Acharya Prashant begins by contrasting the sacrifice of a 21-year-old revolutionary girl with a 21-year-old boy playing video games, lamenting that today's youth is unaware of freedom fighters like Azad, Bismil, Surya Sen, and Pritilata. He highlights the story of Khudiram Bose, a teenager who accepted martyrdom at 18, and questions the youth's knowledge about the ages of Bhagat Singh, Rajguru, and Sukhdev, who were all just 22-23 years old when they were hanged. The speaker emphasizes that a teenager or a young adult's life is shaped by the company they keep. He questions what kind of company today's youth is getting and whether they are being inspired by such historical figures. He lists several tremendous young revolutionaries from India's history, including Binoy Basu, Badal Gupta, and Dinesh Gupta, who carried out the 'Battle of the Verandah' in Kolkata's Writers' Building. He also mentions the sacrifices of young women like Shanti Ghosh, Suniti Choudhury, Kanaklata Barua, Kalpana Datta, Bina Das, and Pritilata Waddedar, who engaged in revolutionary activities at very young ages, some as young as 15. Expanding his examples beyond revolutionaries, Acharya Prashant mentions young achievers in science and spirituality. He cites Blaise Pascal, who created a mechanical calculator at 19, and John von Neumann, whose research papers were published in his teens. In the spiritual realm, he speaks of Swami Vivekananda, who had toured all of India before 30, and Adi Shankara, who left home at a very young age to spread the message of Advaita. He asserts that these great individuals became who they were because they were in the company of high ideals and other great people, just as one flame lights another. Acharya Prashant then addresses the contemporary issue of social media, stating that today's youth is not in the company of these great figures but is instead being influenced by toxic social media influencers. He describes these influencers as mediocre, irresponsible, and foolish individuals who gain popularity by promoting vulgarity and cheap means to success. This, he warns, is a grave danger to the nation's future, as it is being shaped by these lowly influencers. When it becomes so easy to achieve fame and money through vulgarity, the youth will not choose the difficult path of genuine achievement. The enemy, he concludes, is not external but internal, residing within mobile phones, disguised as a celebrity or a role model, poisoning the minds of the youth.