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Gen X Resistance

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Gen X: Analog to Algorithm is about learning how systems work, before they work you.

Hosted by Paul Stevens, the podcast uses Gen X’s unique lived experience between analog and digital worlds to translate skills like skepticism, critical thinking, and system awareness into modern life.

This show isn’t about blaming generations or glorifying the past. It’s about understanding incentives, questioning convenience, and keeping your sanity in a world built on algorithms.

If you’ve ever felt like everything is easier, but somehow harder to understand, this show is for you.

© 2026 Gen X Resistance
個人的成功 社会科学 自己啓発
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  • They Designed Social Media to Be Addictive… Now They’re Getting Sued!
    2026/04/13

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    Episode Summary

    At what point does a product stop being useful… and start becoming a problem?

    In this episode, Paul Stevens breaks down the growing wave of lawsuits targeting major social media platforms like Meta, TikTok, and YouTube—focusing on one central claim: these systems weren’t just built to connect people… they were engineered to keep them hooked.

    This isn’t a “throw your phone away” conversation. It’s a deeper look at how modern platforms are designed, what the data actually shows, and why the conversation is shifting from personal responsibility to system accountability.

    From algorithm-driven content loops to the legal implications of Section 230, this episode connects the dots between past industries, present technology, and a future that’s starting to raise serious questions.

    What You’ll Learn

    • Why social media platforms are being sued—and what the lawsuits are really about
    • How algorithms are designed to maximize engagement (not necessarily well-being)
    • The difference between using a platform and being pulled by it
    • How repeated content exposure—not just content itself—is at the center of concern
    • Why this situation is being compared to past industries like Big Tobacco
    • What Section 230 is—and why it’s becoming part of the debate
    • The reality of how people actually use multiple platforms together (not in isolation)
    • Why “parental responsibility” is only part of the equation in today’s environment

    Key Takeaways

    • These platforms are not passive—they actively recommend, prioritize, and amplify content
    • Engagement-driven design (infinite scroll, notifications, algorithm feeds) is intentional
    • The issue isn’t just access—it’s scale, repetition, and behavioral reinforcement
    • Today’s digital environment is fundamentally different from what Gen X experienced
    • The real question isn’t whether social media is good or bad—it’s whether behavior is chosen or engineered

    Notable Moments

    • “At what point does that stop being a product… and start being a problem?”
    • “The algorithm knows you faster than you understand yourself.”
    • “You don’t quit one platform—you stack them.”
    • “Not pleasure—anticipation. That’s what keeps you scrolling.”
    • “There’s a difference between choosing to watch… and realizing you’ve lost an hour.”
    • “Maybe the smartest move right now… is questioning the system before it fully understands you.”

    By the Numbers

    • ~90% of U.S. teens use YouTube
    • ~73% use it daily
    • Nearly half report being online “almost constantly”

    (Source: Pew Research Center)

    Why This Matters

    This isn’t just a tech story—it’s a cultural shift.

    As platforms move from hosting content to actively shaping what users see, the conversation is evolving from convenience and entertainment… to influence, responsibility, and long-term impact.

    For Gen X, this feels familiar.
    We’ve seen what happens when industries optimize products for consumption first—and deal with consequences later.

    The difference now?
    We’re watching it unfold in real time.

    Connect & Follow

    You can find Gen X Resistance on all major podcast platforms and YouTube.
    Join the conversation, leave a comment, or send a message through the show links.

    Sources

    • Pew Research Center – Teens, Social Media & Technology (2024)
    • Pew Research Center – Teens & Social Media Fact Sheet
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    9 分
  • Gen X Knows Something About This World That Others Don’t
    2026/03/24

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    Something’s off.

    You feel it. You can’t always explain it—but it’s there. The way people think, react, argue… even the way they process information just feels different now.

    In this episode, Paul Stevens breaks down why.

    This isn’t another “we drank from the hose” nostalgia trip. This goes deeper than that.

    Generation X didn’t just grow up differently—we lived through a complete shift in how the world works. We came up in an analog system where you had to go find information… and now we’re living in a world where information finds you.

    And that changes everything.

    What’s Really Going On

    We’re not just dealing with faster technology or shorter attention spans. The relationship between people and information has fundamentally changed.

    • We used to seek information
    • Now information is fed to us


    That sounds subtle. It’s not.

    Because once information is filtered, curated, and personalized… it doesn’t just inform you—it starts shaping you.

    And the longer you’re in that system, the harder it is to tell the difference.


    Why Gen X Sees It Differently

    If you grew up before the internet took over, you remember a different pace.

    You had:

    • Time to think
    • Space between reaction and response
    • A shared baseline of information


    Today?

    Everything is immediate. Constant. Personalized.

    Two people can live in completely different informational worlds and not even realize it.

    Gen X sits right in the middle of that transition. We didn’t just hear about it—we experienced it.

    And that gives us something most people don’t have:

    Context.


    The Bigger Question

    This isn’t about going backward.

    It’s about understanding what changed—and what that means going forward.

    Because if you can see the system clearly, you’re a lot less likely to be shaped by it without realizing it.


    From Analog to Algorithm

    That shift didn’t just change technology.

    It changed how reality is delivered.

    And if you’ve felt like something’s been off lately…
    there’s probably a reason for that.


    🎙️ Follow / Subscribe

    If this episode hit home, follow Gen X Resistance and share it with someone who’s been feeling the same thing but couldn’t quite put it into words.

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    12 分
  • Is This Iran’s Berlin Wall Moment? Freedom, Protest, and the Cost We Forget
    2026/03/02

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    When commentators call something a “Berlin Wall moment,” it sounds historic — almost inevitable.

    For Gen X, it’s something else. It’s memory.

    In this episode, we examine the comparison through history, lived experience, and the reality of authoritarian power. As footage shows Iranian Americans celebrating in major U.S. cities while others protest the conflict, a deeper question emerges: what does freedom look like to people who have fled a regime known for violently suppressing dissent?

    We explore:

    • What the Berlin Wall actually represented
    • How fear sustains authoritarian systems
    • The history of protest crackdowns in Iran
    • The difference between debating policy and surviving power


    This conversation isn’t about slogans. It’s about context — and the cost of forgetting it.

    Walls don’t fall on schedule.
    And freedom doesn’t look the same from every side.

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    7 分
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