
Generational Echo Chambers – When Your Birth Year Becomes a Worldview
Boomers think millennials are entitled. Millennials think boomers ruined everything. Gen Z says OK boomer. Every generation is certain they’re seeing clearly.
How echo chambers, digital, ideological, and personal, shape what we see and shrink real dialogue. Through the lens of writing, the series looks at how authors and thought leaders either reinforce bias or break through it, and how to use your voice for clarity instead of noise. Part of the territory Richard Lowe maps in his Enemies of You series.

Boomers think millennials are entitled. Millennials think boomers ruined everything. Gen Z says OK boomer. Every generation is certain they’re seeing clearly.

62% of Republicans and 54% of Democrats hold deeply negative views of the other side. The shift didn’t happen because parties changed. Information systems did.

Kodak invented the digital camera in 1975 then spent three decades protecting film. Nokia dismissed the touchscreen. The echo chamber didn’t make them dumb.

The wellness echo chamber starts with reasonable skepticism about processed food and Big Pharma. Then the algorithm notices you clicked.

Americans think the top 20% owns 59% of wealth. The real number is 84%. The bottom 40% holds 0.3%. The economic echo chamber hides the country from itself.
If this series sparked something, let's talk about turning your expertise into a finished book.