right. so is this going to be the tobacco the nicotine, the cigarette of, you know, the next decade or you think it is. i work on that. absolutely. yeah ou. e that s that s going to be the problem. but i don t know how you pute this toothpaste back in the tube. i really don t i don t think but when we usedtube i rea the s is the tea you just dropped the tea. you got a court case. the t.. well, i work on the social media addiction litigation i and the primary focus are children, and. and that s my case. childinbut for me, as i m workg on it, yes, the products are designed to addictive. s it s the dopamine head, it s the slot machine pool. auit s it s designed, al our phones, all of the apps and products specificallnt yes defendants are face will matter. tiktok you have youtube, tikt and these defendants have designed their productsok that children become addicted to them and there s documented harmm an that s associated with this continuous feed of content and tick tock push
and by cag the time we finally get the research that catches up with public opinion, people may already have their own narrative written. johnss hopkins itself did not p even put out a press release t about this study. and if you is look at the media coverage, it s one of the biggest stories in theta world today and yet certainut media outlets have not even covered itle. e you know, you hear people say the architects of these policies should be broughtie on felony charges and prison or whatever . let s just start with telling the truth. do you think it would be a palliative? it would be good for everyone if they would just admit that they were wrong. why it s so hard. v but what i ve done that for myself i called for the lockdowns, tucker , when wei saw what was happening in china, it was scary. we didn t know if we remember our nation s children and pretty quickly we startedn to get the data from northern italy that showed s that not ony was it not equally distributed in the populatio