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Is Florida’s Upcoming Social Media Ban Unconstitutional?

On January 1, 2025, some kids will lose access to certain platforms.

by | Dec 29, 2024 | Articles, Media, Opinion

Starting January 1, 2025, kids under 14 living in Florida will no longer be allowed to use social media, according to House Bill 3 (HB 3), one of the most restrictive bans for minors on social media. Entering the New Year, platforms like Instagram and TikTok will be required to delete accounts owned by people under 14. In addition, 14- and 15-year-olds will be allowed to access social media but only with parental approval. Despite the widely known negative effects these platforms have on the mental health of America’s youth, not everybody is happy about the new law. Some people think it violates the First Amendment rights of children. Others believe it’s not the government’s responsibility to police what people of any age watch and read. Are the critics right? Is Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) overreaching?

The Ins and Outs of Florida’s Social Media Ban

While most Americans seem to agree that social media has negative consequences for the mental health of minors, many believe the ban is too extreme, especially without first trying other options. Still, “lawmakers have rushed headlong toward restricting protected expression as a first response rather than as a last resort,” suggests FIRE (the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression) in an article published on its website.

Posts on social media – images, videos, audio, and text – are considered expressive acts, and numerous people think these forms of expressions are – or should be – protected by the Constitution. Unless a post fits into one of the First Amendment’s exceptions, “[t]he government can’t restrict it without surviving the applicable level of constitutional scrutiny,” as FIRE put it. Not to mention, “it would teach them [children] the First Amendment doesn’t really mean what it says and that the government knows best. That’s a dangerous lesson for the next generation of Americans to learn.”

Youths are legally considered to have mostly the same rights as adults, to an extent. Minors “are entitled to a significant measure of First Amendment protection, and only in relatively narrow and well-defined circumstances may government bar public dissemination of protected materials to them,” according to the Supreme Court’s ruling nearly fifty years ago in Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville, a case regarding restrictions at drive-in movie theaters. Jumping ahead to 2011, in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, the Court overturned a law prohibiting kids under 18 from buying or renting “violent video games.” Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the majority, said even though the government “possesses legitimate power to protect children from harm,” it does not give it “a free-floating power to restrict the ideas to which children may be exposed.”

Yet several states, including Ohio, Arkansas, Utah, and California, have attempted to limit minors’ access to social media. Most of these attempts, however, have been postponed by lawsuits challenging their constitutionality.

DeSantis, of course, believes he is doing the right thing by enacting the ban, saying in a statement after signing the bill in March: “Social media harms children in a variety of ways. HB 3 gives parents a greater ability to protect their children.”

Mixed Reactions

Not everybody agrees with him. “[T]his bill goes too far in taking away parents’ rights and banning social media usage—and thus First Amendment Rights—for young Floridians,” said Democratic Rep. Anna Eskamani of Florida in a statement after the bill was signed. She claims improving “parental oversight tools” and investing in “Florida’s mental health system and programs” would be a better step forward than banning kids from social media.

Still, DeSantis is confident the law will be upheld. “Any time I see a bill, if I don’t think it’s constitutional, I veto it,” he said in March. “We not only satisfied me, but we also satisfied, I think, a fair application of the law and Constitution.”

Parents appear to have mixed reactions. Some favor government regulation, but others believe bans like HB 3 step outside the laws and that parents should be the only ones monitoring their children’s media consumption.

HB 3 is supposed to go into effect on the first of January, but “Attorney General Ashley Moody’s office announced last month that the state would not be enforcing the law on major social media platforms until the court rules on a motion for preliminary injunction,” explained the Tallahassee Democrat. “A hearing will be held in late February,” so the law might not be enforced immediately. Even if it is, how will it be enforced? The bill isn’t clear on that, but it does appear to put all the responsibility in the tech companies’ hands, the same ones responsible for creating the platforms the new law is supposed to prevent kids from using.

However, for the government to ban children from social media, lawmakers will need to prove a genuine problem exists and that the only way to solve it is to restrict minors’ speech. If less restrictive measures are available, the government is supposed to use those instead of jumping to more extreme solutions.

“Protecting children is a laudable goal,” explained FIRE, “but enacting futile and unconstitutional legislation does not protect anyone. … If the government had unchecked power to control what information children could access, government officials would usurp parental imperatives and inevitably abuse that power to advance ideological agendas.”

Be that as it may, everyone on both sides seems to be missing one critical point: If a kid wants to read or watch something badly enough, they will likely find a way, regardless of the rules and any safeguards put in place.

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Liberty Nation does not endorse candidates, campaigns, or legislation, and this presentation is no endorsement.

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Corey Smith

National Correspondent

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