Social Media Bans for Youth: A Rush Built on Shaky Science, Experts Warn
Lawmakers Race to Ban Social Media for Youth Despite Flawed Evidence
Statehouses across the U.S. are accelerating efforts to restrict young people's access to social media, framing it as a public health emergency. But digital rights advocates and independent researchers say the science behind these proposals is far from settled.

“The evidence used to justify these sweeping bans is shockingly weak,” said David Greene, senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). “We're seeing correlation being sold as causation, while real societal factors are ignored.”
Bills in California, Massachusetts, and Minnesota rely on a narrative that smartphones are “rewiring” adolescent brains. However, large-scale meta-analyses covering dozens of countries show no consistent link between social media use and declining well-being.
Background
The legislative push follows the media-friendly theory popularized by social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, which claims social media is a primary driver of teen anxiety and depression. But developmental psychologists from institutions like the University of California, Irvine, and Brown University have repeatedly challenged this view.
“These studies often fail to account for pandemic isolation, school gun violence, or climate anxiety,” said Dr. Elena Ramirez, a researcher at UC Irvine. “Focusing solely on social media ignores the broader context of youth mental health.”

The EFF notes that young people retain free speech and privacy rights, and that blanket bans infringe on those rights without scientific justification. “This is not settled science,” Greene added. “It's a rush to regulate based on pop psychology.”
What This Means
If passed, these laws could set a precedent for widespread internet censorship, undermining youth autonomy and constitutional protections. Critics argue that flawed evidence could lead to counterproductive policies that fail to address real mental health challenges.
“We need nuanced solutions, not bans based on shaky data,” said Dr. Ramirez. “Otherwise, we risk harming the very young people we claim to protect.”
The debate is intensifying as more states consider similar legislation. Experts urge lawmakers to demand rigorous, peer-reviewed evidence before enacting such sweeping measures. For more on the research gaps, see Background.
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