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Social Media

The Surgeon General Exaggerates the Threat Social Media Poses to Kids

A new report calls for policy makers to take action when none is required.

Robby Soave | 5.24.2023 10:00 AM

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Vivek Murthy | Chris Kleponis/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
Vivek Murthy (Chris Kleponis/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has joined the veritable cacophony of calls for increased restrictions on youth social media usage. In an advisory report released on Tuesday, Murthy declared that social media presents a "meaningful risk" of harming kids and teenagers.

"We have gaps in our full understanding of the mental health impacts posed by social media but at this point cannot conclude it is sufficiently safe for children and adolescents," writes Murthy.

In that sentence, Murthy neatly summarizes the position of various lawmakers, psychologists, tech whistleblowers, and now the Biden administration as well: Given a lack of overwhelming evidence that social media is completely safe, great caution is warranted.

It is not surprising to see a top government health official default to knee-jerk wariness; the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that federal health bureaucrats are willing to substantially disrupt the lives of millions of people on an operating theory that some public health intervention is needed. Indeed, top White House pandemic advisers urged government officials at the state and local level to shutter schools, forcing millions of kids to endure virtual learning and social isolation. Even past the point at which most sectors of public life had resumed normal operations—and vaccines had become available—the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) still fought to keep masks on schoolchildren's faces, thanks in part to dubious scientific findings.

The case for a massive government undertaking to mitigate the alleged ill effects of social media is similarly dubious. In his advisory report, as well as an accompanying op-ed in The Washington Post, Murthy echoes the concerns of various experts—most notably New York University professor Jonathan Haidt. The main problem is that some young people spend too much time on their phones, which in turn means they get too little sleep and exercise, while dealing with bullying and harassment.

If parents wish to heed these warnings, talk to their kids about excessive social media use, and encourage healthier behavioral patterns—like keeping their smartphones out of their rooms at night—that's all well and good. But Murthy is speaking on behalf of the U.S. government, and he should keep in mind that what occurs on social media is First Amendment-protected speech.

Young people are using Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, Google, and YouTube to express themselves creatively, connect with their friends, gather information about the world (for homework purposes, or maybe just because they're curious), and cultivate new skills. Murthy's concern that some kids are having a bad time online is not sufficient to override the general principle that parents get to make these calls, not the federal government.

Discerning readers who look past the headline will note that Murthy's report does in fact acknowledge benefits to social media use.

"A majority of adolescents report that social media helps them feel more accepted (58%), like they have people who can support them through tough times (67%), like they have a place to show their creative side (71%), and more connected to what's going on in their friends' lives (80%)," he writes.

Even the more sinister findings are far from conclusive.

"When asked about the impact of social media on their body image: 46% of adolescents aged 13-17 said social media makes them feel worse, 40% said it makes them feel neither better nor worse, and only 14% said it makes them feel better," writes Murthy.

This is supposed to scare readers, even though a clear majority of kids are saying that social media is making them feel the same or better about themselves.

As the report is repeatedly forced to concede, the negative side of social media overwhelmingly centers around a narrow cohort—teenage girls—some of whom are made to feel worse about themselves due to social competition and being bombarded with unrealistic body images. The harmed group is a subset of a subset, and the problem is not widespread across all social media, but mostly confined to one specific website: Instagram.

It would be reasonable to advise parents to explore whether their own kids—particularly teenage girls with body image issues—are spending too much time online. If social media is negatively impacting their sense of self, interfering with their sleep schedules, or causing them to disengage from school or peer groups, then families should intervene—the same way they would intervene if a kid had developed an addiction or fallen in with a bad crowd.

But the fact remains that millions of kids are using their phones to stay more connected; this was especially true during the COVID-19 pandemic when federal authorities shut down their in-person gatherings.

Murthy's report ultimately calls for policy makers "to strengthen safety standards and limit access." Suddenly depriving millions of young people of access to social media would not make them healthier; on the contrary, it would probably make them miserable.

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NEXT: ‘No One Will Become an American Until…the Border Is Secure’

Robby Soave is a senior editor at Reason.

Social MediaHealthPublic HealthChildren's RightsBiden AdministrationFree SpeechTechnologyCensorship
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  1. sarcasmic   2 years ago

    The surgeon general's job is to find excuses for legislation and regulation that Congress and the president want to implement.

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      2. Rob Misek   2 years ago

        The surgeon general’s job is to advise on public health.

        Our Wild West internet is loaded with crime, coercion and misinformation which aren’t protected by the first amendment.

        Yet the greatest advancement in human communication has far too many benefits to be withheld from our youth.

        The question is, how to address both without becoming even more vulnerable to coercion from those we elected to entrust with our security. Time and again all elected officials make us regret that trust.

        So the solution must be strategically executed to achieve the desired outcome.

        First, criminalize lying.
        Next, secure the internet with passport like security
        Lastly, empower everyone to digitally record all their personal memories.

        All corruption requires secrets and all secrets require lies. Execute the strategy so there is nowhere for the corrupt to hide.

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  2. Fist of Etiquette   2 years ago

    When asked about the impact of social media on their body image: 46% of adolescents aged 13-17 said social media makes them feel worse...

    I'm not sure wiping out shame has done people any good.

    1. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

      "When asked about the impact of social media on their body image: 46% of adolescents aged 13-17 said social media makes them feel worse…"

      So... don't use it?

      From my personal experience, and from observation, teens have a whole lot of problems with self image, acceptance, and lots of other things. They always have. It's one of the challenges of growing up.

      I don't social media causes any more problems than school-based clubs, flashy teen-oriented magazines, or even telephones of yesteryear. Trying to be "cool" and gain acceptance can be tough.

      1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        From my personal experience, and from observation, teens have a whole lot of problems with self image, acceptance, and lots of other things. They always have. It’s one of the challenges of growing up.

        Yes, so why we now prescribe surgery to fix this should perplex us just a tiny bit.

      2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

        I don’t social media causes any more problems than school-based clubs, flashy teen-oriented magazines, or even telephones of yesteryear. Trying to be “cool” and gain acceptance can be tough.

        For the record I think it does, I just don't think there's a legislative solution to it that won't either make the problem worse, make us less free AND be completely ineffective at the same time.

        1. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

          "I just don’t think there’s a legislative solution to it that won’t either make the problem worse, make us less free AND be completely ineffective at the same time."

          On that part we agree.

          1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

            For the record I think it does

            The idea that the proliferation of "social media" as a conceptual technology that has been made possible by the internet-- which itself has been life-changing-- has zero downsides is false on its face.

            The invention of the car created a whole new category of death: Hit by car. Prior to the invention of the car, no one ever got hit by a car, or died in a car accident. But the net positives to humanity are incalculable. Again, none of this is to suggest that we need Anthony Fauci meddling in the comments at Reason (which is a simplified form of social media itself).

            1. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

              ++

      3. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 years ago

        Today's computerized social media probably makes things worse.
        It's a lot easier to be passive aggressive or even directly aggressive on social media than it is face to face. There's a lot more of it and it gets around way quicker and to a far broader audience.

  3. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

    "Tuesday, Murthy declared that social media presents a "meaningful risk" of harming kids and teenagers..."

    No doubt way more harmful than Covid, yes? Next? Require masks on all smart phones, close the schools, stop the spread.

  4. Naime Bond   2 years ago

    Given a lack of overwhelming evidence that diving into a lake is completely safe, great caution is warranted, e.g. '...Syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer suffered a spinal-cord injury in a 1972 diving accident. The accident left him paralyzed and in a wheelchair...'
    What am I missing? What does children being 'miserable' have to do with adults exercising caution?

  5. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    Wear a mask.

  6. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   2 years ago

    Yes, social media is downright healthy compared to the anti-human hatred of religion on children.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      You can say that again. This trans ideology in schools is literally killing people.

    2. Marya Breiland   2 years ago

      Compared to posting dark web links to hardcore child pornography, practically anything is healthy, shreek.

      I only mention it because you got your original Sarah Palin's Buttplug account banned for posting dark web links to hardcore pornography. I'm sure it's probably very frustrating for you that the Christian kids who haven't been groomed in public school are much more resistant to your advances.

  7. Dillinger   2 years ago

    psychopath American surgeons are entirely more dangerous to teenagers than their phones - isn't General Murthy in charge of them?

  8. swillfredo pareto   2 years ago

    the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that federal health bureaucrats are willing to substantially disrupt the lives of millions of people on an operating theory that some public health intervention is needed.

    Would it be too troubling for federal health bureaucrats to explain how they conclude social media falls under the realm of “public health”?

    It would be reasonable to advise parents to explore whether their own kids…are spending too much time online.

    Not if it is an agent of the government doing it. The government has no constitutional role in this whatsoever.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      Would it be too troubling for federal health bureaucrats to explain how they conclude social media falls under the realm of “public health”?

      The same way "public health" is used to justify a lot of questionable stuff falls under "public health" such as guns or racism.

      Racism is a Public Health Crisis

      Across the country, local and state leaders are declaring racism a public health crisis or emergency. These declarations are an important first step to advancing racial equity and justice and must be followed by allocation of resources and strategic action.

  9. Bill Godshall   2 years ago

    Nobody should believe, respect or trust US SG Murthy unless and until he acknowledges (and publicly apologizes for) his many disastrous public health malpractices including:
    - protecting deadly cigarettes the past decade by lying about and campaigning to ban exponentially lower risk vapes that have helped ten million Americans quit smoking, slashed smoking rates by young adults, and virtually eliminated teen smoking, and
    - advocating and defending Lord Fauci's disastrous covid lockdowns, mask mandates, vaccine mandates, and condemning and censoring truthful claims about covid, covid lockdowns, mask mandates and vaccine mandates.

    1. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

      "Nobody should believe, respect or trust US SG Murthy unless and until he acknowledges (and publicly apologizes for) his many disastrous public health malpractices..."

      Hell, I don;t think he deserves trust from the public even then. As they say, "once burned..."

    2. Bill Godshall   2 years ago

      By lying about covid and defending Lord Fauci's disastrous lockdowns, mask and vaccine mandates, SG Murthy also helped increase the rates of homicide, suicide, fatal crashes, fentanyl overdoses, drug and abuse, depression and many other mental health problems (among Americans under 70).

      Congress should abolish the SG office, as it is now more likely to harm public health (than protect public health).

  10. Longtobefree   2 years ago

    Truth in headlines:
    "Vivek Murthy continues to lie to the American public".

  11. Truthteller1   2 years ago

    No robbie, he doesn't.

  12. TJJ2000   2 years ago

    ...because; those aren't YOUR kids.. Those are [OUR] kids!!! /s

  13. Truthteller1   2 years ago

    According to reason Donald Trump was a "threat to democracy", whatever that means, but social media damage to children is overblown. Got it.

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  15. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

    The Surgeon General should have absolutely nothing to say about children and online activities. There is nothing even remotely related to disease or public health on that topic. They don't even do their core job - epidemic infectious diseases - very well, witness their recent botching of the COVID-19 pandemic, and it goes rapidly downhill from there the further away from infectious diseases they try to stray. Sit down and shut up, Murthy!

    1. Rob Misek   2 years ago

      Lying is coercion.

      Coercing people harms them. Harm affects health.

  16. Think It Through   2 years ago

    "We have gaps in our full understanding of the mental health impacts posed by gender-affirming surgery and chemical treatments, but at this point cannot conclude it is sufficiently safe for children and adolescents."

    1. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

      "We have gaps in our understanding of mental health." There! I fixed it for they/them. Although it would be more accurate to say that Murthy has gaps in they/their understanding (full stop). Or possibly that they/them has gaps ... big gaps ... Huge gaps ... possibly the biggest gaps EVER ... big, beautiful gaps in understanding ...

  17. Eeyore   2 years ago

    Social media is high capacity assault speech. The founders of this country never meant for people to communicate with anything more than thier voices and the printed word. Limiting access to social media - a background check, waiting period, etc - are all just part of common sense speech control. No one needs to communicate with more than one person at a time.

    1. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 years ago

      Ha, I almost responded but then my /sarc detector went off. I do think that it can be and is often used as a sort of high capacity assault speech, but there is no need for government to step in and regulate it.

    2. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

      Brilliant! I wish I still had my Facebook account so I could post a meme of Murthy with that superimposed as a quotation! Thanks, Eeyore.

  18. Ruckweiler   2 years ago

    We're being so open minded about social media that the kids are being bombarded with nefarious messages which are leading us to our destruction.

  19. CAPnSHIP   2 years ago

    This Surgeon General has a terrible track record, but on this topic, I generally agree. I don't want federal laws, but real science-based research and analysis from such an office would be appreciated. However, the entities that should provide that information have shown us the ineptitudes of the current status of our federal bureaucracies.

    My daughter is 29 with 1 two year child and two more expected around Halloween. Her husband is a very special ed teacher. We have recently had discussions about the limits I had on her access to a cell phone, computers, the internet, and social media versus her peers. Now that she is a parent, she is starting to really appreciate the constraints implemented and is already planning her children's future on the logical theory that the commercial wants or the current culture understands.

    Biologically, a human is not a fully developed adult until about age 25 per the final development of the frontal lobe (Logic!). The approximately 12 years before that is controlled by the instinct to procreate. Before that is supposed to be the exploration of the innocent, but especially since the 90s this natural system has been really screwed up by overthinking parents and bureaucracies.

    Can we please get back to actual nature and real-world facts? Until our culture accepts this and in effect forces Social Media to support it, we are stuck with the anticultural war that was started in the 60s.

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