Matt N
TS Member
- Favourite Ride
- Shambhala (PortAventura Park)
Hi guys. In recent days, the murderers of Brianna Ghey, a 16-year-old girl from Cheshire, were given life prison sentences. With Ghey’s murder having been brought back into the limelight in recent days, a debate has ensued regarding smartphone and social media use in children.
As it has emerged that the perpetrators had been viewing online content relating to torture and murder, Ghey’s mother is now calling for social media apps to be banned for under-16s, and for child-specific smartphones to be made available for those under 16 that do not have social media apps on them: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...t-jenkinson-murder-social-media-b2490172.html
Tory MP Miriam Cates has also called for a ban on social media and smartphones for children under 16 following a case of a 14-year-old girl committing suicide due to Snapchat cyberbullying, and in a recent survey, it was found that as many as 44% of parents would support a ban for under-16s: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/should-under-16s-banned-using-31963254
Some campaigners, such as “Britain’s strictest headteacher” Katherine Birbalsingh, are even calling for a ban on phones and tablets for under-16s, along with “tobacco-style health warnings” on their packaging, as they believe that technology and social media “break children’s brains”: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11956063/Ban-phones-16s-campaigners-demand.html
An ethical debate has certainly opened up regarding social media and smartphone use in children, with many smartphone sceptics now arguing that social media and smartphones damage children’s attention spans and mental health and expose them to adult content too early. These campaigners feel that they are an active threat to public health in the same manner as smoking. With this in mind, I’d be interested to know; do you feel that children under 16 should be banned from using social media and/or smartphones?
Personally, I’m possibly leaning towards no, but with a few caveats.
On one hand, I can definitely see the threat that smartphones and social media could potentially pose to children and adolescents.
At present, it is all too easy for children to access adult or dangerous content on social media. Whether it’s pornography, murder content, pro-eating disorder content or some other form of dangerous content, it can be just a few clicks away on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and the like with very little to stop that sort of content from being proliferated. Once a child has clicked on one of these dangerous posts, the algorithms fuelling social media apps mean that it is all too easy to be sucked into an ever-deepening online rabbit hole filled with this sort of content, and that can prove very dangerous, possibly even fatal in some cases.
Social media also means that for children being bullied, there is no escape from it. At least in the days prior to the advent of smartphones and social media, children who were being bullied could get an escape from the bullying when they went home at the end of the school day. But now cyberbullying has taken the bullying online, there is very little way for children getting bullied to escape it.
I absolutely acknowledge that smartphones and social media present these dangers to children, and I acknowledge that the status quo is not sufficient to protect children from this sort of content. There needs to be something more.
On the other hand, though, I don’t think that smartphones and social media are entirely bad for children and adolescents, and I do think that a full ban is perhaps disproportionate. A lot of socialising happens online these days, and social media allows children to socialise with their friends more easily and whenever they would like to. I also believe that smartphones and social media can be very valuable for giving a voice to the voiceless and allowing children and adolescents who might feel like they don’t fit in, or children and adolescents who belong to minority groups (such as neurodiverse or LGBT+ children), to find online communities that make them feel like they belong and form invaluable connections with like-minded people to make them feel less isolated. Smartphones and social media also allow parents to keep in easier contact with their older children as they start to become more independent.
Furthermore, I do think that social media is too commonly blamed for a lot of things; it’s a scapegoat that a lot of people seem to blame modern society’s ills on. As much as it does arguably proliferate certain things, and I fully accept that it has flaws, I believe that many of the ills it is blamed for would exist to some degree even without it. For example, I think the murderers of Brianna Ghey would probably have found a way to commit the murder and been introduced to those concepts even without social media; where there’s a will, there’s a way. There were child murderers in the days before social media.
So personally, I don’t believe that a complete ban on smartphones and/or social media for under-16s is necessarily the way forward. However, I do believe that there should be stronger moderation on social media than there is at present to protect children from dangerous and adult content; I don’t believe that the status quo is working in this regard.
But what are your thoughts on this topic? Do you agree with me? Or do you feel that under-16s should be banned from social media and/or smartphones?
As it has emerged that the perpetrators had been viewing online content relating to torture and murder, Ghey’s mother is now calling for social media apps to be banned for under-16s, and for child-specific smartphones to be made available for those under 16 that do not have social media apps on them: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...t-jenkinson-murder-social-media-b2490172.html
Tory MP Miriam Cates has also called for a ban on social media and smartphones for children under 16 following a case of a 14-year-old girl committing suicide due to Snapchat cyberbullying, and in a recent survey, it was found that as many as 44% of parents would support a ban for under-16s: https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/should-under-16s-banned-using-31963254
Some campaigners, such as “Britain’s strictest headteacher” Katherine Birbalsingh, are even calling for a ban on phones and tablets for under-16s, along with “tobacco-style health warnings” on their packaging, as they believe that technology and social media “break children’s brains”: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11956063/Ban-phones-16s-campaigners-demand.html
An ethical debate has certainly opened up regarding social media and smartphone use in children, with many smartphone sceptics now arguing that social media and smartphones damage children’s attention spans and mental health and expose them to adult content too early. These campaigners feel that they are an active threat to public health in the same manner as smoking. With this in mind, I’d be interested to know; do you feel that children under 16 should be banned from using social media and/or smartphones?
Personally, I’m possibly leaning towards no, but with a few caveats.
On one hand, I can definitely see the threat that smartphones and social media could potentially pose to children and adolescents.
At present, it is all too easy for children to access adult or dangerous content on social media. Whether it’s pornography, murder content, pro-eating disorder content or some other form of dangerous content, it can be just a few clicks away on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and the like with very little to stop that sort of content from being proliferated. Once a child has clicked on one of these dangerous posts, the algorithms fuelling social media apps mean that it is all too easy to be sucked into an ever-deepening online rabbit hole filled with this sort of content, and that can prove very dangerous, possibly even fatal in some cases.
Social media also means that for children being bullied, there is no escape from it. At least in the days prior to the advent of smartphones and social media, children who were being bullied could get an escape from the bullying when they went home at the end of the school day. But now cyberbullying has taken the bullying online, there is very little way for children getting bullied to escape it.
I absolutely acknowledge that smartphones and social media present these dangers to children, and I acknowledge that the status quo is not sufficient to protect children from this sort of content. There needs to be something more.
On the other hand, though, I don’t think that smartphones and social media are entirely bad for children and adolescents, and I do think that a full ban is perhaps disproportionate. A lot of socialising happens online these days, and social media allows children to socialise with their friends more easily and whenever they would like to. I also believe that smartphones and social media can be very valuable for giving a voice to the voiceless and allowing children and adolescents who might feel like they don’t fit in, or children and adolescents who belong to minority groups (such as neurodiverse or LGBT+ children), to find online communities that make them feel like they belong and form invaluable connections with like-minded people to make them feel less isolated. Smartphones and social media also allow parents to keep in easier contact with their older children as they start to become more independent.
Furthermore, I do think that social media is too commonly blamed for a lot of things; it’s a scapegoat that a lot of people seem to blame modern society’s ills on. As much as it does arguably proliferate certain things, and I fully accept that it has flaws, I believe that many of the ills it is blamed for would exist to some degree even without it. For example, I think the murderers of Brianna Ghey would probably have found a way to commit the murder and been introduced to those concepts even without social media; where there’s a will, there’s a way. There were child murderers in the days before social media.
So personally, I don’t believe that a complete ban on smartphones and/or social media for under-16s is necessarily the way forward. However, I do believe that there should be stronger moderation on social media than there is at present to protect children from dangerous and adult content; I don’t believe that the status quo is working in this regard.
But what are your thoughts on this topic? Do you agree with me? Or do you feel that under-16s should be banned from social media and/or smartphones?
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