NIH Ordered Suicide Prevention Researcher to Defund Studies Mentioning Race
"As of January 2025, he was told he needs to go back into every single piece of research that has been funded over the last few years, and anything that was doing DEI needs to be eliminated. Their funding needs to be eliminated right now. Were they even like capturing racial data, which is mandatory? Yes, exactly right."
About this episode
On this episode of the Doctor Mike podcast, host Dr. Mike Varshavski was joined by clinical psychologist Dr. Ali Mattu for a deep exploration of the mental health crisis gripping Generation Z and the systemic forces behind it. Mattu, a Bay Area psychologist and YouTuber who has defended Gen Z from widespread criticism, argued that the generation is not inherently anxious but is appropriately responding to an unstable world they inherited. The conversation opened with a critique of diagnostic over-reliance and moved into the collapse of third spaces, the loneliness economy, and the performative nature of modern social life. Mattu revealed that one in four young men has no close friends and that Gen Z spends 70% less time with peers in person than early 2000s cohorts. He accused Meta of knowingly targeting vulnerable teenage girls despite internal research showing Instagram caused eating disorders, comparing the company's strategy to Big Tobacco. Mattu also disclosed that a senior NIH researcher was forced to defund suicide prevention studies mentioning race or DEI under the Trump administration, prompting a brain drain from federal agencies. The episode covered friction as a psychological necessity, the dangers of frictionless tech design, and emerging research showing a two-week smartphone detox reverses anxiety and cognitive decline. Mattu and Dr. Mike discussed masculinity, the absence of positive male role models, the infantilization of Gen Z, and the need for social rituals over performative connection. The episode closed with practical advice on creating low-friction social routines and Mattu's vision for a startup focused on in-person human connection.
Key takeaways
- Mattu revealed one in four young men self-report having zero close friends in real life, highlighting a male loneliness epidemic.
- Gen Z spends 70% less time casually hanging out with peers compared to the early 2000s, down from 30 to 10 hours per month.
- Mattu accused Meta of knowingly targeting teenage girls for growth despite internal data showing Instagram caused eating disorders and body dysmorphia.
- A senior NIH suicide prevention researcher was ordered to defund studies collecting racial data or mentioning DEI, prompting his resignation in early 2025.
- New research shows two weeks with a dumb phone—calls and texts only—completely reverses anxiety, depression, and cognitive decline from heavy smartphone use.
- Mattu argued Gen Z is not the anxious generation but the ignored generation, appropriately anxious about climate, political instability, and economic collapse.
- Social media algorithms capture loneliness signals and deliver false connection, which is especially harmful to chronically isolated or comparison-prone users.