Part 3. “The Information Front for Teenagers: How Loyalty Is Won Without Propaganda”

16.02.2026
Сергій Таран

War has long ceased to be only about front lines and contact zones. It has become a struggle for the environment in which children grow up: for the voices they hear every day, the communities they consider “their own,” and the decisions that seem “normal” to them. This is not a metaphor. For teenagers aged 12–16, “normality” is shaped not by lectures or slogans, but by feeds, chats, clips, memes, and what their peer group approves of.

It is important to agree on terms from the start: in this article, the “information front” does not mean propaganda or “persuasion at any cost.” It means something different: building a resilient pro-Ukrainian and pro-European environment where a child simultaneously receives three things:

  • meaning and values,
  • a development system,
  • a sense of belonging.

If this does not exist “at home,” teenagers connect to what works — even if it is strategically toxic. In real life, people also go where there is a club, a coach, a program, uniforms, and a calendar — not where things are simply “right.”

1) Why the “Feed” Is Stronger Than Adult Positions

Social platforms are not just entertainment. For teenagers, they are social infrastructure: where they learn “who is cool,” “who belongs,” “how to speak,” “what to be ashamed of,” and “what to dream about.” Their scale is such that adult arguments lose not because they are weak, but because they are less frequent.

According to the U.S. Surgeon General, up to 95% of youth aged 13–17 use social media, and more than a third are online almost constantly.
Pew Research also shows that YouTube remains the core platform for teens, while TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat are high-frequency daily environments.

The conclusion is uncomfortable: if a child spends hours a week in feeds, ethics and identity are formed through repetition — and repetition is provided by algorithms. Not school. Not the state. Not even family, if the family does not create its own regularity.

2) Algorithms Are the Physics of Attention

Many adults are mistaken in one thing: they believe platforms “intentionally” promote certain views. More often, what works is optimization for attention retention. Algorithms are not “for” or “against” you. They are “for” views, reactions, comments, and returns tomorrow.

The most effective content in teenage feeds is not what is “right,” but what:

  • triggers strong emotions,
  • quickly provides status markers,
  • creates seriality,
  • fuels social comparison.

The OECD emphasizes that media literacy must include understanding recommendation systems. Otherwise, people do not control the environment — the environment controls them.

Thus, the “information front” is not about exposing fakes once a month. It is about teaching life in an information physics where visibility equals frequency plus reaction.

3) Why Teenagers Are the Most Vulnerable — and Most Important — Audience

This is not moralizing; it is neuropsychology. Adolescence is a period when social evaluation and belonging carry extreme weight. Social media has made this evaluation public and continuous.

Research shows that teenagers are more sensitive to online social feedback than adults, and their mood reacts strongly to likes. They are also more likely to like content that already has many likes — social approval amplifies behavior.

Add wartime conditions, and distorted narratives easily move between online and offline through peers and adults.

The key is this: teenagers rarely “choose positions” like adults. They enter environments, and those environments make positions feel self-evident.

4) “Loyalty” Without Propaganda: What It Really Means

Teenage loyalty is not love for flags or correct slogans. It consists of four components:

  • Trust (no lies or manipulation),
  • Belonging (“my people are here”),
  • Competence (I am growing here),
  • Future (there is a next step).

Propaganda tries to buy loyalty through pressure and messaging. In 2026, this works poorly. Teenagers recognize falseness. What works is experience systems — habits of being inside a certain framework.

Real information competition is a competition of infrastructures, not slogans.

5) Five Mechanisms Through Which Foreign Ecosystems Attract Teenagers

To treat causes, not symptoms, we must see mechanisms:

  1. System: programs, training, tournaments, scouting.
  2. Status: “they are real, we are provincial.”
  3. Language and memes: “they speak like me.”
  4. Role: “there, you are someone.”
  5. Normalization: “everyone does it.”

Once something becomes group norm, adult morality sounds like noise.

6) How Loyalty Is Won the Mature Way: Environment Over Messaging

Avoiding propaganda requires different architecture — a four-level ladder:

Level A. Content: Short, Honest, Serial

Not lectures, but real formats: short videos, mistake analysis, reactions, algorithm breakdowns, scam warnings.

Level B. Community: A Safe Place to Belong

Real loyalty grows in chats and Discord. Rules, moderation, and anti-toxicity standards matter.

Level C. Stage: Regular Events as Rituals

Challenges, leagues, qualifications, awards, team weeks. Regularity beats randomness.

Level D. Trajectory: Education + Career + Mentorship

When teenagers see “school → team → tournaments → internships/university/work,” the environment becomes home.

This is loyalty without propaganda: system design instead of persuasion.

7) The Role of Parents and Adults: Framework, Not Control

Two extremes fail: total control or total indifference.

The American Psychological Association recommends developing healthy practices: balanced use, sleep and activity protection, and awareness of risks.

Adults must:

  • Explain mechanisms,
  • Set boundaries,
  • Provide alternatives.

At home, attitudes toward the aggressor country also matter. “It doesn’t matter” quickly becomes a norm — and algorithms reinforce it.

8) The “Influencer Code”

Teen loyalty often runs through parasocial authority figures. If they chase hype and ignore facts, audiences absorb chaos.

UNICEF and OECD stress media literacy and algorithm awareness.

A practical solution: standards for influencers and community leaders:

  • fact-checking,
  • ad transparency,
  • no harassment of minors,
  • responsibility for audience navigation.

This is professionalism, not censorship.

9) Metrics: How to Know the System Works

Views are noise. Real indicators are:

  • Retention
  • Conversion
  • Safety
  • Trajectory
  • Parent adoption

A strong system does not create perfect children. It creates resilient ones.

10) The Ethical Line: Competing for Attention Without Becoming Propaganda

Principles:

  • Transparency
  • Voluntariness
  • Respect
  • Safety
  • Education

Trust is the main currency. It is accumulated through repeated honesty.

Conclusion: Either We Design Our Own Infosphere, or Others Do It for Us

Teenagers do not choose countries like adults. They choose environments with rhythm, status, community, progress, and future.

In 2026, victory goes not to those who shout louder, but to those who build better systems.

We can argue endlessly — or we can do the harder work: build networks of content, clubs, tournaments, mentoring, and media literacy where Ukrainian talent grows in a strong, professional, and ethical environment.

Because in the information age, morality without infrastructure is just noise. And noise does not grow the future.

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