The “Kids These Days” Lie: From Cicero to Gen Z cover art

The “Kids These Days” Lie: From Cicero to Gen Z

The “Kids These Days” Lie: From Cicero to Gen Z

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Older generations have been dragging “kids these days” for at least 2,000 years. From Cicero whining about Roman youth to boomers roasting Gen Z on TikTok, the script barely changes: lazy, entitled, soft, ruining the country.

In this episode, I walk through how every major wave of change in American history – the Market Revolution, the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era, the Jazz Age, the 1960s, all the way up to millennials and Gen Z – turns into a moral panic about young people, instead of an honest look at how the economy, technology, and power structures are shifting.

In this episode of Past Is Prologue, we cover:

Why Cicero was already complaining about “arrogant, disrespectful” youth

How the Market Revolution made young people leave the family farm – and got them blamed for “moral decay”

The Gilded Age city, youth culture, and the panic over saloons, dance halls, and “easy pleasure”

Progressive Era reformers, suffrage, unions, and why older elites called them naive radicals

The Jazz Age, flappers, cars, jazz, and the birth of modern “youth culture”

The 1960s/70s: civil rights, Vietnam, hippies, and the classic “generation gap”

Millennials and Gen Z: student debt, housing, climate anxiety, gig work, and why “nobody wants to work anymore” is a dodge

The 5-step pattern: world changes → youth adapt → olds feel loss → blame the kids → then become the next round of scolds

Why generational warfare is a convenient distraction from policy failure, inequality, and corporate power

Key question: when someone says “this generation is going to destroy America,” what’s really changed in the world they inherited – and who benefits from blaming the kids instead of the system?

If you’re Gen Z, millennial, or just trying not to become “old man yells at cloud,” this one’s for you.

00:00 — Cold open: “Kids these days” is ancient

01:03 — Welcome + why generational blame repeats

02:32 — The Market Revolution: youth adapt first, olds panic

06:45 — The Gilded Age: cities, youth culture, and moral fears

09:51 — The Progressive Era: young reformers vs. elite backlash

11:57 — The Jazz Age: cars, jazz, sexuality, and 1920s youth panic

13:54 — The 1960s: civil rights, Vietnam, counterculture, generational war

16:06 — Millennials & Gen Z: debt, housing, climate, and modern blame

19:14 — The recurring five-step generational pattern

21:31 — Why older generations forget what youth feels like

22:23 — What to do with this pattern (skepticism + perspective)

23:58 — Final takeaway: The complaint is old — the kids are new

24:22 — Closing + sign-off

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