reshaped cognition, social norms, and mental health in barely a decade — without any meaningful adaptation at all. We didn’t get a century to build guardrails; we got a push notification. Future historian will likely look at this as the era in which humans zombified themselves — presuming of course there are future historians not addicted to their phones.

Is it too late? Maybe. The genie is so far out of the bottle it’s running its own TikTok channel and also attention deficit addled.

Regulation? Don’t hold your breath. Silicon Valley’s incentives are too deeply tied to engagement metrics — and engagement, as currently defined, thrives on keeping you distracted, anxious, and coming back for more.

Anyone who claims there’s a quick fix is selling snake oil. App timers, grayscale screens, “digital detoxes” — these are bandaids on a bullet wound. The deeper reality is that smartphones, as the portal to the digital metasphere, have rewired how an entire generation thinks, feels, and relates to the world. There’s no undo button.

But there is one place to start: recognition.

We must acknowledge that we’ve engineered an attention economy whose most precious raw material is human focus, and we are burning through it like cheap fuel. Until we admit that, there’s no hope of slowing the decline — much less reversing it.

We will consider 2010s the way we look at the dawn of the industrial era: a technological leap that unleashed prosperity, yes, but also pollution, exploitation, and collapse of old ways of life. Only this time, the pollution is in our minds. And while conservation movements helped detoxify our rivers, lakes and oceans, I suspect we will soon need to consider a similar prescription for our collective mind rot.

Maybe it already exists? Let me check TikTok or ChatGPT for what it has to say.

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About the Editor

Patrick Wood
Patrick Wood is a leading and critical expert on Sustainable Development, Green Economy, Agenda 21, 2030 Agenda and historic Technocracy. He is the author of Technocracy Rising: The Trojan Horse of Global Transformation (2015) and co-author of Trilaterals Over Washington, Volumes I and II (1978-1980) with the late Antony C. Sutton.
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