Originally posted by Neon Ignition
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But I think I've said it here before, in another thread; I'm not sure we thought through the ramifications of the information era on teens, in particular, the way it has networked teens in the same way it's networked everyone else. In earlier eras, kids only really had contact with the kids in their neighborhood, the kids at their school, maybe the kids at their judo class or riding school or youth club, and perhaps a penpal. That's it. Teen culture in Sheffield had no real contact with teen culture in London, teen culture in London had no contact with teen culture in Huddersfield...
Now, the comms era has introduced plenty of problems for adults. Look at the 15-minute-cities protestors, marching against surveillance while all having Facebook accounts. But I think it's fair to say that adults (taken as a group) are different to kids, with a bit more understanding of how their actions have long-term consequences. The information era has shown that people are easily influenced but that teenagers are influenced most of all; the army of kids who are obsessed with the likes of Andrew Tate are a perfect example of this.
People typically post that ancient greek person's quote saying how kids no longer respect their elders, and are idle, and what-have-you, and suggest "twas ever thus"... But specifically with the likes of Tiktok and so on, I'm not so sure if that's true, and whether we're at the cusp of a fundamental and permanent shift in youth culture.
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