These Two Traps Are Absolutely Destroying the Next Generation of
Young Men in America
End of the American
Dream
Have you ever
noticed that our young girls seem to be far ahead of our young boys
and that our young women seem to be much more "together" than our
young men are? Have you ever noticed how many young American men
almost seem like zombies and find even the most basic human interactions
extremely awkward? Well, this didn't happen by accident. Researchers
are finding that there are two traps in particular that are absolutely
destroying the next generation of young men in America. One is video
game addiction and the other is pornography. In the old days, the
parks and ball fields of America would be flooded with young boys
after school was done for the day, but now our parks and our ball
fields are very quiet. So where did all the boys go? Well, they
are all sitting at home staring into computer screens. Yes, there
are also young girls and young women that are addicted to these
things, but the truth is that these addictions are far more prevalent
among young men. Unfortunately, it is not going to be easy to reverse
the damage that is being done to the next generation of young men
in America, and that is very frightening.
These days,
most parents don't consider video game addiction to be a major crisis.
Many parents are just glad to have something that will keep their
children occupied and out of their hair.
But the truth
is that video game addiction is very serious. One study discovered
that 88
percent of all Americans between the ages of 8 and 18 play video
games, and that approximately four times as many boys are addicted
to video games as girls are.
If you are
raising boys right now you probably know exactly what I am talking
about. Most boys are absolutely obsessed with video games these
days.
Trust me, I
know.
I was one of
them.
When I was
a young man I would play video games for endless hours.
I would often
spend entire days playing games like Starcraft and John Madden football.
Once in a while
I would stay up all night playing video games.
I was really,
really good at them but the rest of my life suffered.
Not that there
is anything fundamentally wrong with video games. They can be a
lot of fun, but when it becomes an addiction that can be extremely
damaging.
Today, the
average boy spends 13 hours every single week playing video games.
That is an
astounding number.
Unfortunately,
the second trap that we are going to talk about is almost certainly
doing even more damage to our young men.
The Internet
has improved our lives in a lot of ways, but one of the very negative
things that it has done is that it has unleashed a giant flood of
filth into our homes.
Our young men
have more access to sexual content than ever before, and this is
having some horrific consequences.
The following
example comes from a recent Daily
Mail article....
A boy
of 12 who raped a nine-year-old girl after watching hard-core
pornography online was spared jail yesterday as his lawyer warned
of a generation of children growing up with a ‘skewed view’ on
sex.
The schoolboy,
who is now 14, told police he had raped the little girl because
he wanted to ‘feel grown up’ after watching porn online.
In a
disturbing case that has raised fresh concerns about the sexualisation
of children, the teenager had unrestricted access to the web and
was able to freely look at sexually explicit material.
Sadly, the
United States is the pornography capital of the world. An astounding
30
percent of all Internet traffic now goes to pornography websites,
and the U.S. produces more
pornography than any other nation has in the history of the
world.
Many American
men are so addicted to it that they cannot even wait to get home
to look at it. One survey discovered that 25
percent of all employees that have Internet access in America
visit sex websites while they are at work.
In a recent
article for
CNN, psychologist Philip Zimbardo and Nikita Duncan discussed
some of the consequences that this obsession with video games and
pornography is having on our society....
The consequences
could be dramatic: The excessive use of video games and online
porn in pursuit of the next thing is creating a generation of
risk-averse guys who are unable (and unwilling) to navigate the
complexities and risks inherent to real-life relationships, school
and employment.
Stories
about this degeneration are rampant: In 2005, Seungseob Lee, a
South Korean man, went
into cardiac arrest after playing "StarCraft" for nearly 50
continuous hours. In 2009, MTV's "True Life" highlighted the story
of a man named Adam whose wife kicked him out of their home --
they have four kids together -- because he couldn't stop watching
porn.
Norwegian
mass murder suspect Anders Behring Breivik reported during
his trial that he prepared his mind and body for his marksman-focused
shooting of 77 people by playing "World of Warcraft" for a year
and then "Call of Duty" for 16 hours a day.
Zimbardo and
Duncan have written a new book entitled "The Demise of Guys: Why
Boys Are Struggling And What We Can Do About It" in which they present
some absolutely startling research. A recent Business
Insider article summarized some of the key points from the book....
- In 2011,
young men's SAT scores were the worst they had been in 40 years.
- Even Hollywood
has caught on: films like Failure to Launch, Knocked Up and Jackass
mock the ineptitude of this generation.
- Boys account
for 70 percent of D's and F's given at school.
- Research
shows guys aren't interested in being husbands, fathers or the
head of the household.
- Boys are
four to five times more likely than girls to have Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder, according to the National Center for Education
Statistics. Two-thirds of students in special education programs
are guys.
- The average
boy spends 13 hours a week playing video games. The average girl
spends 5. The average young American will spend 10,000 hours playing
video games by age 21. That's twice the time it takes to earn
a bachelor's degree.
- The average
high school boy spends two hours watching porn every week. Men
can't escape porn: 13,500 full-length commercial porn films were
released in 2011, compared with 600 Hollywood films.
- Researchers
claim that internet pornography is hurting young boys' ability
to form meaningful romantic relationships because they objectify
their partner.
- It's predicted
that 60 percent of bachelor's degrees will go to women by 2016.
Are you starting
to get the picture?
Clearly something
has gone very, very wrong.
When these
sex-obsessed boys grow up, they become sex-obsessed men.
Just check
out what ABC
News discovered was going on over at the SEC....
One senior
attorney at SEC headquarters in Washington spent up to eight hours
a day accessing Internet porn, according to the report, which
has yet to be released. When he filled all the space on his government
computer with pornographic images, he downloaded more to CDs and
DVDs that accumulated in boxes in his offices.
An SEC
accountant attempted to access porn websites 1,800 times in a
two-week period and had 600 pornographic images on her computer
hard drive.
Another
SEC accountant used his SEC-issued computer to upload his own
sexually explicit videos onto porn websites he joined.
And another
SEC accountant attempted to access porn sites 16,000 times in
a single month.
Those that
are chosen to work at the SEC are supposed to be among our finest
young men and women.
So if this
kind of thing is going on over at the SEC, what is happening in
the rest of society?
And just look
at the U.S. Secret Service. It made global headlines recently when
it was discovered that a whole bunch of agents were consorting with
prostitutes.
We are very,
very messed up as a nation.
And we now
have an entire generation of
young men that don't know how to act like men.
In fact, we
are rapidly becoming a nation
of slobs that do not even have the capability of handling adult
responsibilities.
Sadly, at this
point young men in the 25 to 34 age bracket are
nearly twice as likely to live with their parents as young women
the same age are....
The number
of adult children who live with their parents, especially young
males, has soared since the economy started heading south. Among
males age 25 to 34, 19% live with their parents today, a 5 percentage
point increase from 2005, according to Census data released Thursday.
Meanwhile, 10% of women in that age group live at home, up from
8% six years ago.
So what can
be done to fix this?
Well, unfortunately
there is not an easy solution to this problem.
How in the
world are we going to convince millions upon millions of young men
to spend less time playing video games and watching pornography?
Sadly, the
truth is that this problem is getting a little bit worse every single
day.
So we are headed
for big, big trouble as a nation.
Reprinted
with permission from End
of the American Dream.
June
5, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 End
of the American Dream
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