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Bill Maher Debated the Generational Effects of Social Media

Jonathan Haidt talked tech on this week’s “Real Time”

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Bill Maher is understandably baffled by nostalgia for early 2020.

By Tobias Carroll

What’s it like to grow up fully online? It’s something that might be unimaginable for some readers and a part of personal history for others. The gulf between these two experiences is vast, and speaks volumes — and may or may not be at the root of some of the nation’s mental health issues right now. Which brings us to this week’s Real Time With Bill Maher, and the book that Maher dubbed “a clarion call” — Jonathan Haidt’s The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness.

Haidt was the featured guest on this week’s episode. His position? That “childhood seems to have changed” between 2010 and 2015. He pointed to increased levels of self-harm and suicide, and posited that the rise of smartphones and high-speed data were responsible. Mammals need play in their development, he argued — and the role that smartphones played in isolating young people ran contrary to this. It’s one of a few factors in the mix here; Haidt also cited the dovetailing of overprotective parents and the allure of the internet.

He found a receptive audience in Maher, who himself referred to “the portal of evil that is the phone.” And while Haidt has been making variations on this argument for a while now, and cited a recent Florida law regulating the social media usage of minors as grounds for a potential bipartisan push on the issue. He also mentioned the work of sociologist Emile Durkheim, which took me back to my freshman year of college when I took an Intro to Sociology course. 

That said, Haidt could also be more glib when it suited him. “Millennials had flip phones,” he said. “They came out fine.” His conversation with Maher is unlikely to end this debate — but it’s also clearly not going away any time soon.

How to Raise Your Kids in the Social Media Age, According to an Expert
A good place to start? Devorah Heitner, author of “Growing Up in Public,” says to stop spying on them.

Some other notable moments from the episode:

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