| ▲ | bluegatty 5 hours ago | |||||||||||||
No, obviously not, and this is a completely glib argument. Who is suggesting people 'show their papers' to go into a public square? Literally nobody. It really demonstrates how bad the analogy is - so much so that it's not even analogy. The 'social controls' on the 'public square' are limited by a few laws (aka directed violence) but apart from that you can say as you like, kids can as well - it's where parents can be parents. And - don't have problem with kids in the public square. We have a very real problem with kids on social media, verifiable, scientific. Kids are depressed, distracted, they bully each other, they're creeped on, and they're not yet in the business having serious discussions about 'Mein Kampf' - they're kids. Everything in kids lives is introduced in an 'age appropriate' fashion - literally everything. Given the toxicity of social media, it's a 'primary concern' for one of those gated things. This is not even an argument - the only argument is 'the slippery slope'. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | dv_dt 5 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
The science for age bans on social media is weak at best. There were pretty much terrible studies done during Covid and did not attribute all sorts of uncertainty going on at the same time. If the point were to improve on the mental health of kids there are countless underfunded public programs. Especially in the US, social support programs like food, healthcare basic and mental, actual physical public spaces for kids, arts in curriculum, etc. | ||||||||||||||
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