The ban is an incredibly bold, life-affirming move. You can only imagine how hard tech companies fought against it. (Reddit has already filed a legal challenge to the new law.)
"I've always referred to this as the first domino, which is why they pushed back," said
Indeed.
I can tell you from personal experience that all of these moves are long overdue.
Next month, my 15-year-old niece and I will celebrate the seventh anniversary of her arrival on my doorstep. I never expected to raise another child, especially not as a single mother during this stage of my life. We've managed — pretty spectacularly at times — to make a go of it.
But the biggest source of tension for us, bar none, has been her iPhone. We'd signed the pledge to "Wait Until 8th" for a smartphone. In 6th grade, while a lot of her friends had the latest smartphones, she used a Gabb, which looked like an iPhone but lacked Internet connectivity. She started eighth grade, got a smartphone, and that's when many of our troubles began.
There was the incessant scrolling. The real-time texting that allows no time for thoughtful response. The rage-baiting from "friends." The hysteria around breaking a
Her drop in situational awareness was equally alarming.
How many times have I asked her not to stare down at her phone when she is walking to and from the bus or crossing the street? How many times have I insisted she put the phone down when we are at the dinner table? That she leave it in her backpack during school hours? How many times have I just given up on hoping that the dopamine hit she gets from just opening her smartphone will ever be replaced by the joy of reading a book?
In September, after
This generation of children is unwittingly being used as lab rats for the effects of technology on the brain. We know from numerous studies that heavy social media use can lead to depression, anxiety, loneliness and suicidal ideation, and that the platforms depend on addicting kids with content tailored to their interests to keep them online. (Just as they do with adults.)
Please don't accuse me of succumbing to the same moral panic that has accompanied every technological innovation in history. (Violent video games cause mass shootings, rock music leads to oversexualization, etc.).
I am telling you, as someone who has stepchildren in their 50s, a daughter in her 30s and now a teenager at home, smartphones and social media have fundamentally altered childhood.
One day, we will look back at this period of unbridled social media use, free-for-all texting and never-ending screen time and wonder how we could have done this to our kids.
Despite protestations to the contrary, social media companies — Meta/
Even the most cursory search turns up many thousands of lawsuits filed against social media companies by parents alleging the platforms have harmed their children.
Last month, a
Restricting teens is going to be a super messy process. I understand why kids think the new rules "suck." Critics have raised concerns about free speech and about how these rules could drive teens to darker corners of the Internet.
And yes, of course, while parents bear some of the responsibility for out-of-control social media use of their kids, they can only do so much.
When
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Robin Abcarian is a columnist at the Los Angeles Times.
Previously:
• A new generation has its own Dr. Spock --- and a very different take on parenting
• Poisoned, imprisoned and essentially killed by Putin, Alexei Navalny somehow never lost hope
• School kids, get off your damn phones! Trust me, you will thank us later
• After years of running, I quit and took up Pilates. Here's how that turned out
• The boomer versus millennial grudge match is silly
• I wanted to hate what UC Berkeley parents are doing in the name of safety, but I can't
• Fani Willis' inexplicably bad judgment has endangered her case and the nation
• Elon Musk rides to the rescue of Gina Carano, fired by Disney for 'abhorrent' posts
• Should fat people get an extra airline seat for free? This company thinks they should
• I thought Sandra Day O'Connor was too conservative. Now her moderation would be a godsend
• What kind of terrible parent pays their child to get an A? (Well, me.)
• Do video cameras make you feel safe, or just show you how dangerous your neighborhood is?
• Biden's balancing act is the only choice: Support Israel against Hamas and help Palestinians in harm's way
• Advice for the suicidal from a philosopher who tried to kill himself 10 times
• Will Lauren Boebert and other female politicians pay the price for behaving badly?
• Shed no tears for Hunter Biden, who exploited the family name but also broke the law
• The problematic use of 'problematic' to shut down people with whom we disagree
• Elon Musk's Twitter chaos came calling for me
• Relax, candy lovers. No one is trying to ban Skittles. Well, not exactly
• Why was the Murdaugh murder trial captivating for so many?
• Dry January hasn't been so bad after all
• I asked ChatGPT to write me a symphony, a letter to an ex and more
• IN AMERICA: Firing an art history professor for showing students an image of Islam's founder is out of line
• Nepo babies beware. You didn't hit a triple if you were born on third base
• Poor thing, you didn't want to be gifted that vacuum?
• The end of 'harmless' recreational drug experimentation
• The 'Catfish' Killings: My teen is easy prey. Is yours?
• And you thought the movie 'L.A. Confidential' was fiction
• Tell your kids that Billie Eilish says porn destroyed her brain
• Why a lifelong Dem and education reformer is supporting Larry Elder for governor

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