The Ryan Vet Show

Disagreement Used to Cost You Something


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Disagreement used to cost you something. Today, it costs nothing — and that's the problem.

The Berlin Wall is remembered for what it built. But what it really destroyed was the middle: the shared space where people could disagree, stay in the room, and finish the conversation. Today, an invisible wall made of algorithms, labels, and distrust has done the same thing. In this episode, generational futurist Ryan Vet explores what happened to the middle ground in American culture, why the "Invisible Gorilla" experiment reveals how we're all missing what's right in front of us, and what leaders must do to reclaim the space where real dialogue lives.

From Gallup's data on the collapse of political moderates to the inattentional blindness research of Simons and Chabris, Ryan connects the dots between generational information arcs, algorithmic fracture, and the leadership mandate to stay in the room.

  • The middle didn't vanish overnight. Gallup found moderates fell from 43% of Americans in 1992 to 34% in 2024 — a slow erosion with compounding consequences.
  • The "Invisible Gorilla" problem: when you're preconditioned to count passes from your own side, you miss the gorilla walking through the room. Millions of people are doing this simultaneously.
  • Disagreement used to require physical presence and accountability. Algorithms eliminated that friction — and we lost something irreplaceable when it went.
  • Millennials got information at scale. Gen Z inherited a version of that promise already corrupted by filtered feeds, "fake news," and earned institutional distrust.
  • The middle isn't a spineless, uncommitted position. It's having convictions strong enough that you don't need to destroy someone else's to feel secure in your own.
  • For leaders: the goal isn't agreement. It's staying in the room long enough to finish the conversation.

Research and Sources Cited

  • Gallup (2025). U.S. Political Parties Historically Polarized Ideologically. https://news.gallup.com/poll/655190/u-s-political-parties-historically-polarized-ideologically.aspx
  • Pew Research Center (2014). Political Polarization in the American Public. https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2014/06/12/political-polarization-in-the-american-public/
  • DiMaggio, P., Evans, J., & Bryson, B. (1996). Have Americans' social attitudes become more polarized? American Journal of Sociology, 102(3), 690–755.
  • Simons, D. J., & Chabris, C. F. (1999). Gorillas in our midst: Sustained inattentional blindness for dynamic events. Perception, 28(9), 1059–1074.
  • Berlin.de / Chronik der Mauer. Victims of the Wall. https://www.berlin.de/mauer/en/history/victims-of-the-wall/

Connect with Ryan Vet

  • Newsletter (COLLIDE): https://www.RyanVet.com/collide
  • Website: https://www.ryanvet.com
  • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RyanVet
  • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanvet/
  • Read the full essay: https://collide.ryanvet.com/p/disagreement-used-to-cost-you-something

About Ryan Vet

Ryan Vet is a USA TODAY bestselling autho

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About Ryan Vet

Ryan Vet is a USA TODAY bestselling author, futurist, and international keynote speaker whose insights on generations, culture, and the future of work have been featured in Forbes, Financial Times, ABC, NBC, and CBS. His research helps leaders understand emerging generational patterns and anticipate societal shifts before they fully unfold.

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The Ryan Vet ShowBy Ryan Vet