I didn’t watch the Senate hearing on social media, yesterday. I did hear some of the “gotcha” moments captured and broadcast on radio. I saw a brief interview with one of the committee members in which the senator was shamelessly political—go figure—but was also undeniably right. Social media, platforms like Tik-Tok and Facebook have created an incredible and frightening opportunity for harm to young people.
This morning I read the transcript of Al Mohler’s daily podcast,
“The Briefing.” You can listen to or read it here. (A
brief disclaimer: Yes, Mohler does sometimes pull the fire alarm lever when he
ought to pick up his phone and talk to someone, but I do find him generally
helpful as one who watches what’s going on and helps put cultural matters in
the grid of a Biblical worldview.) A couple of significant quotations and
thoughts from his article:
·
The “Surgeon General of the United States, Vivek
Murthy, reported just a matter of months ago . . . there is a massive mental
health crisis among American young people.” I wrote about that here.
This crisis is not solely the fault of social media, but social media is
clearly involved.
·
“. . . social media has created a vulnerability,
a danger, for young people that frankly has never existed before in human
history.”
·
Those of us of a certain age need to realize
that others much younger than we have never known a world without social media.
They take it for granted.
·
“ . . . there is moral responsibility in every
technology . . .. There's a moral dimension to the development of the wheel. [It]
can be used to convey you somewhere . . . it can also be used to crush someone
. . .. [E]ven as ancient technology comes with its own moral dimensions, modern
technology comes with multiplied moral dimensions, because of the
sophistication of the technology, and the immediacy, and the reach.”
So, who owns this moral responsibility?
Clearly in the case of children and teenagers, as in every
other realm, parents are responsible. And, at
the risk of eye-rolls and
objections I’ll just bluntly say that many parents are grievously avoiding that
responsibility. Giving a child unsupervised access to the internet is a lot
like letting them play soccer in a mine field.
Yet, even with allowance for the preening and pontificating
that is part and parcel of a televised Senate hearing, I think the Senators are
right. Those who created and profit from the technology, bear a responsibility
as well. In this regard, Mohler observes a “fishy” phenomenon. Folks who
usually aren’t all that interested in parental rights, suddenly acting like
advocates for parents being responsible to fix the problem. Yes, parents bear
the major responsibility for their children, but others in the community—and in
this case the community is global—bear responsibility as well.
So what?
I’m not a Luddite. The fact that I’m using the internet to
publish my thoughts is evidence of that. But, controls on the power of the web
are appropriate. As someone who is well into his adult years, I personally need
to reckon with the fact that such controls may sometimes be cumbersome. I think
I ought to be willing to pay that price in order to protect the vulnerable.
I appeal to parents. Resist the relentless pressure our
culture puts on you, not to mention the whining of your child. Decide when your
child should have a cellphone not on the basis of what “everybody else” is
doing, but on the basis of what you conclude is best for your child. Do some
listening and research before you come to that conclusion. Think about Proverbs
29:15 on this one. Proper discipline gives wisdom, but a child left to himself
brings his parent to shame. ( That’s the HM application paraphrase.
Look it up in your Bible.)
A general awareness is appropriate. Somewhere between tinfoil-hat
paranoia and clueless indifference there is a sweet-spot. We’ll disagree on
exactly where on the spectrum that sweet-spot is, but isn’t that what responsible
people of faith always do? (See Romans 14) Let’s help each other out. There is
an invasion all around us. Sometimes the invader is pernicious. Let’s not act
otherwise. Yesterday’s Senate gallery was
filled with parents of abused, and in some cases hounded-to-death children. That
is strong encouragement for us to be convinced that we need to link arms on
this matter. We should expect our leaders to do something. We need to be
willing to endure some cost—be it listening to the teenage whining or jumping
through the hoops of proving that I’m not something I haven’t been for more
than fifty years, a teenager.
We can do better. We have to.
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