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We are the safest, most comfortable generation in history - and somehow the weakest. Anxiety, panic attacks, outrage, identity confusion, endless labels, and emotional collapse over the smallest problems have become normal. Strength is rare. Fragility is expected. And no one seems to be asking how we ended up here. The Weak Generation is a blunt and unapologetic look at how modern life quietly produced a society that breaks instead of adapts. From overprotective childhoods and digital dependence to constant self-diagnosis and the rise of victimhood culture, Heinrich Wilson exposes why so many…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
We are the safest, most comfortable generation in history - and somehow the weakest. Anxiety, panic attacks, outrage, identity confusion, endless labels, and emotional collapse over the smallest problems have become normal. Strength is rare. Fragility is expected. And no one seems to be asking how we ended up here. The Weak Generation is a blunt and unapologetic look at how modern life quietly produced a society that breaks instead of adapts. From overprotective childhoods and digital dependence to constant self-diagnosis and the rise of victimhood culture, Heinrich Wilson exposes why so many people today struggle with problems previous generations barely noticed. This book doesn't offer fixes or lectures. It offers clarity - an honest reflection of what has changed, why resilience is dying, and how weakness became socially acceptable. Direct. Sharp. Unfiltered. A must-have read for anyone who feels that something in our modern behavior, mindset, and emotional resilience has gone seriously wrong. If you want to understand the shift you're seeing everywhere - at work, online, in relationships, in society - this book explains it without filters, excuses, or sugarcoating.
Autorenporträt
Heinrich Wilson is a self-styled cosmic provocateur, weaving satire, myth, and a dash of conspiracy into irreverent tales of humanity's greatest screw-ups. Equal parts historian-wannabe and stand-up philosopher, he's spent years digging through dusty legends, UFO files, and corporate press releases-then reassembling them into laugh-out-loud narratives that ask the questions everyone else was too polite to mention. When he's not rewriting the origin story of civilization, you'll find him arguing with algorithms, hunting down misplaced ancient artifacts (or tacos), and plotting the sequel that explores spirits, ghosts, and the ultimate ghost in the machine.