Acharya Prashant explains that Swami Vivekananda would be resisted by the youth today just as he was in his own time, despite being labeled a youth icon. He asserts that the work of a spiritual revolutionary and a knower of Vedanta is to challenge the conditioning of the day, which is an act of worshipping the truth. While specific beliefs have changed over time, the human tendency to live in beliefs and superstitions remains the same. Acharya Prashant notes that while people might celebrate a figure like Swami Vivekananda after they are gone, they find it difficult to listen to the unpleasant nature of the truth while they are alive. He highlights that modern superstitions, such as the belief that the purpose of life is happiness through constant consumption, are just as entrenched as the superstitions of the past. He concludes that Swami Vivekananda would have to fight these contemporary superstitions until his last breath and would likely face the same resistance and lack of genuine followers as he did before.