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Structural stupidity: How historians will view social media's destruction of democracy

Mike Allen 4-5 minutes 4/20/2022

An article in the May issue of The Atlantic is one of the most clear-eyed looks we've seen at how America fractured — and what'll happen if we don't find a way to fix it.

The big picture: "In the 20th century, America built the most capable knowledge-producing institutions in human history," writes Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist at the New York University Stern School of Business. "In the past decade, they got stupider en masse."

Why it matters: All day, we're barraged with tiles in the mosaic — this data point, or that hot take. Haidt's vivisection of America, 2022, is an excuse to step back and behold what future historians will see.

In "After Babel," Haidt invokes the Genesis tale of the Tower of Babel: God is angered by early humans' hubris, then scrambles their languages.

What happened:

Haidt writes that this "stupefying process plays out differently on the right and the left because their activist wings subscribe to different narratives with different sacred values."

What's next:

The bottom line: Haidt puts our hope in Gen Z, born between 1997 and 2012, who "bear none of the blame for the mess we are in." That generation's admirable embrace of mission and activism could be our salvation.

What historians will see

Axios CEO Jim VandeHei and I talk about these trends all the time, and lots of Axios coverage is aimed at making sense of them in a clinical way. So I asked for his thoughts on Jonathan Haidt's piece in The Atlantic:

Editor's note: This story has been corrected to reflect that Gen Z includes people born between 1997 and 2012, not before 1997.