Since Wedd’s plan was announced, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon endorsed it, Labour’s Chris Hipkins came out “broadly supportive”, NZ First’s Winston Peters gave a thumbs up and Act’s David Seymour stood sceptical of its enforcement practicalities.
Some have claimed it proposes to throw babies out with the bathwater.
Yet surprisingly, given its audacity, there’s been scarce resistance to the bill.
This suggests a rising revulsion at our children’s addiction to the anaesthetic of a screen.
Wedd claimed the move would mirror a 2024 approach in Australia. Other jurisdictions were also taking action, she said. “Texas recently passed legislation which bans under-18s from social media use, and the UK, the EU and Canada all have similar work in train.”
A “biscuit tin” member’s bill is effectively a ceremonial lottery with unfavourable odds of being drawn.
But similarly to last year’s cellphone ban in schools, the prospect has buoyed many parents who take comfort in the idea that both school and state are backing a struggle they’re fighting to police at home.
Those with teenagers know there’s a heavy enforcement cost with imposing social-media limits on our kids; it’s the stuff of endless argument.
The scourge that insidiously entered homes has left many feeling they’ve let their guard (and kids) down.
Social media undoubtedly has virtues - but it comes with a hefty trade-off.
Because while the bill is primarily about curbing “bullying, inappropriate content and social media addiction”, it’s more than that.
Social media isn’t just perilous in its own right, its wider downfall is that it precludes other things that under-16s should be doing.
That is, actual relationships and human interfacing.
Sadly, most, if left to their own devices, prefer the escape of blue light. This search for otherness is, of course, a very human pursuit, and certainly not confined to adolescents.
But such arid disengagement was once the opposite of what we deemed healthy in under-16s.
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