Watch What Happens When A Baby That Is Addicted To A Cellphone Has It Taken Away

Authored by Michael Snyder via The End of The American Dream blog,

You have got to watch this video!  I have to admit that I was mesmerized when I first starting watching it.  This baby appears to be less than a year old, and yet it already throws a massive temper tantrum every time a cellphone is taken away.

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-11-26_10-40-39.jpg?itok=IwFWuolL

But as you will see in the video, all the mother has to do to stop the tantrum is to give the cellphone back to the baby. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-11-26_10-41-40.jpg?itok=69KdBzUm

If you need a good laugh, this video is perfect for you, but I think that it also contains a much deeper message.

You see, the truth is that our society is just like that little baby.  We have become deeply, deeply addicted to the digital world that we have created, and when we are forced to disconnect from that world most of us don’t respond very well.

Many of us are old enough to remember a time when people didn’t carry cellphones around with them everywhere.  Instead of constantly looking down at their phones, people actually tried to interact with one another, and the world was a much different place.

But today it seems like everyone has a cellphone, and one study found that the average American spends 86 hours a month on their phone…

According to comScore’s 2017 Cross Platform Future in Focusreport, the average American adult (18+) spends 2 hours, 51 minutes on their smartphone every day.

That’s about 86 hours a month! This might be a record, but growth has certainly flattened out over the last year-and-a-half.

And when you add in time spent on desktops and laptops, the numbers are even more staggering.

According to a study which was released earlier this year, the average American spends 5.9 hours a day staring at a digital device…

For this edition of The Why Axis, we’re focusing on breaking down one slide in particular: how much time the average internet user spends staring at a screen each day. According to KPCB’s report, which aggregates data from market research company eMarketer, the average adult user in 2017 spent 5.9 hours with digital media. This includes smartphones, desktops and laptops, and other connected devices including over-the-top (OTT) streaming devices and game consoles.

Those numbers are absolutely staggering.

And of course Americans are not alone.  Just consider the following numbers from the UK

People are on average online for 24 hours a week, twice as long as 10 years ago, with one in five of all adults spending as much as 40 hours a week on the web.

This is partly due to the rise in use by those aged 16 to 24, who average 34.3 hours a week on the internet. And for the first time women are spending more time online than men, fuelled by a rise in internet use by those aged 18 to 34 and the explosion in social media. They spend half an hour a week longer online than men of the same age.

Yes, in a lot of ways these devices make our lives easier and more convenient, but imagine how much better our world would be if we all spent at least some of that time visiting those in need, reading books or doing volunteer work in our communities.

Each year, we get more sucked into this incredible digital world that we have created, and without a doubt it is very impressive.

But in the process, the real world is rotting and decaying all around us.

According to Dr. David Greenfield, only about 10 to 12 percent of all cellphone users should officially be classified as “addicted”.  But he also says that up to 90 percent of us are guilty of “overusing, misusing or abusing” our devices…

The percentage of smartphone users who would actually be classified as addicted is estimated between 10-12%, according to the director of the Center for Internet and Technology Addiction, Dr. David Greenfield. However, in a survey of cell phone users, Dr. Greenfield found that around 90% of Americans fall in the category of overusing, misusing or abusing their devices. A recent study also found that 50% of teens feel that they are addicted to their devices.

If you think that you may be a cellphone addict, Dr. Greenfield even has a “smartphone compulsion test” that you can take.

Anything can become an addiction, and there is no shame in admitting that you have a problem.

One way to start breaking an addiction is to interrupt your regular patterns.  Some suggest doing a “digital detox” for a short period of time such as a weekend

If you are open to trying something more extreme, Daniel Sieberg, author of The Digital Diet: The 4-Step Plan to Break Your Tech Addiction and Regain Balance in Your Life, suggests doing a full “digital detox,” where you spend an entire weekend with ZERO access to technology. Notify your loved ones in advance, power your devices off and stick them in a box or a bottom drawer, and ask a trusted friend to temporarily change your passwords to reduce temptation. After the detox, Sieberg suggests reintroducing technology slowly. He swears that a digital diet does wonders for reconnecting with the real world and improving relationships.

But for our society as a whole, there is no easy solution.  Technology is going to continue to become a greater part of our lives, and those that create content for our phones have a financial incentive to make it as addictive as possible.

And I haven’t even talked about the health problems that are being created by all of this technology.  In the video at the beginning of this article, that baby is literally being bombarded by radiation from that phone.  And soon the new 5G network will start rolling out nationwide, and that means that hundreds of thousands of new 5G antennas will be going up nationwide.  This new network is an entirely different ballgame from the old 4G network, and many are concerned about what all of this powerful radiation will do to all of us.  For much more on this, please see my previous article entitled “Why Are So Many Concerned About The Potential Health Dangers Of The 5G Cellphone Network That Is Going Up Nationwide?”

Unfortunately, we aren’t really supposed to talk about these things.

In fact, there is a federal law that actually states that local communities cannot consider health concerns when making a decision whether or not to put up cell phone antennas.

Yes, all of this new technology has improved our lives in some ways, but in other ways it has made our lives much worse.

But if anyone ever tried to take all of this technology away from the American people, the temper tantrum that would be thrown would be far, far worse than anything that a baby could muster.

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15 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
November 27, 2018 8:26 am

Why would any parent give an infant a cell phone? It can’t possibly be any good for their development.

Turning off tech at this point would screw with the minds and finances of our digital overlords. (Says me as I type on a tablet.)

meg
meg
  Anonymous
November 27, 2018 8:41 am

Digital babysitters for enslaving and training. If I’d realized what video games really are, things might have been different. but, I LOVED Kingdom Hearts. Wasn’t that a great idea at the time?

Sure, we were just around the corner from a digitech expansion which should keep all the technology autists busy.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
November 27, 2018 9:02 am

All that baby needs is a good tear gassing.

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
  Iska Waran
November 27, 2018 1:34 pm

Good one. You left out (sarc) for the benefit of those who are university trained.
Robert (QSLV)

TC
TC
November 27, 2018 9:28 am

This isn’t an isolated case. We see it in the grocery store all the time, and even have relatives who use their phones and tablets to pacify their kids from babies on up. They don’t realize it’s nothing short of poison for those little kids’ minds.

Platoplubius
Platoplubius
  TC
November 27, 2018 12:39 pm

But,at least the kids aren’t nagging them, Right? (Sarc)

Dutchman
Dutchman
November 27, 2018 9:42 am

I’ve read if you use a smart phone, the cost of ownership, over a lifetime is $75,000!

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
  Dutchman
November 27, 2018 1:31 pm

Exactly. I have a dumb phone and will buy another house for cash next year.

Robert (QSLV)

lgr
lgr
November 27, 2018 9:56 am

random thoughts…
-video was not funny, Mom…was actually rather disturbing. Electronic crack? To your baby?

-I remember and was actively involved in the industry when cellular phone technology launched in the early 80’s.
Back then, the only people who could afford to use them for greater productivity were high volume sales people, doctors, and construction workers. A fixed mobile phone mounted inside a car were around $2000.00
Then, the electronic trends unfolded…lower prices…smaller sizes…transportability…mass market penetration…web surfing…QWERTY keyboard integration…touch pad tech…built in cameras…and on, and on, and on we march.

-soon, young adults, then teens, then pre-teens, and now toddlers? The end effect: A new generation of social misfits, barely able to speak face to face, with a healthy sense of logic, reasoning ability, and wisdom from experiences and individual path education. (not the HS, or college indoctrination kind)
Hell, even in my circles of family and friends over the Thanksgiving holiday…when there was a lull in conversation, or the football game was boring / had a commercial break,…out came the smartphones.
And when everybody else is doing it, I’ve fallen prey to it, too. (full disclosure / hypocrisy potential)

-maybe a few of the old timers who still don’t own a cell phone are on to something wise, albeit old school.

-still, in a world where landlines and payphones are going the way of the dinosaur, some connection to our loved ones scattered across our plains is still a means to avoid solitary confinement or a hermit-like existence.

-Years ago, they used to offer the Jitterbug. A flip phone with large keys. Simple cell phone. No extra gadgets. I wonder if anybody still is producing such a basic, no frills tool for the old school advocates, in our modern society?
Old School. . . . . … well, because Old’s Cool.

-weekend detox is good; i actually enjoy it, when i can unplug. This usually involves a trip to the woods, into an area not covered very well for my carrier. Others in the group use a carrier that does have coverage, and they use their mobile when in that environment. Convenience? or Addiction?

-funny how television, from it’s earliest days, had the same effect of mesmerizing, zombi-fication of viewers.
I find current TV offerings so unfulfilling of value content sought, for either educational enlightenment, or even just for mild entertainment / humor.
Yet even with educational content, I find myself questioning the content…is it authentic truth, or is it a narrative?
PBS sure does ramp up stories about global warming, the holocaust, and the anti-Trump broadcasts.
I bail out, when I recognize it for what it is. Propaganda. An agenda. A narrative. By mega rich, powerful people.

-after being around TBP, I’ve had eyes opened to many things.

-things are not always as they appear.

-One of my fave phrases I jotted down, to try and keep sane and make sense of it all was a culmination of lessons learned and wise tidbits gathered over the years. To wit: Avoid all manner of media input to the mind for awhile.

“There’s peace and solace to be found out in nature, or just sitting quietly alone, in contemplation.”

Meditation comes to mind, but I haven’t dabbled in that.

Maybe I should.

…and so it goes.

Platoplubius
Platoplubius
  lgr
November 27, 2018 12:50 pm

Lgr said,

-video was not funny, Mom…was actually rather disturbing. Electronic crack? To your baby?

I felt the same way after hearing the mom laugh in the video. Sooo cute! NOT!

T.v. and video games use the black screens most of us have stared into from time to time in our lives…

Reminds me of the dark humor in the movie Cable Guy

SmallerGovNow
SmallerGovNow
November 27, 2018 10:05 am

Just exactly like the Libtards when they realized hiLIARy lost the election. Reminds me of Rob Reiner…. Chip

Not Sure
Not Sure
November 27, 2018 3:42 pm

Good timing, I am going through withdrawal by losing Facebook a few months ago and twitter yesterday (except for president Trumps tweets).

From what I have witnessed, the list of the ones I have been following has been shrinking steadily, so why not cut the cord before it gets cut for me anyway?

TampaRed
TampaRed
November 27, 2018 5:03 pm

i believe that we’re making much ado about nothing–
this could have been any toy,especially since the days of toys that have any type of stimulation,as opposed to something such as a doll or a car–

Rdawg
Rdawg
  TampaRed
November 27, 2018 7:52 pm

Exactly. Much ado about nothing.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Rdawg
November 27, 2018 10:51 pm

dawg,
do you ever scratch your head & wonder what people are thinking when they hit the like/dislike button?
you simply agreed w/me & i got 2 upvotes,you got a downer–