Decline in teen drug use continues, surprising experts

(arstechnica.com)

298 points | by pseudolus 3 days ago

65 comments

  • vouaobrasil 21 hours ago
    I wonder if the new drug of choice is actually technology. In some ways I think that the addiction to technology has some similar mellowing effects as drugs. Some research indicates that smartphone addiction is also related to low self-esteem and avoidant attachment [1] and that smartphones can become an object of attachment [2]. The replacement of drugs by technology is not surprising as it significantly strengthens technological development especially as it is already well past the point of diminishing returns for improving every day life.

    1. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S07475...

    2. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S07475...

    • tirant 7 hours ago
      I fear the (negative) impact of our current technological drugs goes beyond the impact of traditional drugs.

      I’ve seen kids not even 3-4 years old already hooked to smartphone screens. Even toddlers around 1 year old with an smartphone mount in their stroller.

      Main impact on kids is lack of socialization, lack of emotional regulation and a complete impact on their capabilities to keep their attention. Those used to be indicators for a future failed adulthood.

      I remember traditional drugs only becoming present around 14-16 years old. Alcohol was probably the most prevalent, and probably the most dangerous. Followed by Cannabis, tobacco and some recreational drugs like MDMA.

      Most of those drugs had a component that actually pushed kids heavily towards socialization and forming peer groups. Now looking back to the results of that drug consumption I would say that most of the individuals engaging on them were able to regulate and continue to what it seems to be a very normal adult life. Obviously tobacco with terrible potential future health effects, but beyond that, everyone I know turned up pretty healthy. Not only that, I remember some time later that the most experimental group (mdma, LSD, mushrooms) of drug users being full of people with Master Degrees and PhDs.

      The new technological drugs scare me way more than the old traditional ones. Obviously it is a normal response of the known va unknown. Time will tell.

      • jorvi 4 hours ago
        I’m very much for legalizing and regulating (almost) all drugs, but watch out with the confirmation bias of “everyone in my social circle who used recreationally turned out fine.”

        I can’t find it right now but I read a great comment on legalization that pointed out that a kid experimenting with weed and cocaine in college is doing so for a radically different reason than a kid doing it escape the daily misery of his ghetto neighborhood.

        This is also why you’ll often see staunch opposition to legalization in the lower socio-economic classes, with them having seen people close to them destroyed by drug use.

        And yes, legalization and regulation would of course also allow harm reduction. But it is good to be able to take the opposition’s perspective :)

        • bluejekyll 1 hour ago
          The primary reason to legalize isn’t to make it easier to do drugs, it’s to not use the justice and court system for dealing with addiction problems.

          Our goal should be to legalize use and then take the money saved from police enforcement and funnel that into programs that get people off drugs. In the US an issue is that the latter part is part of the healthcare system, and we all know that has a lot of issues in serving people who fall into the under-employed category.

          • kQq9oHeAz6wLLS 37 minutes ago
            Several states have tried that. Some have already repealed the laws because they were a disaster.
            • righthand 9 minutes ago
              When this happens the reason 90% of the time is usually not because the program wasn’t working but the opposition to the program has made sure to either gut the funding or put in measures that makes those programs not work (only hiring 2 people to handle all the work or excessive operating requirements.

              Cops will fight tooth and nail against social programs because it reduces their budget when problems are solved.

              Look up these programs and you will see centrists claiming the progressive program was bad, but never indicate reasons as to why.

            • macpete42 8 minutes ago
              Works for Portugal since forever
            • remixff2400 10 minutes ago
              Not my area of expertise per se, but the counterargument that I've seen is that the states (e.g. Oregon) that tried it never got the backstops in place to help soften and support the transition (i.e. rehab centers, support programs, social programs). Instead, it was just a hard switch that went expectedly bad.

              There's at least a theory that people believe will work that hasn't been correctly implemented yet, but whether or not it's feasible to implement at all, I'm not holding my breath.

        • tremon 3 hours ago
          > with them having seen people close to them destroyed by drug use.

          But isn't this a false correlation, then? Were they destroyed by drug use, or by the daily misery of their ghetto neighborhood?

          • beedeebeedee 1 hour ago
            Spot on- so many social problems get attributed to everything but the economy and inequality. If we could make our system more equitable, then we would not have such desperation.
          • westerno 2 hours ago
            The combination, which is the point of the comment above. Legalization may be fine in places where people have other support factors that make them less likely to destroy their lives with drugs and alcohol, but in areas without those protective forces, it's good that there are some controls (or at least many of the people who live there think so).
            • jacksnipe 2 hours ago
              At that point it becomes important to ask (1) how much damage does the illegalization itself do; (2) how much harm does the limited access actually prevent; and (3) how much damage alcohol does, and what the tradeoff is.

              If you’re going to make a harm reduction argument, you need to do your best to fully account for all the harms in play.

          • chaps 1 hour ago
            Imagine hearing someone's loved one dying to drug use and asking them, "But isn't this a false correlation?". What a deeply and unsettlingly cold question that lacks any potential for empathy.
            • HelloMcFly 57 minutes ago
              Okay, but the person wasn't asking this of the family of a dying loved one, they were asking it in this space where ideas are discussed and examined. Yes, it would be disturbingly unempathetic to ask that question in such a circumstance, but asking it in this circumstance is neither cold, inappropriate, or a demonstration that the asker lacks empathy.
            • knome 42 minutes ago
              I disagree entirely, and I have personally witnessed people lose themselves to drug use.

              Anyone with a relative dying of addiction has no doubt been long exhausted in watching them circle the pit of their addiction. They are going to be under no illusions regarding the chances there were to escape it, and the choices made to remain there.

              Asking if they were escaping from a miserable reality vs chasing a high isn't offensive. It's just dealing with the reality of the situation as it is. The only person I see being offended is someone in denial, blaming the drugs alone rather than allowing any blame to the person using them, trying to imagine them an innocent victim without agency in the matter.

              The question is a good one. It actually looks for what caused everything to go wrong, rather than just being pointlessly offended on behalf of the imagined umbrage you think others might feel.

              • chaps 37 minutes ago
                I disagree with your characterization of my comment and I think you greatly missed the point I was making. The OP presented a false dichotomy as if these things aren't woven in with each other in a large feedback loop.

                You comment falsely assumes that I don't have familiarity or loss stemming from addiction.

                • knome 33 minutes ago
                  You've had multiple people "misunderstand" your comment. I suggest reconsidering how you express whatever it is you are trying to say, as I and the others are responding to what you managed to actually communicate, whether that message was your intended one or no.
                  • chaps 28 minutes ago
                    It has been put into consideration. But now that we've made it clear that there have been ~ misunderstandings ~, can you try to see where I'm coming from now? :)
                    • knome 22 minutes ago
                      No, I don't know what you intended to say there if not what I initially read it as. It seems a straightforward reading to me.
                      • chaps 6 minutes ago
                        My point was to suggest to OP that their dichotomous reductionism goes way, way overboard to the point of unproductive callousness. People with addictions aren't just data points. Saying this as a data journalist who focuses on policing and jails.
            • beedeebeedee 49 minutes ago
              > "But isn't this a false correlation?". What a deeply and unsettlingly cold question that lacks any potential for empathy.

              That's an absurd mental picture you've imagined. Using that to undermine the discussion of the reality that people use drugs to temporarily escape from desperate conditions is unsettling and lacks empathy and judgment.

              • chaps 46 minutes ago
                You've deeply misunderstood my comment.
                • beedeebeedee 19 minutes ago
                  You've deeply misunderstood your own comment
      • lolinder 4 hours ago
        > Most of those drugs had a component that actually pushed kids heavily towards socialization and forming peer groups. Now looking back to the results of that drug consumption I would say that most of the individuals engaging on them were able to regulate and continue to what it seems to be a very normal adult life.

        Counterargument: a "very normal adult life" in our generations treats alcohol as basically mandatory for having a good time with a group. As someone who doesn't drink, I'm perfectly happy to go to parties and hang out and socialize, but as the night wears on it becomes less and less stimulating as the alcohol kicks in. People get less interesting on drugs, but they perceive themselves to be having more fun. It's a crutch.

        Now, maybe having a social crutch like alcohol is better than having a drug which encourages disappearing from the physical social world entirely, but our generation's answer was hardly healthy.

        • frereubu 2 hours ago
          I don't think that's true any more, at least not in the UK. Not drinking alcohol is becoming normalised to a large extent - most restaurants and bars I go to now have non-alcoholic options, some of which are really delicious. I had a non-alcoholic "dry martini" in a bar the other day which had a really nice bite to it. I used to feel a bit cheated with non-alcoholic options because they were mostly like overly sweet cocktails or nasty-tasting beers, but the choices are really opening out now.
        • johnisgood 2 hours ago
          A substance is a means to an end. What you described is just one of the many.

          And I agree. I do not drink, not even in social settings, and I feel like I'm the odd one out for doing so, thus I typically avoid parties and gatherings as much as possible.

          I do take something people would consider a drug though, but for different reasons you described. It is to manage pain, anxiety, and depression, difficulty walking, and urinary incontinence. What I take works for all of the problems that affects the quality of my life.

          That said, new year is coming up, and I'm definitely not going to drink.

      • qwertox 1 hour ago
        > I’ve seen kids not even 3-4 years old already hooked to smartphone screens. Even toddlers around 1 year old with an smartphone mount in their stroller.

        Now imagine that they would not be engaging with silly YouTube videos, but with an AI trying to get them to interact with them in order to learn to speak, to learn about the world. Things which parents can't dedicate enough time to. Then also give the kids ideas for what to do with the parents, what to talk about, tease them about science and stuff they'd normally have no access to, because it is information mostly hidden in books or in an inaccessible format, like dedicated to students.

        I do see a huge potential in this, call it cheaply a "nanny for the brain", to help develop it better and faster. There are certainly risks to it, but if it were well done, in a way in which we assume universities are "places well done", it could be better than just having the kids watching TV.

        • etimberg 47 minutes ago
          I assume you don’t have kids because as the parent of a toddler this is a terrible idea. The last thing a toddler needs is AI hallucinations “teaching” them
        • jader201 56 minutes ago
          Please no.

          While what you describe may be better than YouTube/TV, there is no replacement for development through human interaction and contact.

          Let’s not give parents another excuse to have devices babysit/raise their children.

          EDIT: and if your post is being upvoted -- and it seems to be -- I hope it's by people that don't have children, and will later realize how bad of an idea this is once they do have children.

          • siva7 48 minutes ago
            Sometimes there is no choice when both parents must work so better raise the child by AI rather than TV.
            • jader201 41 minutes ago
              If you have a nanny/preschool/daycare that is letting your child be raised by TV, the solution isn’t instead have your child be raised by AI.

              The solution is to replace the nanny/reschool/daycare with a better nanny/preschool/daycare.

        • derwiki 20 minutes ago
          Sounds like “A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer” by Stephenson
      • sevensor 1 hour ago
        Why are the moral panics always about the media diets of children? Let’s talk about old people for a minute.

        1) They can be socially isolated in ways that few children are. An unsupervised septuagenarian can go literal days without speaking to another live human being.

        2) They’re more technologically competent than we give them credit for, certainly enough to spend days doomscrolling their politically aligned newsfeeds of choice. The generation who thought their CD-ROM drives were cupholders passed quite some time ago.

        3) They have an outsized influence on politics. Not only do they vote more than any other demographic in the US, they are the most likely to turn up and harangue your city council or school board meeting.

        Of course, nothing new under the sun, their parents’ generation was mainlining cable news and AM talk radio 20-30 years ago.

        • agency 54 minutes ago
          because children are undergoing a critical phase in their development that has no analogy for older populations? I'm not saying isolation among the elderly is not concerning, nor widespread phone/tech addiction among adults. But I think there’s ample reason to have particular concern for the effects on children.
        • dasil003 48 minutes ago
          LOL at “mainlining cable news and AM talk radio”.
        • mistermann 1 hour ago
          >Why are the moral panics always about the media diets of children? Let’s talk about old people for a minute.

          This same reasoning is highly applicable to how various "so terrible, they're a threat to X!" are constantly vilified, yet the Normies (who cause most of the problems) get a free pass.

          Rigged popularity contests are a terrible way to run a world, yet we insist on it.

      • will5421 5 hours ago
        Playing Devil’s advocate… Socialisation is what’s driving technology use. It’s just happening on the phones, not irl. Just like with alcohol, anyone not participating will be left out. If everyone’s on their phones all the time, IRL socialisation won’t matter compared to socialisation via phones.
        • herval 3 hours ago
          I think this was true a decade ago, where people used social media to talk to each other and actively kept chats with friends, etc.

          What I’m seeing now is social media got so hyper optimized for engagement that it became a passive consumption mechanism, and the only “socialization” left is sharing memes. It’s a widespread digital heroin epidemic

        • vouaobrasil 5 hours ago
          Disagree. Nothing can replace face to face socialization. We're not even close. Our minds are just adapting, but to a new local maximum that is far away from the global maximum of ideal.

          (Edit: corrected typographical error.)

        • Timshel 5 hours ago
          Socialization online exists, but I'm not sure that it's the main activity on phones.

          When you look at https://explodingtopics.com/blog/screen-time-for-teens it does not look promising. Video is leading, then Gaming which can include socialization then third come Social media but with Tik Tok leading which I would not categorize as socialization.

        • tgv 4 hours ago
          Rather: avoidance of socialization is what's driving it. It's the easy way out of meeting people while still getting compliments and such and pretending "everything is fine". In that sense, it indeed has a lot in common with alcohol.
      • api 2 hours ago
        Old drugs are also at least sometimes social. Even heroin gives rise to cliques of users. It’s deeply unhealthy and self destructive but at least there is connection. Sometimes you get art out of it too. A whole era of great music has many bittersweet odes to smack.

        I particularly worry about men. The greater cultural and possibly (more controversial) biological susceptibility to isolation coupled with this stuff means a generation of young men who are isolated, hopeless, poor, lonely, and sexless.

        Then we have a culture that, depending on which side you listen to, either shames them as potential rapists from the patriarchy or simply “losers.” (IMHO the “woke” shaming is just code for loser, as I have heard said in private.) They are neither. They are victims of exploitation, of a nearly exact analog to the Matrix that is destroying their minds.

        I speak mostly of social media and addiction optimized gaming, not all tech. The problem is the apps not the phone. Really anything that works very hard to “maximize engagement” should be considered guilty unless proven innocent. This phrase is code for addiction.

        As we have seen the gurus that appeal to such men are the likes of Andrew Tate. As awful as he is Jordan Peterson is actually among the less toxic of the crew since he does occasionally say something good.

        In the future we could have gurus for hordes of lonely poor men that make Tate look helpful and wise. This is how we either LARP the Handmaid’s Tale or — worse — ISIS or the Khmer Rouge.

        I have two daughters and I fear for their safety in a country full of fascism radicalized angry emotionally stunted men who have been told they are losers and then handed pitchforks.

        Our industry is the industry making the opium to which these youth are addicted and that is destroying them. We are destroying the minds of a generation every time any B2C app tries to optimize its time on app KPI.

        Mothers and fathers of boys: raise your sons or Andrew Tate will.

        • selimthegrim 1 hour ago
          If you read William Dalrymple’s book about the early Christian church in the Middle East, that is exactly what happened in terms of gurus for hordes of fanatic monks.
          • api 10 minutes ago
            I’m sure that’s just one of endless historical examples.

            Large numbers of desperate people are a danger to society. I harp on men because I think they are more vulnerable (for various reasons and the reasons don’t matter much) to isolation and radicalization, though as we recently saw with our young lady school shooter this is definitely not universal.

            I also didn’t mean to dismiss the damage addictionware can do to young womens’ self esteem and mental health, and I have noticed a disturbing rise in “femcel” rhetoric that mirrors the incel cancer. The style of the rhetoric is a little different but it’s coming from similar places and has similar effects.

            We need to stop calling it social media too. It stopped being social when algorithmic timelines were introduced and over time it’s evolving toward less and less connection and more shoveling of engagement bait slop.

    • Spooky23 3 hours ago
      I think it’s not technology as a thing people are hooked to - it’s taken over social life. My 13 year old and his buddies socialize online, period. In person stuff is mostly organized. That is helped by school policy that got rid of the idea of a neighborhood school.

      Additionally, the social activities that coalesced around things like alcohol are out of reach of many teens. I live in a city that had a very active college bar scene. It’s dead and gone. Crackdowns on underage serving and cost drives it away. Happy hour special at a place that other day was $12 for 4 coors lights in a bucket. In 1998, I’d pay $15 for a dozen wings and all you can drink swill for 3 hours.

      • cluckindan 3 hours ago
        ”My 13 year old and his buddies socialize online, period.”

        Nothing new under the sun. Me and my friends were like that 30 something years ago.

        • ChrisMarshallNY 3 hours ago
          It's a different beast, these days, though.

          Back then, only "nerds" socialized online. Nowadays, everyone does it.

          I'm of two minds about this.

          On one hand, I'm really glad that kids aren't screwing up their formative years. Drug use during growing/development years can wreck someone's life.

          The issue is that, if you are an addict (which is different from physical addiction. Many addicts never get physically addicted to anything), then you'll eventually have problems with drugs; even if they are "socially acceptable" ones, like pot or alcohol (pot being "socially acceptable" is kinda new, around here, but Things Have Changed).

          It'll still destroy your life, but, at least, you'll hopefully have something like an education, and living skills, by then, which can help Recovery (and also hinder it).

          • derwiki 17 minutes ago
            It was maybe only nerds in 1994, but by 1998 everyone at school was asking their parents for the internet so they could talk on ICQ—not just the nerds!
        • vouaobrasil 3 hours ago
          > Nothing new under the sun. Me and my friends were like that 30 something years ago.

          (1) When I was growing up, nobody had any online presence. I remember life without the internet.

          (2) The fact that it is not new does not mean it has not changed in magnitude and addictiveness.

          (3) The fact that it is not new does not mean that it is not a problem. It is a growing problem. Especially because societies these days do nothing about their problems except through more technology at them, which rarely solves the underlying issue.

          • ghaff 2 hours ago
            Aside from BBSs from about the mid-80s, followed by some Usenet and related later, there was very little online presence until getting well into the mid-90s or so. Certainly my social friends who weren't part of the local BBS scene had no online presence until maybe the dot-coms really took off.
            • cluckindan 1 hour ago
              Mid-90s were 30 something years ago. Perhaps the US was a little slow to develop in this front compared to Europe.
              • ghaff 47 minutes ago
                Maybe, though that would surprise me a bit. My first personal webpage was probably around 1996 or 1997--and I assume that was fairly early for that sort of thing. As I said, I had been using BBSs for a while and also accessed usenet and FTP sites somewhat later. (I would have only had access from work to the Internet for quite a while.)

                For most people, it probably wasn't until MySpace and the like and the popularization of blogging in maybe the early 2000s that an "online presence" was really a thing although people increasingly had access to email etc.

                (My dates may be a bit off but not by a lot.)

      • vouaobrasil 3 hours ago
        > I think it’s not technology as a thing people are hooked to - it’s taken over social life.

        One cannot separate the tool from the use. Of course, you are right, though. Technology has done two things: it has eradicated communities by making communities less economically valuable, and it provides a superficial alternative.

        But the end result is that people become effectively hooked on using the device. The device is nothing without what is happening on it, but it cannot be deconstructed and separated either into a social component and the technology itself because it is more than the sum of its parts.

    • yowayb 15 hours ago
      Makes complete sense to me. Drugs are an effective distraction because they're easy to use and often fast-acting. Outdoor/sport distractions require effort (driving, etc). Video games require much less effort. Add to that less-trivial things like investing and research, and you've got the perfect "addiction"
      • akira2501 9 hours ago
        There are games designed to be addicting. Some even have gambling built in. Technology is just a tool.
    • addicted 6 hours ago
      I’ve said this story before but I quit Facebook about 10 years ago, at a time when it was essentially the only social media game in town, so I was essentially quitting social media, and the quitting process felt exactly like when I had quit smoking the year before that.
      • vouaobrasil 5 hours ago
        Indeed. And I do feel that we need a sort of new terminology for technological "attachment/addiction" or whatever it is. Because people continue to nitpick on whether it is physiologically the same as physical dependence and that completely misses the point.
    • achairapart 20 hours ago
      Suddenly I remember this movie from the 90s where people drugged themself with some kind of minidisc. “Strange Days”, maybe? Anyhow, I always found the plot weird, but maybe they actually were onto something…
      • genezeta 20 hours ago
        The discs had -in the movie- the memories of another person, and you would experience that memory and sensations as if you were living it. So, e.g. someone would record themselves doing something risky and you would get the adrenaline rush from watching it.

        So... Maybe in some way one could argue that social media gives some sort of connection were you get some feelings from what others are doing/showing. I mean, technologically it's quite a leap, but in a conceptual way... it's still a bit of a leap but maybe not that big.

        • twiceaday 19 hours ago
          Sounds like Brain Dances (BDs) from Cyberpunk 2077.
          • nyc_data_geek1 16 hours ago
            Yes, which originally came from Cyberpunk, the first sourcebook for which was released in 1988, with Cyberpunk 2020 releasing in 1990 complete with the idea for pre-recorded replayable memories/full sensory experience, ie:Braindance.

            Strange Days was released in 1995.

            Maximum Mike was, and is, a prophet right alongside Gibson.

            edit: Although almost certainly this wasn't the first place people imagined being able to record and playback memories.

            • saxonww 10 hours ago
              Made me think of Total Recall, which was adapted from "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale," looks like from 1966.
            • Fluorescence 1 hour ago
              Wiki tells me there was a Cyberpunk 2013 released in 1988. Feels like a millennial cult that keeps missing it's big day...

              Cyberpunk 2013 - join us! Jack in choom

              Cyberpunk 2020 - oops sorry, had to reschedule

              Cyberpunk 2077 - crazy story, anyway we've got a new date

              Cyberpunk ???? - this time, we promise!

          • ahartmetz 16 hours ago
            Simstim from Neuromancer (released in 1984) is the first mention of such a thing that I know of.
            • atombender 6 hours ago
              Brainstorm (1983) did it before Neuromancer. The movie is about a device that records and replays sensory and emotional experiences, and a central plot point is that it records the dying moments of a character.
              • bregma 5 hours ago
                I thought the central point was the porn played on a loop. Maybe I was distracted and missed the real plot. Also maybe mixed up by the fact that one of the principle actors died in real life while the movie was being made.
                • atombender 1 hour ago
                  The porn thing showed that the device could be harmful to the viewer. This adds another dimension of risk to the later scenes where the Walker character is experiencing the death tape.

                  The actor was Natalie Wood, and the event is shrouded in mystery about how she died. However, the character who dies in the movie is played by Louise Fletcher.

                • Fluorescence 1 hour ago
                  The central point was like Lawnmower Man, the military / government were going to misuse the tech for evil purposes.

                  The porn and the vicarious near-death-experience were just plot points.

        • wahern 16 hours ago
          > Maybe in some way one could argue that social media gives some sort of connection were you get some feelings from what others are doing/showing. I mean, technologically it's quite a leap

          That technology exists; it's called empathy, and the extremely powerful form of it innate to humans is arguably our singularly defining characteristic. It's our tech moat, so to speak.

        • sandworm101 8 hours ago
          >> some sort of connection were you get some feelings from what others are doing/showing. I mean, technologically it's quite a leap, but in a conceptual way... it's still a bit of a leap but maybe not that big.

          Play that VR game set within in the shark cage. The adrenaline rush is definitely not much of a leap from the real thing.

        • Mistletoe 10 hours ago
          This is exactly the parasocial way my girlfriend's niece and friends experience life. No relationships of their own, it is all celebrities and their lives, ingested on their phones. I don't have the heart to tell them that 95% of it is stuff created by PR firms.
          • lazystar 9 hours ago
            playing devils advocate for a minute... isnt that similar to what our parents said in the 80's/90's about our generation? all that "tv and phone" brain rot
            • maccard 7 hours ago
              Yes. And what the previous generation said about rock music.

              Celebrities and “socialites” have been idolised for years - Paris Hilton certainly isn’t the doing of this generation, neither is Jackie Kennedy.

              If you think that what we’re doing with mobile apps and social media is new, take a look at the 20th century a little harder.

              • addicted 6 hours ago
                1. People were clearly wrong about music. Audio only is clearly not as addictive as video + audio.

                2. People did say that about TV and TV maybe had the potential to be like this. However, TV failed in many ways to be a hyper addictive device. Some of the many reasons: i. Just less content. There wasn’t that much TV content at all. YT probably adds more content in an hour than all the TV content ever created.

                ii. You couldn’t choose what you wanted to watch beyond a few dozen channels at best. So you always had opportunities where you were forced to do something different at many times.

                iii. The TV wasn’t available to you at all times. You had to go to the den to watch it and you couldn’t take it to school with you.

                iv. TV couldn’t specifically target you individually with content to keep you watching. The most amount of targeting TV could do was at maybe a county level.

                v. You couldn’t be part of the TV. Social media and phones today make you an integral part of the “show” where a kid can end up having a video of them popping their pants on a playground shown to millions of people. Even in a more ordinary sense, a kid commenting on a video or sending a message to a friend makes them part of the device in a way TV never could outside of extraordinary situations.

                • dotancohen 4 hours ago
                  TV certainly could target their audiences. Television shows would share their viewer demographics with advertisers: age groups, income levels, race and other social indicators, related interests.

                  The shows had target markets often driven by the need to reach certain demographics, though actual viewer demographics sometimes were surprisingly way off the mark.

                  • graemep 4 hours ago
                    They could not do this at the individual level, nor did they have ways of reaching people to persuade them to watch (notifications from mobile apps, emails about posts).
                • BoingBoomTschak 4 hours ago
                  > 1. People were clearly wrong about music. Audio only is clearly not as addictive as video + audio.

                  Or they weren't and addiction wasn't the crux of their position; and I say that as someone who loves a lot of rock derivatives.

                  The influence pop icons with broken lives had on teen generations was horribly deleterious (and I'm not even talking about hippies), mainly because malleable and unproperly taught minds rarely see that an artist's respectability is completely separate from his output.

                  The ancients had the concept of muses for a reason.

              • vouaobrasil 5 hours ago
                The key is limits. In the past, even if celebrites were idolized, we had a limited amont of information compared to now. The fluid variable is the increase in information, which makes the situation different.
                • Fluorescence 1 hour ago
                  You might need to recall just how crazy it was e.g. literal shrines to boy bands was just normal. To cover every inch of your bedroom walls and ceiling with photos of a celebrity crush was not unheard of. At school, every conversation could be about these obsessions. Folders/files would be covered with pledges of devotion.

                  No comment on how it is today, but looking back it was terrifyingly nuts - full on religious fervour to the point of mental disorder. When bands broke or people married/died, there would be full on breakdowns and sympathy suicides.

                  The lack of information might have helped exacerbate the religious mystery and make more space for imagination, fantasy and faith.

            • tirant 7 hours ago
              And they were right. But we would watch TV usually together and only for around 4-5 hours a day. Do you know how much screen time are people having ? 8 to 10 hours are not uncommon. And alone.
            • gehwartzen 2 hours ago
              And our kids will warn their kids about how the ‘direct to brain’ type interface they will use is rotting their brains. Each generation will have been a little correct along the way; the harm at each step was just always gentle enough to not scold the frogs too quickly.
            • graemep 4 hours ago
              I do think TV was, and is, harmful. I do not have one for that reason and I think it was good for my kids (as well as myself).

              I also think social media is a lot worse.

      • cassianoleal 20 hours ago
        Or the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode The Game [0]. Every time I watch that I get this eerie sensation that we're essentially giving our free will up to the masters of the games and social platforms we're addicted to.

        [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Game_%28Star_Trek:_The_Nex...

        • dartos 2 hours ago
          Wow! The game in this episode has been living in my head since I was a child and I could never find where it was from!

          I need to watch this episode again

        • vouaobrasil 20 hours ago
          Darn, I forgot that episode. That's a very eerie parallel to some of what we have today.
          • NBJack 17 hours ago
            "If you just let the game happen, it almost plays itself." The quote from the episode certainly makes me think about the "idle games" genre that has emerged in that last several years.
      • Izkata 18 hours ago
        Offhand the only drug-like thing I remember from that series is the nutrition bars that had 0 calories that most of the school got addicted to. Or maybe the cheerleader that got bee pheromones and started controlling the rest of the students.

        Aside - I just learned a month ago that there's an official followup miniseries that brought back several of the original actors, titled "Echoes", with hopefully more coming since it's called Season 1. Came out over 2022-2023: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHGrvCp5nsDJ1qSoKZEmm... (the trailers are at the bottom of the playlist)

        • Izkata 16 hours ago
          Dangit tried to delete this when I realized this is completely unrelated, just a similar name, and was seconds late. Got the delete link then it denied me.
      • atomicnumber3 13 hours ago
        In Serial Experiments Lain, they have a drug that makes your brain think really fast.
      • dragonwriter 20 hours ago
        The minidiscs in that case where full-sensory VR recordings of people’s experiences.
      • layer8 16 hours ago
        Brainstorm (1983) had the tape version of that.
      • TacticalCoder 14 hours ago
        > Suddenly I remember this movie from the 90s where people drugged themself with some kind of minidisc.

        With Ralph Fiennes. I think that, although strange, it's actually an underrated movie.

        • briandear 7 hours ago
          That movie was awesome. I remember the first time I saw the trailer in an actual movie theater. It was mindblowing.

          “Have you ever jacked-in, wire-tripped..”

          “Santa Claus of the subconscious”

          https://youtu.be/8RoOs-S_JVI

    • thr0w 15 hours ago
      Growing up, people on the street would fidget with their cigarettes. Now they fidget with their phones.
      • Zambyte 1 hour ago
        I would argue that the health impacts of both habits are comparable too.
    • heresie-dabord 5 hours ago
      > I wonder if the new drug of choice is actually technology

      Technology certainly is the economic sector that we privilege against all criticism of the harm it does to young people, to voting adults, to information quality, to public discourse, and to democracy itself.

      • vouaobrasil 5 hours ago
        Well, we have tied all of the smooth functioning of society to producing new technology, so regardless of its negative effects or its diminishing returns, we develop it. It's a strong piece of circumstantial evidence for technological determinism, not to mention many advancements are clear-cut cases of the prisoner's dilemma (arms race), such as computer security vs. hackers.
        • hamburga 1 hour ago
          I’ve been looking at it more from an ecological angle.

          “We have tied all of the smooth functioning of society to producing new technology” — this implies it was a deliberate decision. Whereas in reality, there’s a selection effect where leaders who embrace technology the most aggressively simply get rewarded in money and power, and they go on to promote accelerationist views with that power.

          With the logical conclusion that people are increasingly treated as resources to be harvested by technology.

          I don’t know the answer, but I refuse to accept determinism (despite not believing in free will, separate conversation), and I think that framing this as an ecological competition between species — humans vs machines — is clarifying.

    • imoverclocked 21 hours ago
      Be careful of a possible false dichotomy; People don’t need to have a drug.
      • techfeathers 13 hours ago
        I really found it interesting that in the engineered society of Brave New World, everyone got a drug. I guess my personally opinion is that I disagree with you, that in a world where you know about drugs, drugs are a sort of need.
      • vouaobrasil 20 hours ago
        That's fair. But I was only referring to those that tend towards drugs, since the entire study is about a reduction in drug use.
      • ndileas 21 hours ago
        Hey, speak for yourself, buddy.

        More seriously, I think there's ample historical evidence that drugs (with a liberal definition, beer, etc) are very popular across various times and places.

        • kube-system 21 hours ago
          • ikanreed 20 hours ago
            That very wikipedia article you links makes it clear it's not intended to mean religion is a "Drug" in the sense of being addictive, but rather a sociological pain killer. A tonic that limits how much people react to their own suffering.
            • kube-system 19 hours ago
              Absolutely. And smart phones are also not literally a drug. Drugs, video games, alcohol, and religion, are all used as a part of coping mechanisms for many, however.
              • vacuity 1 hour ago
                > a compulsive, chronic, physiological or psychological need for a habit-forming substance, behavior, or activity having harmful physical, psychological, or social effects and typically causing well-defined symptoms (such as anxiety, irritability, tremors, or nausea) upon withdrawal or abstinence

                (Merriam-Webster, "addiction")

                It might be stretching it somewhat, but I think video games, social media, and religion can manifest a habitual need to indulge, negative effects from doing so, and negative effects from not doing so. Perhaps not in most people.

                Coping mechanisms/painkillers can naturally cause some people to be "in too deep" because they keep using it and become dependent.

        • _Algernon_ 20 hours ago
          Popularity doesn't necessarily imply a need.
          • BriggyDwiggs42 19 hours ago
            If you want to get technical, doesn’t it? When some particular variety of thing is popular across all human cultures, doesn’t this point to it addressing some deep desire we might put on mazlow’s? What distinguishes a deep, innate human desire from a need?
            • s1artibartfast 18 hours ago
              One way to distinguish them is the retrospective analysis of the outcome. What happens when someone obtains or goes without each category?

              To go deeper, I think one needs to more fully defined "need”. Need for what? Are we talking about needs.. to sustain biological life? Are we talking about needs... To sustain happy and productive lives?

              If we take the second definition, there is a pretty clear difference between a desire and a need. Satisfaction of a desire does not necessarily advance that goal, and can very well be counter to it.

              • BriggyDwiggs42 3 hours ago
                I would just argue that “happy and productive“ is vastly too reductive. This seems like a very difficult definition to nail down, but those needs which are not required for survival would probably be defined as something like “those things which increase the flourishing of, maximize the potential of, and/or contribute to a valid and lasting feeling of deep satisfaction in the individual.”

                From this definition, it seems like some drugs and some uses of drugs are most certainly not necessary while others seem to be contributing to a real psychological need. Some drugs can give people insight into the nature of their own mind or of their experience, or reshape their worldview for the better. They can allow us to experiment with our own consciousness, which seems to be something that we derive a lot of satisfaction and even utility from. In these cases, drugs may be fulfilling a need. Simultaneously we can recognize that drug use intended more just to anesthetize or produce blind pleasure is most likely not contributing to a need, as it was defined above.

      • pwillia7 21 hours ago
        Who like hermits and people that follow asceticism?
      • behnamoh 21 hours ago
        OP didn't say that.
      • layer8 16 hours ago
        So what‘s your drug of choice?
      • dpndencekultur 20 hours ago
        Indoctrination into a dependency mindset fits the "buy a solution" model that our societies run on. We are already primed for this indoctrination from the moment mother puts a pacifier in our mouths. Then constantly looking up at her approval, that constitutes the beginning of our need of approval from the women in our lives. We are programmed and primed from day 0.
        • mindslight 5 minutes ago
          A human baby is helpless and "primed" for it - there is simply no other way they could be (without a drastically different evolutionary path). This whole thread is about the modern difficulties of teaching children to become independent in spite of that beginning and the corporate machine that wishes to keep us there ("commoditize your complements"). So uh, welcome to the conversation and try not to be so fatalistic.
        • nozzlegear 19 hours ago
          We're just missing a cigar and a dream about trains here.
          • sandy_coyote 12 hours ago
            What's the reference here? I thought Pink Floyd at first.
            • FooBarBizBazz 6 hours ago
              Quoth the AI:

              > According to Freud, dreaming about trains often symbolizes the journey of life, with the train representing the progression of time and the destination representing death, and the act of riding a train can be linked to unconscious sexual desires due to the sensation of movement and confinement, particularly when experiencing anxiety about missing a train or being trapped on one.

              • mindslight 17 minutes ago
                Any exceptions for when you had train wallpaper as a kid? Asking for a friend.
        • 9dev 4 hours ago
          That kind of misogyny sounds like some deeply rooted trauma you have there, buddy.

          Have you ever considered that humans are simply social creatures, that the only thing really separating us from other animals is our ability to socialize and organise in groups?

          There is no programming, it’s our nature.

          • gehwartzen 2 hours ago
            So if babies are ignored and raised in isolation they still grow up with normal social skills? I think it’s fairly clear that socialization is learned (a term which I think is equivalent to programmed in this context) and not something as innate (or “in our nature”) as breathing.
            • 9dev 1 hour ago
              That’s a fallacy. Human babies don’t grow up in isolation; if they do, it’s in contrived experiments, and drawing conclusions from that is about as helpful as watching birds in a cage.

              Humans in their natural environment will interact with other humans socially, mirror their display of emotion, and have a desire for affection.

              • gehwartzen 1 hour ago
                Of course they will. But that’s is programming. Nurturing, socializing, teaching… all of it is programming. I’m not placing any negative connotations on the word. I’m not sure why you don’t view those things as programming?
    • m463 13 hours ago
      I wonder if it is like facebook.

      The next generation weren't interested in facebook, because "that's what moms use" and figured out something different.

      As to drugs, now many are legal, so parents can now partake in what used to be illegal for them. Or for harder drugs, "Uncle Bob does drugs, and he's always in trouble".

      So one generation of parents acts as a negative example for the next generation to reject.

    • Klonoar 19 hours ago
      It is somewhat amusing that Leary had a period of saying that computers were the new drugs (“PC is the new LSD” or something)
      • mindcrime 10 hours ago
        "Turn on, boot up, jack in" ~~ Timothy Leary
      • dbtc 15 hours ago
        Marshall "Joyce is my LSD" McLuhan would agree emphatically.
      • briandear 7 hours ago
        Chaos and Cycberculture, Timothy Leary, 1994.

        An astounding book.

    • alecco 20 hours ago
      Gen Z was conditioned with algorithmic timelines and loot boxes (gambling).
    • rolph 20 hours ago
      • vouaobrasil 20 hours ago
        Hey I remember that show! What a weird one. I kinda liked it though.
    • card_zero 8 hours ago
      This is a massively overstated, trendy, technically incorrect thing to say.
      • nvarsj 2 hours ago
        Agreed. The original comment just made me think "good grief".

        No, scrolling on a website is not the same as doing lines of coke in the club bathroom.

        • 1986 1 hour ago
          No, it's not, but there's a spectrum of drug experiences. Scrolling social media is more like sitting in a shitty motel by yourself on a meth binge, or being on the nod.
      • vouaobrasil 5 hours ago
        Even if technological "addiction" is not like real drug addiction, it is something strange. People constantly checking, scrolling without any real purpose. There's some sort of conditioned behaviour in it that has some facets of addiction.
        • casey2 16 minutes ago
          You should read some absurdist literature, people doing things without any real purpose is very common.

          Nobody cared about drug addiction until it was politicized. US politicians have a long history of using drug users as scapegoats to win elections to disastrous results. Prohibition, drug war, next are social media bans. The insanity will never end.

        • astura 2 hours ago
          How do you know they don't have a purpose? Seems like you're projecting your insecurities on strangers.
    • badpun 1 hour ago
      I wonder if we're entering an era of social stagnation, caused by screens. Before screen-based entertainment was so ubiquitous, young people (teens and young adults) experienced a lot of boredom, which pushed them to do new things. Many of those things were stupid and bad (drugs etc.), but some of those kids decided they were ambitious and wanted their life to be above ordinary in terms of achievement and impact on the world. Today, there's less room for such thoughts to even emerge - and if they do, they have to compete for mindshare with addictive entertainment on a daily basis.
    • eikenberry 21 hours ago
      The article discusses all drug use, not just addictive use. I don't think addiction is prevalent enough to solely explain those numbers.
      • vouaobrasil 20 hours ago
        Well, I think there is also an emergent theme in the research that there also needs to be two distinct concepts: addiction, and attachment. See [1].

        [1] Hertlein, Katherine M., and Markie LC Twist. "Attachment to technology: The missing link." Journal of Couple & Relationship Therapy 17.1 (2018): 2-6.

    • some_furry 21 hours ago
      Does compulsive technology use trigger the same neural pathways as addictive substances?

      Because "addiction" is a very loaded term (with a specific clinical definition when it's not being used colloquially), and the sources you cited used "attachment" instead.

      • UniverseHacker 20 hours ago
        I think the answer here is a bit subtle and hard to explain, because it contradicts a lot of common assumptions about addiction and drugs.

        In short, many addictive substances create a chemical dependence that often has awful, even potentially fatal chemical withdrawal symptoms. Behavioral addictions don't cause this, which makes people assume they are entirely something different, and categorically less serious and damaging.

        This is wrong- because those withdrawal symptoms, while they do make it harder to quit by making going cold turkey difficult and sometimes impossible, they are not the underlying reason why these drugs are being abused in the first place, nor the reason they destroy peoples lives. The reason is that they stimulate the reward system and/or allow one to escape negative emotions and trauma. Behavioral addictions also do that, and can just as easily ruin ones life, by completely overcoming someones mind and will, such that they no longer are able to live their life, and are unable to escape or quit with willpower, just as much so as with drugs that cause withdrawal. They can still completely ruin your life and drive you to suicide, etc.

        Moreover, people also often emphasize that many addictive substances can directly cause serious health problems, or even death. This is also not central to their harmfulness, nor always the case. In fact, for a drug to have substantial abuse potential it must be relatively free from serious adverse health effects, at least in the short term, or else it would become impossible to abuse- the most damaging substances are the ones where people can take higher doses for longer with less adverse effects, because this more strongly emphasizes its ability to be used to strongly stimulate the reward system and escape negative emotions and trauma for longer periods of time - cementing the addiction-, without causing a new negative experience on its own. Methamphetamine for example is unique among stimulants in how benign it is- allowing people to take massive doses over really long periods of time, and not face immediate health issues. Counter-intuitively, this is actually what makes it have so much abuse potential and cause so much harm, compared to other stimulants which quickly make you sick or feel awful at high doses. From this perspective, you can see that the fact that behavioral addictions are also able to be repeated in "large doses" for long periods of time without immediate short term health consequences can make them have a high potential for harm in the long term.

        • krispyfi 4 hours ago
          Some corollaries, that might not be obvious for those not deeply familiar with drug policy:

          1. Statements like "we can't legalize a drug until we have proven that it's not harmful" are nonsensical given that it's easier to become habituated to drugs that are less harmful. The standard should be, "when measured holistically, does legalization and regulation increase or decrease harm relative to banning and criminalization?"

          2. Lumping habitual use and sporadic use together as "abuse" is counter-productive.

          3. A humane and just drug policy would focus on removing the causes of people wanting to escape negative emotions rather than on removing the tools they use to escape those emotions.

        • card_zero 8 hours ago
          Explain why MDMA isn't a huge addiction problem like meth (or all that popular any more).
          • UniverseHacker 7 hours ago
            MDMA has little addiction potential- for one it isn’t really just an unhealthy escape from negative feelings, but helps people process traumatic experiences and negative emotions by temporarily lowering anxiety and fear, and may be close to being FDA approved for that therapeutic purpose.

            I have only tried it once, and it permanently eliminated my crippling social anxiety, by temporarily eliminating it, and allowing me to experience and remember what that was like. I felt no desire to use it again, because the (life changing positive) effect was permanent.

            Second, it seems to have rapidly diminishing effects that make it self limiting- if sometime takes MDMA too much or too frequently, it stops having the desired effect.

            • hylaride 3 hours ago
              MDMA can be addictive, though usually on people who are dealing various issues that, like alcohol, can mask or suppress "bad" feelings. It pumps up the serotonin levels and people can definitely get addicted to that (the same way shopaholics are addicted to the temporary dopamine hits they get when they buy something new).

              MDMA (and other drugs that fall under the psychedelic umbrella like magic mushrooms or LSD) has has shown some clinical success in dealing with trauma and other mental health issues, but only supervised and combined with professional help. Most people I know that have used MDMA/Ecstasy usually only stopped because the crash sucks as they didn't want to deal with it after. That's the main reason it was used for social gatherings like raves; it really helps eliminate social anxiety.

              • stef25 1 hour ago
                Yes we know :)

                Every time there's talk of drugs people will just shuffle and repackage some random facts they know about whatever drug in question and preach it like it's something they just discovered.

        • imtringued 7 hours ago
          I'm not really sure how the behavioural addiction here is harming the person. You're talking about an external harm with the behavioural addiction being symptom treatment due to feeling trapped.
          • UniverseHacker 5 hours ago
            It ends up consuming all of a persons time and energy, and they stop doing everything else that is important or essential- maintaining their own career, friendships, family obligations, and health. They lose the ability to feel joy or engage positively in anything but the addiction. This causes a downward spiral of physical and mental health, that destroys quality of like and can in some cases be ultimately fatal.
      • vouaobrasil 20 hours ago
        Fair point. Some other studies use addiction too, though, and there is a distinction between both addiction and attachment and the links between them is a bit nebulous. You can check out the results on Google Scholar if interested.
      • goodpoint 3 hours ago
        > Does compulsive technology use trigger the same neural pathways as addictive substances?

        Absolutely yes: the dopamine circuit.

      • superkuh 17 hours ago
        I couldn't agree more. Using the term addiction in contexts where it is not medically valid is very dangerous (like yelling "fire" in a theater) and leads to the use of violent force against those one falsely claims are "addicted".

        Audio-visual stimuli from screens and speakers has never been shown to be able to have the same effects as a dopaminergic drug which is to say, completely turning up incentive salience regardless of reward or lack of it. That is why drugs are dangerous.

        Technology can only be habit forming (in some contexts, maybe) if it continues to be rewarding in some way. Psychological dependence, maybe, but never addiction, and not even physiological dependence. Addictive drugs do not have to be rewarding or pleasurable. They just hijack wanting.

        They are not the same and definitely should not be legislated the same. Enjoying something that is actually fun is not the same as wanting something because it chemically turned on wanting.

        • UniverseHacker 4 hours ago
          There is no reason to assume that a behavior that activates the reward system is categorically less harmful than a molecule that activates it directly. In both cases it can completely overcome someones will such that it destroys their life and they can’t escape it. Both are addiction. You’re making a distinction without a difference- a fire only needs to be hot enough to kill, it does not become “invalid” just because you can think of other types of fire, or hotter fires.

          You are using the word “medical” to emphasize your point incorrectly- behavioral addictions are included in the modern medical concept of addiction, and the idea that they should be considered categorically separate from substances is an outdated concept. The DSM-5 for example has a diagnostic criteria for gambling addiction.

    • athrowaway3z 10 hours ago
      It does replace a demand of people who want to mellow out.

      The same tech completely disrupts how drug-use spreads as well. There is nobody to offer a first hit if you're hanging out online.

      ---

      Though I would caution taking tech as _the_ cause. Things like demographics and the general zeitgeist shouldn't be ignored.

      Maybe the kids are really into DARE.

    • jart 21 hours ago
      If everyone is switching from drugs to social media, then that's progress. Twitter and Facebook won't harm your body. They're also free, so your habit will never make you poor and desperate. This kind of revolution in improving our health makes me proud to work in the tech industry. The worst that can happen is you'll feel sad if people bully you online, but that's the fault of people, not the technology. We can improve the human condition, but we can't change human nature.
      • rurp 20 hours ago
        I strongly disagree with this. Social media companies are incredibly valuable specifically because they are effective at getting people to spend their money on things they otherwise wouldn't have.

        Depression, suicide, and other serious mental health disorders are strongly linked with social media use. Is that better than more kids drinking and smoking pot? I don't know, it's complicated. It's certainly not clearly better and might be significantly worse.

        Hand waving away these costs is putting on some seriously rose colored glasses.

        • melagonster 10 hours ago
          Hello, depending on data from the CDC, we have:

          >Number of alcohol-induced deaths, excluding accidents and homicides: 51,191 Alcohol-induced deaths, excluding accidents and homicides per 100,000 population: 15.4

          >All suicides Number of deaths: 49,476 Deaths per 100,000 population: 14.8

          Apparently, not all suicides are caused by social media, and accidents may be more important here. I just want to offer some data that can be easily fetched.

          • addicted 6 hours ago
            The problem with alcohol is that it’s a drug that isn’t just legal and tolerated, it’s a drug that’s celebrated and encouraged.
        • dpndencekultur 20 hours ago
          They are also really valuable at building/generating personality models of large swaths of the population, the data can be said knows us better than we know ourselves. Since the memory of our patterns can be mined for discovery or narrative creation. That's why they really exist. Just follow the money.
        • Clubber 15 hours ago
          Drug addicts sell their children (in the worst way) for the next hit. It's not the same.
      • lxgr 10 hours ago
        > Twitter and Facebook won't harm your body. They're also free

        Only if you value your time at exactly zero.

        > The worst that can happen is you'll feel sad if people bully you online, but that's the fault of people, not the technology.

        By that logic it’s also your body’s fault to react poorly to drugs, not the drugs’.

        Thinking of it in terms of “fault” is also not very productive. I’d say it’s definitely a (possible) negative consequence of social media usage that might otherwise not have happened, and as such worth studying.

      • d_tr 10 hours ago
        > This kind of revolution in improving our health makes me proud to work in the tech industry.

        I can say with some amount of confidence that the number of people wasting their talent and life in making up bullshit engagement algorithms, who thought about it as a way of getting people away from drugs, has been exactly zero. So, it is definitely not something to be proud of, but maybe something to think of as a funny coincidence, provided that the premise actually holds.

        > The worst that can happen is ...

        That you'll remain or become an idiot, or suffer physically and mentally as a result of being inactive while consuming the garbage your proud tech workers shove down your head.

      • pseudocomposer 20 hours ago
        I’d argue that targeted advertising and unprecedentedly-centralized corporate control of what text, images, and video we see online is just as potentially harmful as (recreational) drug use, if not worse. And online-shopping/adventure-travel/other addictions facilitated by targeted ads and targeted content algorithms can definitely leave people unable to achieve goals in life.

        Creating a new addiction to replace the last generation’s isn’t really something to be proud of. As developers, we should be aiming to create ways to communicate that aren’t addictive and facilitate genuine connection with others that includes their highs, the lows, and financial/socioeconomic transparency.

      • hgh 20 hours ago
        Perhaps? But a confounder is the strengthening or weakening of social ties. It's not clear that what seems to increasing loneliness is doing well by this next generation.
      • techfeathers 13 hours ago
        As someone who grew up in the 90’s and partied the way they did in the 90’s If there is a switch from drugs to social media I find that incredibly dystopian.
      • kube-system 20 hours ago
        Mental health is health, and poor mental health can result in death... death rates that we have seen climb precipitously among children. Trading heroin deaths for suicides isn't an improvement, even if the dealers feel they aren't directly responsible.
      • dagss 20 hours ago
        Plenty of bad side effects: Harming your brains development, ability to concentrate, harm the ability to find joy in non-screen activities, mental health and so on.
      • throaway2501 16 hours ago
        social media can definitely harm your body if you’re constantly overstimulated and sedentary
    • jvm___ 14 hours ago
      You can order custom kitten being killed videos on the internet. Is this suppressing the serial killers and rapists in our society?

      It's along the lines of your theory, the internet is filling in a base need for a segment of society that's always been there.

    • HPsquared 16 hours ago
      Opiate of the masses (21st Century version)
      • dbtc 15 hours ago
        I think psychedelic is more apt (but not a perfect analogy either).

        Expands horizons, connects self to world, catalyzes cults and psychoses.

      • mr_toad 15 hours ago
        Bread and Circuses. Or at least, circuses.
        • HPsquared 15 hours ago
          They'll have bread, but they won't have bred.
    • fsflover 6 hours ago
      Yes, and a former executive confirmed that it's intentional: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24579498
    • globular-toast 8 hours ago
      This was my first thought too. Their phones are all they need. Plus they are legal, encouraged even.
  • oortoo 21 hours ago
    Another aspect here I think is the generalized fear and anxiety present in young people. Having spoken to some family members in the 15-18 age bracket, the message they seem to be receiving is that they are without a future... they won't be buying homes, they won't be getting high paying jobs, and that the system is not going to work in their favor. I think people of this age are uniquely feeling mortal and vulnerable in a way teens typically have not, causing them to be more hesitant to risk losing their mind which they may need to protect themselves down the road. But they also are modern teenagers, not only low in willpower but also coddled by their smartphones, which is why technology addiction is the go to "safer" alternative to habitual drug use.

    Also, you typically need to be unsupervised with friends to get into drugs, something teenagers no longer have access to compared to 10-15 years ago. If we look at the social decline due to the pandemic, what made experts think these kids would bounce back? They are forever changed, and will forever be less social than other generations because they missed out on formative experiences.

    • fawley 21 hours ago
      First-time home owners have increased in age[0], the middle class is shrinking[1], education costs have vastly outpaced inflation[2] as have medical costs[3].

      Perhaps the generalized fear is not so much about "coddling", but concrete realities. I do not envy them.

      [0] https://www.axios.com/2023/11/20/american-housing-market-old... [1] https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2022/04/20/how-the-a... [2] https://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/paying-for-co... [3] https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/how-does-medical-i...

      • kasey_junk 13 hours ago
        More of gen z are home owners than previous generations at that age[0], real wages are increasing for the lower and middle class for the first time since 1970[1]. More people are leaving the workforce than anytime in history, creating high paying trade job openings at an unprecedented rate[2]. Health care costs are growing slower now than any prior decade[3].

        Every generation has challenges and benefits. Framing the narrative can happen in any direction and the variance in group is bigger than the variance between.

        [0] https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2024/09/05/how-gen-z-outpaces-past-...

        [1] https://www.americanprogress.org/article/americans-wages-are...

        [2] https://www.protectedincome.org/news/labor-day-peak-65-trade...

        [3] https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/u-s-spe...

        • Uehreka 12 hours ago
          > More of gen z are home owners than previous generations at that age[0]

          If you’re going to make a claim this bold and this counter to the prevailing narrative, you’re gonna need to cite a better source than an outbrain-riddled webpage that tells me to “watch our video to find the lede we buried”. I’m not saying this isn’t true, but extraordinary claims require good sourcing and explanation.

          • kasey_junk 12 hours ago
            • cj 7 hours ago
              > The homeownership rate for 26-year-old Gen Zers is 30%, below 31% for millennials at 26, 32.5% of Gen Xers at 26, and 35.6% of boomers at 26.

              Unless you're specifically 26 years old, I suppose? This analysis seems far from scientific and cherry picks data in strange ways.

              • lazyasciiart 5 hours ago
                The fall in genz ownership rates is also quite interesting: I guess they weren’t buying during the pandemic?
          • 9rx 9 hours ago
            > If you’re going to make a claim this bold and this counter to the prevailing narrative

            What do you see as the prevailing narrative? The one I see is homeownership itself, which suggests that homeownership has been seen as being hotly desirable. I strongly suspect we wouldn't have a homeownership narrative to speak of if ownership was unwanted. When something becomes unusually desirable like homeownership has, it is not unexpected to see an uptick in participation around it; in this case owning a home. Much of the urban age has been marked with the majority of the population being renters. Everyone wanting to own a home with such furor is historically unusual.

            I expect homeownership has become so desirable as it has become seen as a way to build wealth. While, historically, housing only kept pace with inflation at best, real home values have risen by unfathomable amounts in the last decade or two. Which, again, attracts people willing to risk it all for a chance at some of that wealth opportunity. It would be unusual if said generational group had comparatively lower ownership rates given the "FOMO" aspect. People run away when prices are falling, not when they are rising.

            Given the market we've watched, the extraordinary claim would be that Gen-Z has lower ownership rates compared to previous generations at the same age.

            • jasonkester 7 hours ago
              Well said. I remember making a spreadsheet in maybe 1995 laying out the math to compare the real costs and expected gains from buying vs. renting.

              It mathed out about even. I decided to go with renting instead of buying, with the logic that the S&P didn’t need me to buy it a new roof every 15 years or to work in its garden every weekend.

              It worked nicely too, growing the money that would otherwise have gone into mortgages and property tax, letting me take some of it out recently and buy a house with cash.

              I don’t see much of this attitude in my younger friends now. But living cheap and saving does actually work.

              • FooBarBizBazz 5 hours ago
                A 20% down mortgage is a 5x levered bet. Plus you can roll capital gains into new real estate. The S&P 500 cannot offer these advantages.
                • abduhl 2 hours ago
                  With the proper mix of retirement accounts, options, and futures contracts it can. It can offer even more leverage if you want.
                  • kasey_junk 2 hours ago
                    The bigger win is the government subsidies and tax breaks.

                    You need very little on hand cash to get a very low interest rate. Much lower than asset loans at equivalent levels of wealth.

                • lotsofpulp 1 hour ago
                  A 5x levered bet with no prepayment penalty subsidized by future Americans, and it cannot be called and is non recourse in many states. And it provides shelter.
            • george_w_kush 5 hours ago
              The claim isn’t that homeownership is undesirable to Gen Z, but that a lower percentage of Gen Z owns homes compared to previous generations regardless of the specific reason. I think in this case the most likely cause is the increase in prices is causing houses to be unaffordable to Gen Z, despite their desire to own houses.
              • 9rx 1 hour ago
                There may be some temporal confusion here. Gen-Z rates of homeownership has stalled out over the past year or so. Prices are no longer rising like they once were, with fears over impending decline, so the desire is not what it once was. It may be fair to say that the narrative has shifted to "too expensive", but as they loaded up early when prices were rising at unprecedented rates there is a big head start at play. They don't have to buy any more homes for a while to maintain the lead.
        • Tade0 8 hours ago
          Regarding home ownership: they only started with a higher rate. It's too early to say, but considering that growth has stagnated, they're on track to become the generation that will own the least homes.
        • lazyasciiart 5 hours ago
          > Health care costs are growing slower now than any prior decade[3].

          I don’t see any data on that page supporting this claim. The current decade is growing much faster than the previous one, and they only show data up to 2023.

          > Health spending increased by 7.5% from 2022 to 2023, faster than the 4.6% increase from 2021 to 2022. The growth in total health spending from 2022 to 2023 is well above the average annual growth rate of the 2010s (4.1%).

          • kasey_junk 2 hours ago
            I should have said compared to gdp.
        • lotsofpulp 13 hours ago
          [0] needs to breakout what proportion of the homeowners received help from parents, either via free rent or cash.
          • kasey_junk 12 hours ago
            [0] in the parent comment needs to note most of the increase comes from older people living and staying in their houses longer rather than dying, moving to facilities or in with family.
      • speakfreely 2 hours ago
        First-time home buyers are getting squeezed by a combination of peaking market forces, but those forces are peaking and we're probably seeing the worst of it at this moment [1]. It will get better.

        [1] https://unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/p/why-i-dont-inv...

        • AnarchismIsCool 41 minutes ago
          Their arguments for "won't go up much" are reasonable but their arguments for "will actually fall enough to allow two generations to finally own homes" are pretty fucking nonsensical.

          They're comparing to hosting dips in the world wars and while I assure you ww3 will have enough loss of life to make houses quite cheap a third time, you still won't want them because they'll be covered in radioactive contamination.

          The issue isn't blind supply and demand, it's that we've made construction expensive through code and arbitrary supply chain constraints and we're planning to deport all the construction workers. Even if population grown naturally slows to zero we will simply stop building houses because it won't be profitable. That's what got us here in the first place.

      • mmooss 18 hours ago
        Also the insane political risks and social instability, climate change, heightened risks of war and econmomic calamity, housing cost increase.
        • MarcelOlsz 16 hours ago
          All I want in life is a good union for software. Role finished this week, who needs me next week? Off I go.
          • mmooss 15 hours ago
            The political instability, social instability, climate change, wars, and more will affect you whether or not you deny them.
            • aziaziazi 8 hours ago
              Those are easier to cope with when you live in a supportive society. _Most_ humans naturally help each others in case of emergency. It’s easier when the framework is already in place.
              • lizzas 8 hours ago
                People help each other in war? Catastophy? Sometimes they do, sometimes they definitely do not.
          • DiggyJohnson 15 hours ago
            How would a union help you move between roles? Or are you saying the opposite.
            • MarcelOlsz 11 hours ago
              In the sense of how certain trade unions function as a hiring hall. Like a centralized job assignment. We already have a version of it except it's a million splintered hiring/recruitment agencies that may or may not be good. Lot's of time wasted.

              Probably the wrong place to be barking up this tree though.

            • toast0 12 hours ago
              Most professional sports players are unionized and they move around all the time. :P

              I hope we get a union with a draft and such.

              • MarcelOlsz 11 hours ago
                This would rule. I would watch the FAANG draft.
      • notyourwork 12 hours ago
        Society hasn’t setup future society to be better. It’s a grab and go everywhere you look and it’s tiring. This is coming from a millennial with a good tech job. I cannot imagine how younger generations feel.
        • speakfreely 2 hours ago
          This is the inevitable result of higher connectivity in society. More spoils flow to top performers due to the reduced friction. I don't see any way to undo this trend short of undoing the connectivity, i.e. forcibly rolling back technological progress. Kind of a non-starter.
    • crtified 21 hours ago
      I imagine that, for the young people of the world, the Covid years really ripped away the illusion that the adults of the world are in competent control. To a degree that modern generations (from otherwise relatively stable, wealthy countries) have never experienced. While there are other major factors clearly contributing to the generational angst, I think this was the catalyst.

      I wonder how the economics stack up, because intoxicants aren't free. If the researchers are saying there's X less drug use, then presumably that either implies (a) teenagers are now spending X more on other areas instead (and what are they?), or (b) teenagers now have X less money.

      • smogcutter 13 hours ago
        Agreed that Covid was disillusioning for young people, but uniquely so? The 2008 financial crisis, 9/11, and the GWoT would all like a word.

        The only generation I can think of without a similar formative crisis (in the US at least) is Gen X. Does the death of Kurt Cobain count?

        • sznio 9 hours ago
          the financial crisis was just financial. 9/11 or war on terror was just behind a tv screen.

          covid was actually something everyone felt personally - not just empathized with through media. I feel like I just started recovering mentally from the lockdowns - all my college years eaten up by them.

          • throwameme 2 hours ago
            i am just old enough to have experienced 9/11 when i was in elementary school. it was a similar change to society to how covid screwed everything

            when i was a child, there was no security in airports. like literally NONE. you could walk in and buy a flight with physical cash. if you wanted an international flight, there was a metal detector like you might find in a night club

            government ID and drivers licence did not have your photograph on it, and some state drivers licenses were printed on non-laminated card. there was also no functional internet surveillance (there were no good search algorithms or tools in the early internet, so the government couldnt search either).

            but the real big change, which is kind of what everyone felt i think, is the whole world was celebrating the end of the cold war and so vehemently protested going into the middle east, and the government just did it anyway. the largest protests in the history of the west were against that war and it was all totally ignored https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protests_against_the_Iraq_War

            then we got the PATRIOT act, NSA/CIA spying on the population, heavily armed police. btw, in the 1990s you would NEVER see police with assault rifles and armoured trucks etc except for swat teams in major cities and the ATF. The idea of your local police department having a heap of military equipment was crazy. a great example of this is the LA riots in '92 - they had to call in the army and the national guard because the police simply werent equipped for it

            and they would run these polls on tv, like gallup polls, falsely claiming that 20%+ of people publicly supported the war

            even though it didnt affect anyone as much personally, it was the turning point where the gov just started brazenly ignoring people and introducing the heavy duty surveillance state, which was especially painfully felt in aus, canada, new zealand, the us, and the uk. and covid19 tyranny was only possible because of what bush did in response to 9/11 - it physically could not have happened in the 1990s as there were no government agencies that could have done it

            • aeonik 2 hours ago
              I thought the AR-15s that the police carried in America were semi-auto. More like a sporting rifle than what the military uses.

              AR-15s are more versatile than shotguns, though less powerful they are more accurate. If your going to carry a long gun around, it's probably the most logical option.

              Basically anyone who isn't a prohibited person in America can field the same equipment. Though I think police have more access to restricted ammunition.

          • germinalphrase 3 hours ago
            I mean, lock down absolutely was a disruption - but I know more than one or two young men that ended up in the desert after 9/11. Maybe we’ve also acclimated so much to the post-9/11 infrastructure of fear and surveillance that we assume this is how it always was?
      • HPsquared 16 hours ago
        See also: anyone who lived through the decline and fall of the USSR.
        • DiggyJohnson 15 hours ago
          Presumably you’re referring to disillusioning a generation, right? I wonder if the masses had smartphones in 1992 if they would have withdrew to the internet rather than vodka. Genuine question - yours is an interesting connection because the circumstances of disillusionment are so different.
          • makeitdouble 15 hours ago
            Online services have displaced at least:

              - the TV
              - the radio
              - board games
              - card games
              - video games
              - theaters
              - phones and faxes
              - the mail
            
            Perhaps the above where the equivalent of vodka to some of you, but I wouldn't look at someone with their smartphone and think "wow, they're getting wasted !"
            • DiggyJohnson 13 hours ago
              It replaced those things but that list doesn’t include the major time sinks, besides TV: social media, porn, doomscrolling. We already made fun of TV zombies, and at the worst it absolutely can remind me of a drunk or unstable person.
              • makeitdouble 12 hours ago
                I understand how much people are emotionally reactive to these part of the net, and the cultural hatred some can have for "unproductive" time (does it match what you call "time sinks"?)

                I still don't think they stand on the same foot as vodka.

    • LorenzoGood 19 hours ago
      As a person in that age bracket, I don't feel like my peers and I are lacking in opportunities to participate in drug & alcohol use.

      As to why I choose to abstain, I honestly am just not interested in drinking or doing drugs. I don't see any benefit to it socially, since I have more fun with my friends doing things while they are sober, and I don't want to be one of those adults that can't socialize without it. Also, the consequences for getting caught are high.

      • captnObvious 12 hours ago
        This is what I’m thinking. All of the kids I know from 16-22 are the most level headed group of young adults I’ve known. It is hilarious to me that this group of brilliant technologists leans so heavily towards seeing the absolute worst in every data point.

        Could it be that, kids are doing less drugs because they’re more informed, less bored, and less reckless than previous generations?

        We all aspire that our kids will do better than we have. We did our best to instill a sense of confidence and worth in them.

        What if it is finally starting to just, f’ing work?

        • chasd00 15 minutes ago
          My son is 15 and he’s a lot more level headed, compassionate, and mature than I was at that age. Even his worst friends are just like mischievous vs the real menace to society type teens were in my generation. As a parent, I want to take the credit for the man my son is becoming but I know I’m just a part of the equation. …a BIG part but still just a part :)
        • sdiupIGPWEfh 2 hours ago
          > This is what I’m thinking. All of the kids I know from 16-22 are the most level headed group of young adults I’ve known.

          Taking this on a bit of a tangent, but as an elder millennial, I recall having been told (by elder relatives in their mid-30s at the time) all about how one day I'd too be an "old fogey" looking down on "teens being teens" and how such progression is just the way of things. Hell, I still hear people preaching such "wisdom" today to their youngers.

          Yet here I am, just past the age I'm supposedly meant to start ragging on "kids today", and all I can remark is that this same 16-22 set you speak of are remarkably respectful, polite, and considerate, perhaps more so than my own cohort at that age. I almost worry they're not rebellious enough for their own good.

      • sundvor 16 hours ago
        I'm very pleased to see this sentiment, as a father of a 14 year old boy. 4 years ago I decided to quit alcohol altogether (from a moderate by Australian standards consumption), and I hope to be a positive influence on him through his formative years through open and honest conversations about the topic.

        (He has no desire to start drinking etc early or at all at this point.)

        Long term health impacts are high, as someone in my 50s I'm certainly doing better for my choice. And yes, not making stupid decisions under influence also cannot be underestimated.

    • fy20 12 hours ago
      > the message they seem to be receiving is that they are without a future...

      At least when I was that age, it was usually the low income people who's greatest achievement in life would be avoiding prison, who usually turned towards smoking, alcohol, drugs and sex. See "Common People" and similar 80s/90s Britpop songs.

      What changed?

      I grew up in a lower middle class family, and for me the feeling that I could end up like that - as many people I went to school with did - was what pushed me to achieve. My parents could only just afford their bills, so I didn't get any handouts from them. Of course I don't have a Lambo, so maybe I'm considered a failure by Gen Z? Has the boundary of what is considered "successful" shifted?

    • legitster 20 hours ago
      I have had the opposite observation. Millenials and older Gen Z have extremely pessimistic takes on the future. Our childhoods were some of the most materially comfortable in human history, and everything in comparison is downhill from there.

      But high schoolers I know today seem more even keeled about things. They are graduating into a world where fast food jobs start at $17, no one needs to go to college if they don't want to, and they are accustomed to a world where everything is temporary and digital.

      I think the strongest evidence of this is the sharp decline in military recruitment.

      • bitwalker 9 hours ago
        You might not need to go to college, but you're going into significant debt if you do, so now one has to decide which disadvantage they want to start their career with: no degree, or crippling debt.

        A fast food job might be $17/hr, but the cost of gas is >2x what it was when that same job paid $8/hr, not to mention other basic costs like groceries, rent, and buckle up if you have to go to the doctor. Pay has simply not kept up with the cost of living for most Americans.

        Why would anyone be happy that everything is ephemeral? That implies a lack of stability, more anxiety about the future, less confidence that you can weather bad times.

        Humans are tactile creatures, everything being digital leads to a counter-intuitive sense of isolation - more connected, but less personal. There are positives too, but as an older Millennial, it has been interesting to be along for the ride as the potential of the internet and social media went from a superpower, to kryptonite. Who knows where things will be in 5-10 years, but it's hard not to see how some of our greatest tools are being turned against us in the search for more profit.

        Millennials are, if anything, brutally realistic - a trait required to navigate the last 16 years. We were forced to watch as the last bit of life in the idea of a strong middle class was snuffed out, and had to enter the workforce right as the GFC hit. Our parents were the last generation where one could reasonably expect to live a life that truly lived up to the ideal of the American Dream - that one could get educated, get a job, buy a decent house and raise a family, without it being especially noteworthy to do so. For many Millennials, if not every generation following, it is essentially nothing more than a dream at this point. Corporate greed, and a government fully captured by it, has all but killed the middle class, and I fully expect that the advent of AI - rather than being a boon for the middle class - will drive a nail in its coffin. Those with the most to gain are already on top, and I've already heard way more people here talk about what they'll be able to do without needing to hire anyone, than I have about how the people left jobless will benefit. It is readily apparent that nobody with any power is going to do anything about it before a significant amount of suffering is felt - maybe not even then. All you have to do is listen to how people talk about it, as if everyone will magically figure out something else to do when every sector starts losing jobs simultaneously. Our society has a greater chance of eating itself alive first.

        I consider myself lucky amongst most Millennials - I entered the workforce before the GFC, then joined the military shortly after it (not due to the GFC, but the timing worked out). I was able to get far enough along in my career in those first years though that I never had to struggle with finding a job like many did. I was able to get a house in my 30s thanks to the GI bill. Very few of those I grew up with are in the same boat, many are living much the same as they were 15 years ago - unable to save enough to buy a house, facing reduced job prospects in the future. What reason do they have to be anything _but_ pessimistic?

        For me personally, I think we've simply lost the battle against greed, and there is a tipping point after which reigning it back in is impossible without burning it all down. That's something nobody should want, least of all the rich, but it's played out many times in history, and we keep falling into the same trap, just different ways. I think this time it probably was Citizens United where we lost our grip, that decision made it inevitable that corporate interests would be the driving force of government, not the needs of its people. Who can say for sure what will happen, but we're all along for the ride regardless.

        • kortilla 48 minutes ago
          > A fast food job might be $17/hr, but the cost of gas is >2x what it was when that same job paid $8/hr

          This is probably the worst example. In 2008 gas cost as much as it does now and fast food did only pay $8/hr. https://www.creditdonkey.com/gas-price-history.html

          > Millennials are, if anything, brutally realistic

          No, your entire post is an example of the dramatic doomerism waxing on the anxieties of normal life. Complaining about anxiety is one of the hallmarks of a millennial.

      • HPsquared 16 hours ago
        Millennials had high hopes and were disappointed; Gen Z didn't have high hopes.
        • corimaith 11 hours ago
          Exactly. In 2014 I really thought we'd have flying cars, exploring space and world peace by 2024. Instead everything looks the same, regressed even in some areas and all-around alot more cynical
    • noobermin 12 hours ago
      Today on HN, Jonathan Haidt afficionados lament the decline of use of addictive, life ruining, hard drugs. Something about "formative experiences." I think it's a good thing kids don't do hard drugs today, information addiction is a thing may be but going back to hard drugs isn't a good thing.
    • sydd 1 hour ago
      I don't think it's be cause if anxiety, it usually increases drug use not decreases.

      It's much more about people ha ing less friends and socializing less

    • jolmg 16 hours ago
      > you typically need to be unsupervised with friends to get into drugs, something teenagers no longer have access to compared to 10-15 years ago.

      They don't? I'm pretty sure I saw unsupervised teens hanging out at a mall even just a few days ago.

      • mr_toad 15 hours ago
        Gen X’s will probably remember being unsupervised from about the age they learned to ride a bike. I think we were the last “get home before dark” generation.
        • kortilla 40 minutes ago
          Millennials were the same for the ones born in the late 80s and early 90s.
      • DiggyJohnson 15 hours ago
        Not to sound snarky, but please consider interpreting comments like these as making a statement about rate rather than an absolute binary.
        • jolmg 14 hours ago
          Right back at you. I was also commenting on rate rather than saying that I saw one or 2 in the last 10-15 years.

          Not all locations are the same though, so maybe there has been a noticeable decrease where you're at. Personally, I think I've felt an increase if anything.

          • exitb 6 hours ago
            These changes aren't always easy to spot. I live in a city that acquired a significant Ukrainian population over the last two years. Whenever I see a group of kids that biked to an arbitrary location and play, they turn out to be young Ukrainians. They do the exact thing local kids would do 20 years ago.
    • jajko 20 hours ago
      > they won't be buying homes, they won't be getting high paying jobs, and that the system is not going to work in their favor

      I dont have a clue what your upbringing looked like, but even up to around age of 25, I never ever expected nor was told to expect any of that. The success despite all that is much sweeter.

      Maybe thats some US thing, being raised in eastern Europe you were born to shit, you were considered insignificant shit and that was about it. Thats what being occupied for 4 decades by russians causes to society, on top of other bad stuff they are so natural with.

      Maybe stop telling kids how they are all special and great and all will be astronauts and let them figure it all out by themselves? Teenagers being frustrated that they wont be owning some posh expensive house, thats pretty fucked up upbringing and life goals to be polite, thats not success in life in any meaningful way.

      I recommend checking biggest regrets of dying people, focus on careers and money hoarding are consistently at the top.

      • acuozzo 12 hours ago
        > Teenagers being frustrated that they wont be owning some posh expensive house

        Posh expensive house? Nowhere was that mentioned.

        The post-WWII 20th century American social contract was: "You will have the ability to get married, live in a modest home of your own, own a car, raise 2-3 young children, and go on a modest annual vacation even if you work in a factory".

        • kasey_junk 2 hours ago
          Neither of my parents _ever_ went on vacation until they were adults themselves. Both were middle class and white. 3 of my 4 grand parents worked in factories. 1 was a teacher.

          My dad’s parents owned their own home. The _biggest_ one they owned was 1000 square feet, which they viewed as cavernous. The one my dad lived in as a small child had no indoor plumbing and the heat came from a single wood burning stove. I was alive when my dad first lived in a house with central air.

          My mom’s parents never owned a home while she lived with them.

          The numbers will back me up that this was a completely typical middle class American experience post ww2.

          What seems to have changed is a) the class of housing stock available. b) trends around _where_ people live and c) the narrative about the past.

        • JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago
          > The post-WWII 20th century American social contract was: "You will have the ability to get married, live in a modest home of your own, own a car, raise 2-3 young children, and go on a modest annual vacation even if you work in a factory"

          Few under 50 actually want a suburban home in a no-name town with a single domestic holiday a year and a job requiring physical labor (and hard limits on clocking in and out) that feeds your family with industrial calories.

          If you do, you can get that with practically zero training in a mid-tier hospitality job (or working as an e.g. bank teller) with an hour commute each way. Small-town suburban homes are cheap.

      • yks 15 hours ago
        It didn't even cross my mind until the very late teens that it might be possible for me to own a flat one day, the sums involved sounded not much different than a "gazillion dollars", but that particular future outlook definitely had zero effect on my behavior.
    • yieldcrv 21 hours ago
      > uniquely feeling mortal and vulnerable in a way teens typically have not, causing them to be more hesitant to risk losing their mind which they may need to protect themselves down the road

      its just as easy to reach the exact opposite conclusion when everything is so hopeless and nihilistic. you are extrapolating way too much here.

      less unsupervised time, location tracking from parents, unregulated dopamine from chatgroups and algorithms in public social media, and the risk of fentany and other poisons in drugs, are much better contributors to extrapolate from

    • NotYourLawyer 13 hours ago
      You’d think doomerism would lead to MORE drug use.
      • john_minsk 13 hours ago
        Bad times create strong people.
        • john_minsk 9 hours ago
          To clarify, I really think that is what's happening. People feel that their future is not a guaranteed success and make safer choices to be clear minded and focused to achieve success. Probably just my bias is talking...
    • anal_reactor 9 hours ago
      > Also, you typically need to be unsupervised with friends

      There's a bigger cultural shift going on where people just don't like hanging out with each other anymore.

    • plagiarist 21 hours ago
      Your last point was my knee-jerk reaction, "where are they going to do drugs? There are fewer and fewer places available to spend time without paying a fee." I'd like to know if that's true or just a mistaken impression on my part.
    • 2OEH8eoCRo0 15 hours ago
      I suggest you read up on or watch a documentary on the 60s. We are fucking pampered today.
  • 01100011 8 hours ago
    A question for older folks: what did drugs do for us? Why did we do them?

    For me, drugs were:

    - socialization. I met a lot of friends through alcohol & drugs and they became the social glue for my circle. Alcohol & drugs became a large part of my identity.

    - a way to cope with boredom. Every day is a party when you're high.

    - identity. In my generation, drugs were mostly cool and associated with iconoclasts, artists, etc.

    Young people's culture changed. I don't think kids see alcohol, drugs and being out of control as cool anymore. I don't know specifically what changed this. Better social messaging, mass prescribing of ADHD meds, more competitive job markets.. Social media and multiplayer gaming have both ramped up competitive drives for what used to be more relaxing activities. Maybe the current optiate and meth epidemics are more effective as a warning than, say, the crack epidemic was for us?

    Kids have tech to glue them together(poorly in many cases, but it does fill the niche). Kids have internet subcultures to define their cultures now. Alternative lifestyles are much more accessible and take much less risk to participate in vs my childhood in the 80s. You don't need drugs to meet people or forge common identities.

    Kids are never bored anymore. I suspect there has never been a better time to be a kid in a boring small town. If you have bandwidth, you have culture. You have better shipping, home delivery, cheap imports, etc. Affluence seems more common than it used to be, even in our highly divided economy.

    • Gigachad 8 hours ago
      Gen Z here and people are definitely still doing drugs and drinking, but it does seem massively less.

      Just a personal anecdote, but there’s still a lot of house parties and stuff going on, and most people will have a couple drinks, some will have none, etc. But you are absolutely expected to handle yourself appropriately, getting too drunk or taking drugs you couldn’t handle isn’t tolerated and you’ll find yourself uninvited to future events. It is significantly more socially acceptable to drink no alcohol and take no drugs, than it is to get too drunk and act inappropriately.

      • JumpCrisscross 8 hours ago
        > It is significantly more socially acceptable to drink no alcohol and take no drugs, than it is to get too drunk and act inappropriately

        From what I’ve seen, this is partly a function of embedded social media. A drunk night at a friend’s isn’t just a bad decision, it reflects poorly on everyone in the room, including the host, in a semi-permanent and semi-public way.

      • 01100011 8 hours ago
        Handling your stuff isn't all that new. Unless you're hanging with very close friends you always needed to not be a problem or you wouldn't get invited back.

        I'm curious what GenZ+ thinks about the movie "The Boys & Girls Guide to Getting Down" which is a tongue-in-cheek, funny look at mid 00's partying culture in LA. That's not really my generation, but is a bit of a window into what I think was the last generation to really embrace intoxication.

      • znpy 7 hours ago
        As a millennial this is just great.

        The more i read about GenZ’rs and their attitude to work and life the more i like this generation.

        Yes, people should be expected to handle themselves appropriately. Getting black-out wasted with alcohol is not cool. It’s just unhealthy. Way to go!

      • inferiorhuman 5 hours ago

          getting too drunk or taking drugs you couldn’t handle isn’t tolerated
          and you’ll find yourself uninvited to future events. It is significantly
          more socially acceptable to drink no alcohol and take no drugs, than it
          is to get too drunk and act inappropriately.
        
        That doesn't sound all that different than previous generations. SXE's been a thing since the 80s. Not everyone is Bret Easton Ellis. I don't think that attitudes have changed all that much, but circumstances have. Inflation and wage stagnation mean less discretionary spending. Fentanyl analogues mean street drugs are significantly more lethal than in generations past. Legalized marijuana means there's less mystery and motivation to experiment further.

        I've interacted with a number of Gen Zers in their 20s and Millenials in their early 30s, some in passing and some on a more regular basis. In my experience that cohort spans the gamut. Some are teetotalers, sure. Most use drugs (cocaine, ketamine, assorted off-label prescription stuff, marijuana, etc.) at least occasionally, some daily. It really doesn't seem all that different from when I was their age. Excluding peer pressure, most of the societal ills that drove my peers to experiment with drugs still apply. Conversely I've seen a lot of my peers start to dial back drug and alcohol use as they get older.

    • crossroadsguy 3 hours ago
      I am about to turn 40 very soon. Do I fall in that generation? Because all those things did hold true and was there when I was growing up/adulting. But I never felt any need of it and many didn’t. But many did. Many still do. Because those small pockets are still around where drug is still cool and even back then those were small pockets!

      One of the reasons is - it has become too difficult and costly (at least where I live). Even for weed, which was pretty much kosher unless you were caught by the police keeping KGs on your person or home, it has become too difficult to procure and not get caught. That could be a reason.

      In many places where weed is available like cigarettes - maybe it’s not the forbidden fruit anymore. That danger or aura of different is gone with it.

    • TomK32 6 hours ago
      The improved treatment, and acceptance, of ADHD is certainly one key element here. I hope we continue to support kids if they show symptoms of any psychological disorder.

      Here's a 2018 study following kids into adulthood and questioning them on their substance abuse: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5985671/

      My brother is one of those really bad cases, while I got my diagnosis just recently; never had more than a slight drinking problem which has almost disappeared since the I started taking medication.

      • FireSquid2006 1 hour ago
        We can take a good thing too far (and probably are at that point). ADHD is being overdiagnosed and medication is being overprescribed, especially in young men.
    • lakomen 6 hours ago
      Yeah but at some point the life of the party became boring because it was all day every day. So we just hung out and smoked weed and played SNES, PSX on a daily basis and went to clubs on weekends and cafés from wed/thur onwards.

      I met so many people only through smoking weed. And because weed is such a laid back drug, we were all laid back and friendly with each other.

      What I learned to hate over the years was that daily routine of finding something to smoke. We had our dealers we phoned up or sometimes we would deal ourselves to finance our consumption.

      Dealing drugs was another level though. Hostilities arose. Some people claimed turf and threatened others with violence, those were "miraculously" found by the police and landed in jail. Also dealers that scammed others. The scene had a way to police themselves. Those were the good years.

      Later the quality became worse and the quantity as well. It was no longer... how should I put it,... fun and games but people discovered it as a source of making profit. Even friends or people you considered friends would try to scam you and you weren't any different. That time began approximately when the Afghanistan wars began and the CIA was cut off from the cannabis sources.

      It was like this, we would smoke weed in the summer and black afghan in winter. The black afghan fell off. What remained was green hash from the turks and weed, which was stretched with hairspray and silica sand.

      I quit doing ganja, also because I hated being stoned all day every day and having to do the daily finding weed routine. I was so tired of it, also "what am I doing with my life".

      I lost most "friends", I had to, to not be exposed to this crap on a daily basis. I wanted to get somewhere in life not just consume weed all day and be a loser who got nothing done. Better late than never.

      I very rarely do resin nowadays, not by smoking but orally, and it's like once a year or every 2 years. Cannabis is definitely good for your health, if not overdone.

  • FireSquid2006 1 hour ago
    I was in eighth grade at the start of the pandemic (college freshman now. Insane how the pandemic was 5 years ago). For a lot of people like myself, it was when I got into programming and found my career. However, I know lots of other people who basically sat on dopamine loop apps all day.

    Our habits from then continued on. While I can't prove this, I would suspect that this isnt due to any lack of vice, but because plenty of people have that feeling satisfied by short form algorithm apps.

    • astrobe_ 51 minutes ago
      I think the pandemic had nothing to do with that except maybe that it served as a trigger for you or others. Plenty of people got hooked on programming in normal and peaceful times, with plenty of addictive distractions around - be it chess, reading, popular sports, Pokemon, movies, etc. Not everyone is interested in, or has the patience for, programming. You see its potential and what you could do with it, they see it as a chore better left to people who like that kind of stuff.
  • nperez 10 hours ago
    I think information and culture/fashion both have a lot to do with it.

    Pre-social media, you could get drunk and embarrass yourself, and forget about it by the next day. Now everything is recorded. Information about alcoholism is easier to come by, and there are influencers like worldoftshirts who show people what life as an alcoholic is like. I don't see how anyone could want a drink after watching content like that. Smoking weed in front of a camera doesn't seem as edgy as it used to now that it's legal. Having red eyes in a photo is annoying. Vaping has always had a cringe factor.

    All of this tech is giving us the ability to look in the mirror and see what we're doing to ourselves.

    • yapyap 4 hours ago
      oh my god, never thought there would be a day I saw WorldofTshirts mentioned on HN
  • jaco6 21 hours ago
    Two things:

    Even the “cool kids” are staying inside and using their phones all day. Cool used to mean you were at the party, now it just means you have a high snapchat score.

    Other thing is genuine fear of accidental fentanyl consumption. They’re making fake Xans with fentanyl in them, fentanyl is being found in coke powder. Plenty of people aren’t taking the risk with street drugs anymore. Jelly Roll said so in an interview, he’s a big recreational drug user but doesn’t trust the supply anymore. Good job dealers!

    • tokioyoyo 30 minutes ago
      There just isn’t just one type of “cool” anymore. Media is extremely targeted and everyone interacts within their own bubbles to the point where they don’t know about the other bubbles. There are artists with 1B+ streams that I haven’t heard of, because none of the algorithms ever recommended it to me.

      Same applies to “cool”ness, as there aren’t a handful of tastemakers that decide on “what’s more or less cool for a given environment”.

    • cyberpunk 9 hours ago
      Why would anyone put fent in cocaine? It’s more expensive and has the opposite effect.

      Drug selling is all about repeat customers I don’t really believe this happens apart from accidents.

      • otherme123 8 hours ago
        Search "speedball drug", this has been done for decades.
      • kstrauser 8 hours ago
        I wondered about that too. The most likely answer is that a lot of dealers aren't meticulous about cleaning work surfaces between batches.
      • psyclobe 7 hours ago
        I don't know but a very close friend's x-wife died that way, coke laced with fent.
      • swores 7 hours ago
        TL;DR: If fentanyl could be evenly dispersed in cocaine at a tiny percentage of the weight, there’s a theoretical reason for a dealer to add it. However, it’s likely rare and more often accidental.

        I agree with kstrauser—most cases of fentanyl in cocaine are likely due to contamination from preparing multiple drugs in the same space. Accidental fentanyl poisonings usually involve people using other downers, like heroin or counterfeit benzos, rather than cocaine.

        That said, there’s a theoretical motive for intentionally adding fentanyl to cocaine. While cocaine is highly mentally addictive, it doesn’t cause the same physical dependence as opiates. A low, undetectable dose of fentanyl could enhance the high and subtly increase physical dependence, potentially leading to more frequent use. It’s an unethical but plausible strategy for some dealers.

        Regarding cost, fentanyl is cheaper than it might seem. While per-gram prices for cocaine and fentanyl are similar, fentanyl’s potency makes it far more economical in effective doses. A gram of fentanyl can be diluted across hundreds of grams of cocaine, making it cost-effective for someone aiming to enhance or manipulate their product.

        The real challenges are: 1. Mixing: Distributing fentanyl evenly in cocaine is extremely difficult without specialized equipment. Uneven mixing could make some doses dangerously potent. 2. User safety: Even tiny, “safe” doses can become deadly when combined with alcohol, benzos, or other opiates, all of which are common among cocaine users.

        In short, the risk and complexity of mixing fentanyl properly likely outweigh the benefits for most dealers. But that doesn’t rule out less ethical or less cautious individuals attempting it.

        (I first wrote a too-lengthy reply of ~800 words as I'm too sleepy to write well atm, so I got ChatGPT to condense it which got rid of 70% - https://pastebin.com/raw/khm2VFxN )

        • oseityphelysiol 6 hours ago
          Interesting how I could instantly tell that this was written by AI. CharGPT has a very distinguishable style and reasoning.
          • swores 6 hours ago
            That's why I included a pastebin link of my original reply that I asked it to summarise - I hate when people comment "here's what ChatGPT thinks on this subject", but hoped people wouldn't mind a lazily-shortened version of my own writing!
    • LorenzoGood 19 hours ago
      > Even the “cool kids” are staying inside and using their phones all day. Cool used to mean you were at the party, now it just means you have a high snapchat score.

      Eyebrow raise.

      • DiggyJohnson 15 hours ago
        At what? This is clearly true by experience. As long as you remember it’s a rate and not an absolute statement. Cool kids still go to more parties and are less terminally online than their lamer peers, but it’s a lot less parties and a lot more screen time for the cool kid as well.
        • deadbabe 13 hours ago
          I think the eyebrow raise is due to the fact that nobody cool uses Snapchat anymore. It’s like Facebook now.
          • dag11 13 hours ago
            For millenials and older gen z yeah, but it's my understanding (and my complete surprise as a millenial) that snapchat is actually big again amongst actual children.

            Can anyone who better knows the reality here chime in?

  • dartos 2 hours ago
    It’s probably because previous generations are becoming okay with drugs and millennials tend to be in favor of more permissive drug use.

    If parents think it’s cool, teens won’t.

    Pretty clear cut to me.

    • nvarsj 2 hours ago
      Yup this is exactly it. In the middle class UK even cocaine use is normalized. When your parents are smoking weed, doing lines of coke, and drinking excessive amounts of wine/beer, it's not exactly cool.
  • cpcallen 4 hours ago
    Technology (e.g. highly addictive short-form video apps) seems like a likely explanation; fear of fentanyl is less plausible (it would not deter drinking or vaping). Surely the biggest factor, however, is just the interruption of social contagion?

    I strongly suspect that physically separating highschool students from their older peers for a couple of years meant that most of the older kids who were in to drugs etc. graduated and were not around to introduce their younger peers to these vices.

    It's the flip side of the phenomenon whereby many university societies shut down and either never reopened after the pandemic or struggled to get going again (examples I know about including swing dance clubs and solar car racing teams), because the only students with enough experience to teach their younger peers had by then all graduated.

    • Unearned5161 3 hours ago
      I like this thought process your brought up here! I hadn't put much time into thinking about the physical separation of generations in organizations like schools. A certain absence of physical heritage if you will... A mini extinction event

      Makes you think of other, perhaps smaller, things that may have gotten a gap in physical hand offs. Perhaps I'm generalizing too strongly here, but certainly someone that was a middle school teacher or something before and after covid might have some observations on little oddities that may have escaped the public eye.

      • hex3 3 hours ago
        [dead]
    • Fade_Dance 3 hours ago
      The obvious reason for me is simply that everyone is much more health conscious now. That also plays much more of a role in social status than it did before. That also extends to showing off your healthy lifestyle on social media.

      Simply put, it's not as cool now.

    • lexicality 3 hours ago
      smh kids be on they damn phone so much it's killing the drug dealing industry
  • ikmckenz 21 hours ago
    Teens aren't doing drugs, smoking, drinking, or having sex. And the suicide rate has never been higher.
    • hathawsh 21 hours ago
      I'm not contradicting you, but it appears that the suicide rate hasn't changed since 2018. See this interactive chart and switch the Injury Type to Suicide:

      https://wisqars.cdc.gov/fatal-injury-trends/

      That chart shows the rate has hovered around 4000 per month for years. That's 4000 too many, but at least it's not increasing.

      • kube-system 21 hours ago
        That is the raw number, not the rate.

        Since the spread of social media, suicide rates are up for children, significantly: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/databriefs/db471.pdf

        > The suicide rate for people aged 15–19 did not change significantly from 2001 through 2009, then increased 57% from 2009 through 2017

        > For people aged 10–14, the suicide rate tripled from 2007 through 2018

        • moralestapia 10 hours ago
          I don't follow.

          If the rate has gone and population as well, how come the total number is about the same?

          • Schiendelman 2 hours ago
            It decreased for older folks, and there are fewer kids now.
        • zeroonetwothree 10 hours ago
          How are you disagreeing? The comment you responded to said it hasn’t changed since 2018.
      • ecshafer 21 hours ago
        But we are also seeing shrinking amounts of children. So a steady suicide amount in raw terms is an increasing rate.
      • mr_toad 15 hours ago
        > I'm not contradicting you, but it appears that the suicide rate hasn't changed since 2018.

        Peak social media?

    • mmooss 18 hours ago
      > Teens aren't ... having sex.

      Nor are people in their 20s (that is, both groups are having much less sex). That is the most worrying thing to me. People are not even engaging in the most fundamental, unavoidable, pleasurable human drive.

      They seem very much like traumatized people, on a massive scale, just trying to survive.

      • robertoandred 13 hours ago
        When you don't get matches, it's pretty easy to avoid sex.
        • bonestamp2 13 hours ago
          ... and if everyone is always on screens it's hard to avoid the dating apps where they're not getting matches.
      • grecy 1 hour ago
        > They seem very much like traumatized people, on a massive scale, just trying to survive.

        Every few years I like to leave the world for a bit and do something else to reset a bit. For example I just finished walking 779km on the Camino in Spain.

        What you said is essentially true for the vast majority of people in our modern world. What we have built is terrible for us, and we’re all suffering and very sick.

      • globular-toast 8 hours ago
        I'm starting to think many people just aren't into sex that much, in the same way many people aren't into food.

        Many people just get hungry and inhale the most convenient thing they can to scratch the hunger itch. McDonald's is always busy. People would be there on Christmas day if it was open. These people aren't into food as pleasure, they just don't want to be hungry. Of course with meal replacements bottles etc McDonald's isn't even the bottom of that particular barrel.

        It's the same with sex. I've met people who define themselves by their sexuality. They consider it a primary pursuit in life. But for others it's just scratching an itch. I've realised I'm basically that way. It doesn't mean that much to me, it's just something my body makes me do. Porn is now everywhere and more easily accessible than drugs. People are now able to reach for McDonald's or the meal replacement, but for sex.

      • llm_trw 15 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • reocha 13 hours ago
          Disregarding the weird response, you do know 20-29 year olds have the lowest average BMI for adult age groups right?
          • llm_trw 13 hours ago
            Higher than the 40-50 year olds when I was that age.
      • Henchman21 13 hours ago
        I think we all realize deep down there are too many humans on this planet.
        • kridsdale1 12 hours ago
          It’s possible to have infinite sex without influencing the population quantity. Well, you could decrease it.
        • BeFlatXIII 3 hours ago
          Quorum-sensing ain't just for bacteria.
        • jpcom 12 hours ago
          We can comfortably host 100B or more on this beautiful planet. Just gotta be strategic about it.
        • nozzlegear 11 hours ago
          I fundamentally disagree with this take, it's at odds with my belief in growth and dynamism.
      • BeFlatXIII 3 hours ago
        On the flip side, imagine the tremendous spiritual development possible to be unlocked by a generation undistracted by carnal desire.
    • conductr 21 hours ago
      I've had is persisting thought that, we as a society have been delaying adulthood, thus extending childhood, with each decade for a while. And we've now pushed it so far that the current cohort of teens simply are effectively young children on a social/emotion perspective making them unprepared to handle the stresses their age is exposing them to.
      • makeitdouble 15 hours ago
        > have been delaying adulthood

        If you have kids, do you see them as less mature than how you perceived yourself at their age ?

        TBH I feel the opposite: current kids have a lot more to deal with, and are expected to be much much more down to earth than a few decades ago. The most basic things: a single post on an SNS can stick with them for the rest of their life, yet we moved half of our social life online.

        • bbarn 2 hours ago
          By 17 I was on my own and joining the military. My daughter is 25 and just got her first real job out of college. By her age I had a 6 year old child (her). I'm not saying I took the right path (I didn't) but the level of maturity I had at her age was vastly different. Her peers are all similar, and when I was young many of mine were similar to me. I do thing generationally / culturally there's a difference.
        • BeFlatXIII 2 hours ago
          My observation of teens online, as someone who was once an online teenager, is that they are noticeably less mature than my cohort. Perhaps because it's no longer just the nerds who are online all day—if everyone in my high school was chronically online, there's a high possibility that Bush-era teens would've been just as openly immature and stupid as today's youth. Whatever happened to pretending to be an apathetic 24-year-old?
        • meiraleal 2 hours ago
          > current kids have a lot more to deal with, and are expected to be much much more down to earth than a few decades ago

          For sure not. They are pushed to play in a stage and fake drama. Decades ago, many 13 years old kids worked for 10-16 hours a day.

      • cosmic_cheese 15 hours ago
        I would agree that modern childhood is protracted to what is perhaps a damaging extent, but would also argue that the stresses and anxieties of everyday life are more constant and overbearing than the human psyche is equipped to handle. It’s mot healthy for well-adjusted adults either. We’re built for dangers and stresses that come in relatively short bursts, not those that are without end.
        • llm_trw 15 hours ago
          In 1924 you would expect to be a child in a family of 5 with two dying before they hit their majority.

          We are simply blind to how much even the relatively recent past sucked.

      • FredPret 20 hours ago
        There must be a good balance between the grow-up-quick-or-die-horribly of the pre-technology world and the my-cats-are-my-kids life of the post-danger world
      • GeoAtreides 20 hours ago
        The age of majority should be the end of a journey, not a bureaucratic milestone.
    • dpndencekultur 19 hours ago
      Erich Fromm said this in his "Fear of Freedom" We live in a time that we are able to customize our lives to our delights. That makes us lose perspective and purpose. So we look to movements to fill the void.

      That was back in the 50's/60's I think he was spot on why this generation can't see past the last scroll or click. They don't have perspective because they have not been bred to have it. It's very sad.

      • paulryanrogers 3 hours ago
        > They don't have perspective because they have not been bred to have it. It's very sad.

        Did 'bred' once include upbringing? I thought it began and ended with mate selection, pairing, and procreation.

  • threeseed 21 hours ago
    There is also a corresponding decline in alcohol consumption.

    One angle that hasn't been researched enough is the link to anti-anxiety and anti-depression medication. These has been a significant rise in the prescription of both to young adults: https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/anxiety-prescripti...

    And on these medications there are often severe interactions with alcohol and drugs which would be enough to frighten off most people. Some e.g. bupropion even reduce addictive tendencies entirely.

    • bonestamp2 13 hours ago
      The other thing I haven't seen in this thread yet is that kids today are really focused on is: lifestyle -- they want to work hard at school so they can get great jobs to make a lot of money so they can afford to own a home and live healthy lives. With the cost of living, and everything else, they're going to have to make a lot of money to life the kind of life that they're used to as kids.

      My kids are not on social media. They eat like pro athletes. They ask me why I'm eating things with higher amounts of sugar or ultra-processed foods. They do an hour of gym class at school every weekday and then they want to do sports every night of the week and on the weekend. They do their homework and get straight As. They are concerned about bullying and suicide -- they talk to each other, even siblings, in a healthy and caring way.

      My oldest couldn't understand why people drink alcohol if it's bad for you. I explained that some people like the way it makes them feel, "So what? It's bad for you. Why would anyone do that to their body?" They couldn't understand why I bought a gas guzzling luxury sports car instead of an electric car given the state of the environment (I've wanted one my whole life and I could finally afford one, yes it's selfish and they are more ethical than I am).

      There are definitely a bunch of things going on with Gen Z and Alpha that have made (some of) them this way. But one of the results is that they're not interested in a lot of unhealthy things simply because they know they're unhealthy. They can't understand why we do things that we know are bad for us, the environment, etc. and they're probably right.

      They're not perfect, but I do have faith in the next generation and we're going to see some amazing leaders come out of this group.

      • quesera 1 hour ago
        I'll take a guess: you are raising kids in a small-to-medium, moderately-or-more affluent community -- or a similar enclave, or selective/private school, in a larger city.

        I would further postulate that your parenthood community is more affluent than your childhood community.

        My point being: the lifestyle you describe (and its offset from the median) has "always" (post-war at least) been common in "nice" places. But nice places are unusual.

      • altairprime 5 hours ago
        > kids today are really focused on is: lifestyle -- they want to work hard at school so they can get great jobs to make a lot of money so they can afford to own a home and live healthy lives

        To expand on this point: American kids today are facing a world that’s drawn up the ladder behind them economically, and their only hope of escaping the pit of despair is to work themselves to the bone for the dregs of pay available to them. Unhealthy habits cost precious wage-earning time. Their intoxicant of choice is prescription medications because they’re covered by insurance, and that’s largely kept things from boiling over into harming the ascended old people — until recently, anyways.

        > I do have faith in the next generation and we’re going to see some amazing leaders come out of this group.

        Not if today’s leaders have anything to say about it. What leadership arises is, to date, captured by the pre-existing social structures and has had no power to keep the ever-older graying generations from holding the reins away from them. It’ll be interesting to see what happens when public health insurance is taken away, as withdrawing the last of the price-accessible drugs will certainly put their skills to the test.

        I remain hopeful for the outcome, but the circumstances are already set in the recent past. What a time to be a social scientist, though!

      • spacechild1 6 hours ago
        > My kids are not on social media.

        Your kids are big outliers then. I wouldn't extrapolate to the general young population.

      • aucisson_masque 6 hours ago
        It's great but the way you write I can't stop comparing them to what used to be brainwashed communist kids.

        People aren't robots, or we would be living in a sad world

        What did you do to make them behave like that ? That's uncommon, at least in occidental society. Closer to what the CCP does.

  • belval 21 hours ago
    > Monitoring the Future Study, which annually surveys eighth, 10th and 12th grade students across the United States.

    I wonder if there is correlation to the opioid crisis, where the "downsides" (if you want to call it that) of drug abuse are so visible to teenagers that they are staying away from it. Doing drugs when it's associated with being "cool"/interesting like rappers is one thing, but when you associate it to fentanyl zombies living in the streets it loses a lot of its glamour.

    I was not able to find the regional breakdown so it's just a conjecture though.

    • conductr 21 hours ago
      Not data driven at all, just my life experience, but I was a teen during the crack epidemic phase. It certainly had me and my peers cautious of crack itself, nobody wanted anything do to with it, but it was not a deterrence to drug usage in general. I was pretty experimental but when offered some crack once I remember declining; I wasn't even curious. The things that had the most correlation with my drug experimentation was 1) social activity/partying and 2) boredom. I think it's important to note as the average teen socializes significantly less and always has a digital crack pipe to cure their boredom; so I'd look there for a stronger causation.
    • throwup238 21 hours ago
      I can’t speak for anyone else but I’ve completely stopped doing any drugs that I can’t make myself or purchase from a liquor store or dispensary (or shroom store). The risk of fentanyl making it into the product even for unrelated party drugs is just insane now and I don’t trust myself to use fentanyl strips properly while already high or tripping.

      I wonder if that impacts teen drug use too, because for the first time opponents have a tangible risk to point to instead of just a dumb frying pan commercial and fearmongering.

      • bbarn 2 hours ago
        I was a big fan of cocaine back in the 90s. I never got to the "problem" level with it but if it was there I was the first to raise my hand.

        My personality has changed a little, but I'd still probably jump at it today, if it weren't for the fear of fentanyl. I'm not worried about addiction, I'm worried about death.

    • jjmarr 21 hours ago
      I go to university next to a safe injection site. It's very clear what addiction leads to.
  • jppope 2 hours ago
    The general sentiment around this phenomenon tends to be that a drop in drug/alcohol use is a positive social change... I'm pretty skeptical of that hypothesis.

    They also left out that having sex is on the decline and that is 100% a bad thing for our society.

  • jimmar 21 hours ago
    My pet theory is that buying drugs requires a level of personal interaction that many young people now avoid.
    • giantg2 20 hours ago
      That actually makes a lot of sense. I know of quite a few younger people who pass on things they can't order online. Grubhub vs phone-in takeout, Amazon vs malls, etc. I wonder if the areas that are legalizing drugs will see a DrugHub app pop up.
    • zingababba 20 hours ago
      It's insanely easy to buy drugs online.
      • CardenB 9 hours ago
        The motivation to try drugs, especially initially, is often social. I would wager that’s really what OP means
      • ThrowawayTestr 15 hours ago
        You still need crypto, no?
      • cute_boi 16 hours ago
        But someone has to tell that link and I am sure peer pressure can be one of the major reason for addiction.
  • _tom_ 12 hours ago
    Incorrect title. "Illegal drug use among teens drops" is what the study is talking about.

    Psychoactive prescriptions are up probably orders of magnitude in the last fifty years.

    People have been talking about "self medicating" with alcohol and other legal drugs to deal with various problems for decades. Now there are legal "doctor medicating" options.

  • Animats 10 hours ago
    The pot industry is having serious problems. The market was not only way overestimated, sales are down.[1]

    World's smallest violin plays.

    [1] https://www.ft.com/content/de36eb98-f28d-4594-9ae6-624d25802...

    • coffeebeqn 6 hours ago
      This growth story I never understood. The grey market has been extremely saturated for at least 20-30 years - demand can’t really grow from “everyone who wants it has it”. There is barely any value add that a company can do with the raw output (flower). The growing and processing equipment is already a mature market. Growing is easy if you can follow a basic guide and invest $500 in equipment. Harvesting is just cutting it off the plant and putting it up to dry.. The vape cartridges etc, anyone can buy from AliBaba for cents a piece. I just don’t see where you can outcompete a random Joe
      • paulryanrogers 3 hours ago
        Fentanyl contamination is a real concern though.
        • coffeebeqn 2 hours ago
          Why would anyone put fentanyl in weed? The black market does have many negative consequences I agree on that
  • Peacefulz 19 hours ago
    In the age of fentanyl I am not at all surprised by this news. The age of experimentation is waning when you can't be sure that your substance is genuine and the cost of being wrong could be your life. If I were a young person today I probably wouldn't even touch anything powdered or pressed.
  • foobarian 21 hours ago
    I always thought, thank goodness for video games because without them I would probably be a drunk or something similarly physically harmful. I guess the world is just now catching up :-D
    • georgeburdell 21 hours ago
      I used to regularly skip meals when I gamed. Weight started creeping up after I quit
      • amelius 21 hours ago
        You also got older ... Age is a factor.
        • gardenhedge 21 hours ago
          Does weight increase as you get older if you consume the correct amount of calories?
          • munk-a 21 hours ago
            Weight will increase as you get older if you consume a constant amount of calories. Your metabolism slows with age (and generally entering the job market means a much more sedentary life style for most white collar workers).
            • gardenhedge 20 hours ago
              So you adjust your calories
              • munk-a 20 hours ago
                Calorie counting is a habit that's generally unnecessary as a teenager so it's a habit not everyone is familiar with.
              • cute_boi 16 hours ago
                Easy to say difficult to do. Most people have family, work, 100's of tensions etc.. Reducing calories might not be that much of priority.
          • hnuser123456 21 hours ago
            People tend to have more major life events as they get older, and sometimes they choose to soothe with food when facing major loss in other areas.
          • kbelder 19 hours ago
            No, but the 'correct amount of calories' is a steadily decreasing number, so it requires constant adjustment.
  • dr_dshiv 2 hours ago
    In the future, will there be drugs specifically for kids?

    I find it weird that we don’t give kids coffee to help them focus on math. (But amphetamine is fine?) There is no evidence coffee is bad for kids.

    Psychedelics are so similar to kid level playfulness — and sometimes I think it could be helpful to help them see the big picture.

    Even cannabis— we know it’s controlled use is fine for kids, based on studies of usage for epilepsy, etc.

    Why do we wait till kids try it themselves under suspect circumstances rather than introducing it with intention?

    Just provoking some free thought.

    • bdangubic 2 hours ago
      we already drug our kids with heavy drugs like ritalin so why not other less dangerous drugs…
    • stef25 1 hour ago
      Don't quit your day job just yet
    • meiraleal 2 hours ago
      > Why do we wait till kids try it themselves under suspect circumstances rather than introducing it with intention?

      if you are talking about a "kid" of 16, 17 years old, that's less problematic. But a parent shouldn't be part of all experiences of a young person, much less actively pushing things.

      • dr_dshiv 2 hours ago
        It’s pretty normal for parents to drink alcohol with their kids. Letting kids of 12+ drink in special circumstances is common in Europe. But wanting to toke with a 15 year old to make sure they have a good first experience - why is that absolutely taboo?
        • meiraleal 1 hour ago
          I don't think it is a taboo but not something we should normalize, not because of the responsible parents but because of the already irresponsible ones.
  • yloswgns 21 hours ago
    Technology is causing antisocial behaviour in young people and teens, I see it everywhere in public. Even amongst friends on a night out people are glued to their phones. Antisocial behaviour brings fewer opportunities to meet people and be exposed to drugs. Drugs were rife during my adolescence in the UK no matter what part of 'society' you were from during the 2000s. I get the impression speaking to younger colleaugues that there a fewer big house parties and nights out clubbing and summers spent going from festival to festival. I started smoking weed as a young teen simply through boredom and curiosity, I only had access to a shared computer a few hours per day. The rest of the time I was out, god forbid, socialising with friends and strangers alike (the skatepark, local parks, parent-less houses, etc...).
  • kalium-xyz 21 hours ago
    I remember lying on these surveys when i was 12 out of paranoia, i wonder if the internet makes teens more prone to this
  • pvaldes 7 hours ago
    Hum, If we hypothesize that drugs abuse could be ruled in part by genetics (some people are more prone to became addict than other), then the drug epidemics from 70's, 80's and 90's should had pruned a lot of this genes from the population.

    The current teen not doing drugs are mostly the sons of the former teen not being killed by drugs on its 20's (because they didn't do drugs, or were able to quit drugs before it was too late).

    I wonder if an effect of the Fentanyl epidemic could be traced in the genetic makeup of the future USA population, when the children of all the young that died (obviously) never appear in the population pyramid.

    • bgnn 6 hours ago
      wow, you have no idea how genetics work.
      • pvaldes 5 hours ago
        Enlighten me, please
        • paulryanrogers 3 hours ago
          Drugs don't usually kill or cause people to die or otherwise become unwilling or unable to reproduce? In fact they may remove inhibitions and lead to producing more children than those who abstain, at least on the whole.

          Anyway, I'm not sure and of that is true. It's just one set of possibilities.

  • kylehotchkiss 18 hours ago
    Ample bodycam footage of people on drugs, or overdosing is widely available. I’d like to imagine that many people’s first exposure to drugs is seeing the terrifying things it leads them to do.
    • Gigachad 15 hours ago
      There’s regular news articles about people straight up dying from dodgy pills. Why would you take that risk. There is no way to safely use drugs when a single pill could kill you instantly.
      • bdangubic 15 hours ago
        not that you are wrong but life without risk is what today’s kids are mostly experiencing and it is no way to live. statistically based on number of pills consumed your chances of straight-up dying are very low. drug dealers do not want to kill you any more than Elon selling you a Tesla without brakes. we do thousands of inherently dangerous things all the time (e.g. each time you fly you should know that chances are your aircraft may have been maintained / repaired in any of the 900 facilities outside of the United States and such work is performed by people making less money per day than you spend on pumpkin spice latte… and yet we fly…) statistically though, your chances of dying from a dodgy pill are very very low
        • Gigachad 8 hours ago
          I find this discussion quite odd. Society has worked quite hard for a long time now to reduce drug usage, and now it’s actually going down, and somehow that’s meant to be a bad thing.

          I get the point about kids being afraid of taking any risks being bad. But why is taking drugs important to someone’s life in a way that riding a mountain bike and risking hurting yourself doesn’t satisfy?

    • CamelCaseName 12 hours ago
      Is there? LiveLeak and it's ilk are gone now
  • ThinkBeat 3 hours ago
    This is not accurate in what I see around me. Alcohol far less common among young people than it used to be. Cocaine and MDMA is flourishing.

    Ritalin like drugs is out there as well but I dont have much inside inot how common it is.

    That is a tiny tiny sample compared to the study so it does not in any way say that the study is wrong. It is just what I myself see and hear around me. (and what the police see a lot of )

  • tempodox 9 hours ago
    Or someone misunderstood. Teen drug use did not decline, it shifted. From substances to social media / “AI”.
  • vitro 4 hours ago
    What about sugar addiction? Read recently an article in the news that that's what is becoming a problem, actually, much more than alcohol or cigarettes. Anecdotally, I see kids around drinking all kinds of sweetened beverages. My friend who cleans at a college picks every day full baskets of empty bottles. And in my school, some parents giving kids chocolates for a snack or kids buying themselves a pack of sweets from their pocket money.
  • sailfast 21 hours ago
    Is it possible this batch of survey respondents just doesn’t trust anyone with information about their habits, so they lied?
    • naijaboiler 3 hours ago
      everywhere this survey has been done. colleges, independent firms, doctors office, the results are all the same.

      Teens and young adults today are doing less sex, less drugs. All those can't be wrong unless todays teens are collectively less truthful than tennagers from previous eras. I doubt that.

    • jimbob45 12 hours ago
      Came here to say this. I remember these surveys in high school and how non-seriously we took them. Really, I can’t imagine any group less credible to survey than high schoolers.
      • _tom_ 12 hours ago
        But it's changing over time, and students always lied.

        But it's possible that this generation is wiser/ more cynical and doesn't believe in anonymous surveys.

        I know I don't.

  • anonymouscaller 16 hours ago
    I’m guessing it’s linked to declining social interaction among teenagers, which also explains the decline in alcohol consumption too.
  • navaed01 4 hours ago
    I find the decline in alcohol consumption fascinating, how much of it is lack of sociability, being more aaare of its dangers, or just not willing to put up with the hangover.

    I was at a family event last night and all the cousins and their friends were using zins - tobacco pouches. I don’t see those mentioned in this data under nicotine in the article.

  • idunnoman1222 21 hours ago
    Well, tell the experts that if you just stay home and stare at your phone, you don’t go out an experiment with drugs with your irl friends (because you don’t have any) Also, when I was a teen, I had my own place kids nowadays live in the basement
  • ipaddr 11 hours ago
    The obvious reason is they don't have the freedom or space to with helicopter parents and fear of strangers. It's a wonder they even leave the house but if they do mother will drive and pick them up.

    Plus weed is legal now in many places. Kids don't want to do what their parents are doing.

  • keepamovin 13 hours ago
    It doesn't look so good on IG and TikTok if you're wasted and unhealthy. Image culture's positive flipside is appearance is a currency of respect, and people don't want to lose it. I guess there had to be some silver lining, right? Ha! :)
  • siruncledrew 1 hour ago
    I wonder if this decline means the public health campaigning and lessons about drinking/smoking/drugs prevention made a difference?

    As 1 data point, I have a cousin who is 17, and I am 35.

    As a 17 year old, she's been taught the dangers of cigarettes, that drinking is bad, and to avoid drugs for a number of years already.

    I'm not saying this is bad... it just feels like previous generations (Millennials, Gen X, Boomers, etc) did not really go into the informational side about the risks of drug use from a personal level, and moreso approached don't do drugs like an episode of COPS, which focused more on the risk as a scare tactic.

    • Ylpertnodi 33 minutes ago
      I'm one of those people that growing up, was bombarded with negative talk about drink, drugs etc. So I took more. And will continue to do so.

      Guess my age?

      I give my kids my* advice. One had a 6 month period of getting fucked up, and now doesn't touch anything. Another, 'doesn't inhale', and has never touched alcohol.

      They have also learned to shut the fuck up when being lectured by some teacher that is parrotting (sp?) the party line, and they howl at the 'touch drugs snd you'll become an addict' government bullshit.

      My conclusion?

      1/100: Scientists need to be young now to understand,

  • matt3210 8 hours ago
    TikTok is the drug of choice. I’ve found in my family people turn to drugs in downtime. Less downtime, less drugs
  • 0xbadcafebee 8 hours ago
    Why would a teen use drugs when they have TikTok? All the kids I grew up with who did drugs did it largely because they were bored or had bad family lives. The internet is an increasingly addictive distraction.
  • rdl 14 hours ago
    Fentanyl contamination/adulteration seems like a sufficient reason to not use any street drug active in greater than microgram quantities. (If I were a parent, I'd probably prefer to give "good" drugs to a kid who was unavoidably going to do them vs. trust their friends/etc. to find safe ones, although there's obviously horrible moral hazard there. I have no idea what the right answer is.)
  • nozzlegear 19 hours ago
    It's remarkable to me that many of the top-level comments on this story are all positing that something (i.e. the damn phones) must have replaced drug use and we're just not accounting for it. And if it isn't the damn phones, then it must be that the kids are just too scared of modern-day drugs and the dangers lurking within.

    I'm not saying it's not phone addiction, or fentanyl in the weed, but is it really that hard to believe that the youths just don't want to do drugs as much as your generation did?

  • nextworddev 7 hours ago
    TikTok might be more additive for the average teen
  • Arubis 14 hours ago
    Most initial exposure to drugs is social. That happens less if you’re holed up in your room on your phone.
  • nemo44x 16 hours ago
    Isn’t this good? We’ve literally told teenagers to not use drugs or have sex for decades and it’s obviously working. The consequences are far higher today or at least more well understood and the messaging is getting through.

    We’ve trained younger generations to be extremely risk adverse and they’ve listened. I line they’re probably dangerously exposed to other risks that we don’t have generational knowledge of yet.

    • _tom_ 12 hours ago
      Social media, for example.
    • bowsamic 10 hours ago
      Yeah I think it’s just this. We learnt that alcohol is actually really bad for you in many ways, and we taught our children, and they listened. I think it’s pretty funny that our instinct is somehow to be slightly horrified that they stopped drinking or using drugs. I guess they can’t do anything right
      • jppope 2 hours ago
        I think the issue here is more about the unintended second order effects. Yay! Drug and alcohol use is down... annnnnnddddd now theres a mental health crisis, increase in suicide rate, and the fertility rate is dropping like well drug and alcohol use.

        I'm personally not saying the isolated health aspect of reduced drug and alcohol use is a bad thing. In a vacuum it is obviously positive. When you consider how they function in a broader social system it may turn out that its not a positive change.

  • yapyap 4 hours ago
    not that surprising given how everything is laced with fentanyl nowadays
  • cullumsmith 21 hours ago
    The drugs are digital now.
  • luckydata 14 hours ago
    They don't know who to buy them from because they don't have any friends and don't go out.
  • kickout 21 hours ago
    Think most commenters are correct and that tech and screens have usurped more “medicinal” drugs.

    What I find interesting is the general lack of care among folks here at HN. There was a comment thread about some person in AL alluding to not being able to find qualified workers at their government contractor implying a morale hang up on “weapon systems”

    I’d argue tech kills more folks than these contractors but people can easily look past that.

    • _Algernon_ 20 hours ago
      It's a question of spectacle. 300 people dying in a plane crash is perceived as worse than 300'000 dying of preventable disease.

      (Or 1 insurance CEO being killed being perceived as worse than 50'000 being killed by denied insurance claims)

      • kickout 14 hours ago
        Thus my point. Cognitive dissonance at its finest (worst)
  • aucisson_masque 7 hours ago
    It says what but fail to explain the why. Some hypothesis in the comments about technology being the new 'drug' for teenager so they don't seek drugs, some other about how now everything is recorded so they can't go nuts, ... I don't buy it at all

    For me it's just a cultural shift, it's no more cool to be that guy that smoke weed or is drunk. That's all.

  • whatever1 13 hours ago
    It's because they dont have same day delivery. Who has the energy to stop scrolling on tiktok and get out of the house to get anything. Let alone drugs that require you to speak to someone.
    • _tom_ 12 hours ago
      You can probably get same day delivery on drugs, too.
  • chiefalchemist 6 hours ago
    > surveys a nationally representative group of teens each year

    Self reported with nothing actual to verify (e.g., hair sample, school sewer water sample, etc.) Self-reported data is notorious for being unreliable. Why would this be any different?

    Editorial: What a waste of time and money. Hopefully taxpayers aren't paying for this.

  • lakomen 7 hours ago
    What's surprising about it? Teens are attracted by things that are forbidden to them. When you legalize drugs that falls off. Also enough information is available nowadays that doesn't come from some finger waving "you you you" morality zealot, but actual real life examples.

    For me at least the pull of cannabis and other drugs, never did real hard and addictive drugs like heroin, was that they were illegal and the effects weren't as bad as the lectures said they were. So I thought what's true about cannabis is also true about cocaine, lsd, psilocybin, xtc etc, but I've seen enough movies about heroin addicts going to waste. I was wrong about lsd and psilocybin and coke had no positive effect on me, except once I became Mr super cool monopoly player ans the other time I was full of energy, but I believe it was mixed with something other than coke. LSD was very uncontrollable, the 1st time was great, simple laugh and dance, the next time was awful and I suffered from it for many years. Psilocybin then, with friends cleared my mind and I was able to articulate myself and think clearly like never before. Amphetamine, I'll never forget the sour smell, but essentially a useless drug, except to stay awake. MDMA varying degrees of happiness and community. But the worst drug was nicotine. Useless, super addictive and really bad for your health. So hard to quit and it's everywhere and it's even worse now with all the e-cigarettes / vapes. Nicotine is an epidemic that needs to be eradicated. It's pure evil.

  • gnabgib 3 days ago
    Original source (4 points, 8 hours ago) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42442279
  • euniceee3 20 hours ago
    Blame the homeless for this win. Seeing the outcome so blatantly all around us is pushing a net positive. Next big shift will be from the legalization of more recreational drugs.
    • thefaux 20 hours ago
      I don't know about that. I feel like the cat is out of the bag with cannabis and that it actually has the net effect of making the population more docile and accepting of the status quo which is good for power (individual experiences may vary of course).
      • nozzlegear 19 hours ago
        Isn't there research showing that people are smoking less weed in the places it's been legalized? It lost its "cool factor" after that.
  • glass1122 6 hours ago
    Inflation. they cannot afford. This is happy news. not surprising news.
  • Eumenes 3 hours ago
    Yeah, cause they're all on SSRIs, mood stabilizers, legal meth via ADHD drugs, and beta blockers.
  • p0w3n3d 5 hours ago
    it's been SWITCHed to another addiction. Pun intended
  • AI_beffr 15 hours ago
    the appetite for self-destruction is just as big now as it used to be among teenagers. i think people simply dont understand how self-destructive social media is. thats why theyre surprised.
  • cyberax 13 hours ago
    There are now very visible examples of drug use consequences in pretty much every Downtown of a large city.
  • yieldcrv 21 hours ago
    The article linked here doesn't compare previous time periods, only showing the percentages of use/abstaining that they detected now and just saying that's a decline or record decline, while the article it links to does compare to prior time periods for you to make up your mind about that better

    https://news.umich.edu/missing-rebound-youth-drug-use-defies...

  • mschuster91 21 hours ago
    "surprising experts", LOL

    It was clear ever back when the Dutch decriminalised weed that its normalisation led to youth not being that much interested any more, and so it was everywhere else where weed was legalised decades later.

    But hey, just because the Dutch have had decades of experience, the rest of the world still isn't able to learn from them.

    It's time to end the war on drugs, once and for all. And DARE etc can go and die in a hellfire where it belongs.

    > The initial drop in drug use between 2020 and 2021 was among the largest ever recorded.

    No surprise, with the world in lockdown and most schools in lockdown it was harder to get drugs, and meeting up to consume drugs could in many countries lead to a knock on the door or even a raid from the police - it happened quite the surprising amount of times in Germany.

    • pkaye 20 hours ago
      They only legalized it recently though.

      https://www.vice.com/en/article/legal-weed-netherlands/

      • mschuster91 20 hours ago
        Yeah, it was decriminalized... but that wasn't my point. The point is, police didn't care, and it wasn't interesting for young people because of that.
        • earnestinger 9 hours ago
          Legalisation/decriminalisation was only one part of the strategy.

          Real problem they had was heroin. So they made heroin(or some replacement) free, pushing out drug dealers from the market. Importantly: providing other help to addicts, so they could/would be part of society.

          https://youtu.be/6OYLoPvLzPo?feature=shared (1h video comparing situation in US, Portugal, Netherlands; Netherlands part starts around 27:00)

  • logicchains 21 hours ago
    Presumably it's related to increased conservatism in gen Z males: https://www.axios.com/2024/09/28/gen-z-men-conservative-poll . Conservatives generally have more negative attitudes to drug use.
    • rvense 20 hours ago
      Do they actually have lower rates of drug use, though? They also have more negative views of homosexuality, but their gatherings can still make Grindr crash.
    • PittleyDunkin 21 hours ago
      That poll is really confusing. There are multiple types of conservatism—one is very media-driven (e.g. "omg they did a gender wokeness in my game") and then there's the global variety (liking traditional values). The poll presumes these are the same social phenomena when they're very obviously not. It doesn't help that the way our political parties (which is what the poll seems to be based on) differentiate themselves map extremely poorly onto how americans differentiate themselves.

      edit: political -> media-driven

    • rockskon 21 hours ago
      Not really. Don't conflate octogenarian-guided party and community policy with what people actually do.
    • KerrAvon 21 hours ago
      Nope, women are getting less conservative and this applies to them too.

      > Conservatives generally have more negative attitudes to drug use

      That is categorically false.

      I think it would be interesting to look at whether the rate of physical / sexual abuse has changed, since that's significantly correlated with use of hard drugs.

  • bdjsiqoocwk 6 hours ago
    [dead]
  • LosEstupidos 13 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • Izkata 21 hours ago
    > But, according to data released Tuesday, the number of eighth, 10th, and 12th graders who collectively abstained from the use of alcohol, marijuana, or nicotine hit a new high this year. Use of illicit drugs also fell on the whole and use of non-heroin narcotics (Vicodin, OxyContin, Percocet) hit an all-time low.

    From an unexpected conversation with some younger people not long ago (though not this young), they may have just switched to LSD.

    • UniverseHacker 21 hours ago
      Anyone that has experienced LSD would know that what you are saying is impossible and makes zero sense. Other than both being chemicals, the effects are so radically different that they have no interchangeable purpose. Specifically LSD cannot be used to escape trauma or negative emotions, if anything it does the opposite and makes you confront them head on, often terrifyingly so, and as such LSD has something like negative addictiveness. It’s like saying someone switched from using staples to orange juice- it’s an incoherent statement.
      • Izkata 18 hours ago
        The study makes no distinction between that and recreational use. "Getting drunk with friends" counted, for example.

        Besides if anything I'd say current generations have less trauma to avoid so they're more likely to use it than past generations.

    • fullshark 21 hours ago
      They switched to smartphones
      • smartmic 21 hours ago
        This. And what about the psychosocial consequences, will it be an improvement compared to the other substances? I doubt it.
        • prerok 21 hours ago
          While I don't think smartphone addiction should be taken lightly, it's still a far cry from substance abuse.
          • s1artibartfast 21 hours ago
            I'm not so sure, especially if you look at the sum societal impact, and not just the worst outcomes.

            My personal take is that the net social impact is positive for alcohol, marijuana, hallucinogens, and maybe some of the party drugs. For most people, they tend to be a social lubricant, tool for exploration, and source of fun.

            I think that smartphone use probably balances out negatively. I think for most people, they have a pretty severe negative impact on their lives, and for some, an extremely negative impact.

            The worst outcomes for drug use are probably worse than those for smartphones, but not by too much in my opinion.

          • Nextgrid 20 hours ago
            Substance abuse is pretty much universally understood to be wrong (including by the addicts themselves, but they lack the help to get out of it).

            Social media usage on the other hand has been normalized and now humanity's social fabric is in the control of a few companies who are happy to rent it out to the highest bidder. This has obvious implications regarding democracy, surveillance, misinformation, etc.

            From a society perspective, I'll take substance/alcohol abuse any day because it appears to be self-regulating at a level that while is higher than we'd like, is much lower than what it takes to destabilize society and democracy.

        • alephnerd 21 hours ago
          > will it be an improvement compared to the other substances? I doubt it

          Smartphone addiction beats having cirrhosis.

          Therapy's cheaper than a liver transplant.

    • jsheard 21 hours ago
      Notably absent from those stats is nitrous oxide, which has had a resurgence in popularity lately.

      https://archive.is/wRa3Q

    • carlosjobim 21 hours ago
      You don't use LSD habitually. If they switched to LSD, then that's very interesting.
      • codr7 21 hours ago
        Some do, and that's fine too.
        • kamikazeturtles 21 hours ago
          “If you get the message, hang up the phone. For psychedelic drugs are simply instruments, like microscopes, telescopes, and telephones. The biologist does not sit with eye permanently glued to the microscope, he goes away and works on what he has seen.” ― Alan Watts
        • PittleyDunkin 21 hours ago
          LSD is not a drug that you can develop an addiction to. Habit is one thing—some people take it regularly—but it doesn't work very well if you do take it frequently.

          Which is not to say that LSD can't potentially be harmful. Of course it can. But it's not very analogous to the typically destructive drugs (alcohol, amphetamines, strong opiates) and it's not going to mess with your dopamine the way they do.

        • pvaldes 20 hours ago
          > Some do, and that's fine too.

          And those should learn something from Syd Barret's life

          Could had been a millionaire rock star, women, expensive toys, children. He could had everything for the rest of his life. But he choose LSD. As a lot of people claim, LSD is a cool and harmless funny drug, right?.

          His life instead was: living in his mum house since 24 Yo, with his brain like a car crash, and all the time in the world to think on his boy room about how he managed to mess up his life so badly.

          So thanks, but no way.

          • quesera 1 hour ago
            I don't think you can speak authoritatively about Syd Barrett's life, or his mental health issues.

            Those that can, do not agree that LSD was causative.

            Syd was not the only person doing LSD in the 1960s, and if your argument boils down to "people with life-long major neurodivergence, who are living multiple years of extraordinarily stressful life, should not do huge amounts of psychedelic drugs" ... then OK! That's a good rule of thumb!

            But the vast majority of people are not latent schizophrenics. And the vast majority of drug users could not approach Syd's consumption in quantity or duration.

            So an argument from the same data is that occasional or even moderate use of LSD by almost every adult human, is perfectly safe.

            ...

            Reframed: Every adult can make their own decisions about their personal level of risk tolerance. Hopefully the decision will be an informed one. Syd Barrett can be a huge terrifying red flag, or a bright illuminating green light, depending on the decisions you've made.

            On one extreme of risk tolerance, you'd never leave the house. On the other extreme, (with some bad luck, some excellent luck, and a great deal of effort and resources!) you might approach Syd Barrett's lifestyle. Neither extreme is appropriate for most people.

        • carlosjobim 20 hours ago
          Not in the same way as alcohol, weed or cigarettes. Not even close.
  • D-Coder 16 hours ago
    Oddball theory:

    COVID hit credulous / non-technical people harder, because they refused to believe in it and didn't take precautions. So a lot of people who might have turned to drugs died for an entirely unrelated reason, leaving teens who are "smart" enough to avoid drugs. ("Smart" here is not intended to mean just IQ.)

    • at-w 12 hours ago
      From 2020-2024, the UN recorded ~17,000 deaths among children in all measured countries combined. The share of that that is among older children/teens and in developed countries like the US is vanishingly small.