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SOCIAL MEDIA BLOCKS FOR MINORS IN THE U.S.: A NATIONAL DEBATE ON KIDS AND TECH
Techlife News
|Techlife News #697
Across the United States, lawmakers and families alike are wrestling with a critical question: should minors be barred from social media to protect their well-being?
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 This week, bipartisan momentum surged in Congress with the introduction of the Kids Off Social Media Act, spearheaded by Senators Brian Schatz and Ted Cruz, aiming to prohibit children under 13 from platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and X, while curbing algorithmic feeds for those under 17. The Hill reported this legislative push on December 18, 2024, spotlighting a growing trend mirrored by state actions—Florida’s ban on under-14s took effect January 1, while Texas’ SCOPE Act faced a partial federal block in February, according to CBS News. These developments highlight escalating concerns over the nexus of personal technology and youth mental health, placing parents squarely at the center of a national conversation.
The issue’s urgency reflects a digital landscape that has transformed dramatically, embedding social media into the lives of nearly every teenager—95 percent of 13- to 17-year-olds use these platforms, a third almost constantly, the U.S. Surgeon General revealed in 2023. As evidence mounts linking excessive screen time to mental health challenges, advocates for restrictions clash with defenders of online access, each presenting robust arguments. For every parent navigating this terrain, the stakes go beyond policy debates—they distill to finding the best approach to safeguard their children’s mental health in these sensitive times of pervasive technology. What fuels this divide, and how do the arguments measure up? Here’s a comprehensive examination of both sides, with parental priorities taking center stage.
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