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Lizenn Valo's avatar

When the NYT write that "the digital gap between rich and poor kids is not what we expected", I'm genuinely surprised. When I was a teenager back in the late 1990s/early 2000s, I understood quite quickly that having the TV switched on constantly and/or having a TV in each bedroom was a sign of belonging to a poorer, less educated class. In my upper middle-class family with my dad being a college professor, there was one TV in the living room and it was switched on only when there was a specific show we wanted to watch - and so it was in the families of all my peers who were from a similar background.

Today, as a mother, I find the exact same division holds when it comes to screens used for entertainment. The children who had the TV on constantly at home are now the children who have a smartphone in their hand when they're still in a stroller. Meanwhile my son and our friends' children are being raised with strictly regulated access to screens. It is so transparent and so predictable that I have to ask how it's possible that people whose job it is to observe and think didn't see this coming several miles away.

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Grow Some Labia's avatar

Jon, there was and remains a glaring hole in your research: Your unwillingness to touch how harmful social media has been in convincing LGB teens that they're T or Q. The trans movement got only the briefest mention in The Anxious Generation. I get it; transactivists are vicious and you don't want to subject yourself or your family to rape and death threats. But it's really, really hard to read you debating the pros and cons of social media for LGBTQ kids when it's done so much demonstrable harm in promoting kiddie sex change operations, for which there is pretty damn little hard science behind it. You must know this by now. Eighty percent of so-called 'trans kids' are simply gay, which makes 'gender affirming care' progressive gay conversion. And all this shit started on social media. Like I said, I get your reticence to address it, but it's a major hypocrisy in your work.

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