Last week’s school shooting that killed two children in Minneapolis was every parent’s nightmare.

And the killer’s writings point to a national crisis that’s hiding in plain sight.

America’s young people are being coddled into weakness and hopelessness — and sometimes, those feelings can curdle into rage.

I see it every week in my practice.

One recent college graduate told me her therapist had urged her to quit a promising new job because it was “triggering.”

Another patient had been advised to cut off her entire family in the name of “healthy boundaries,” even though her conflicts with them were ordinary and fixable.

A teenager said her school counselor excused her from class whenever she felt anxious, teaching her that escape is the answer to stress.

Adolescence, which should

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