By CHRIS POWELL
Kids always have spent too much time doing unproductive stuff for mere amusement. It’s called being a kid.
Governor Lamont and Attorney General William Tong think they can change this by legislation restricting social media. They condemn “youth social media addiction,” which they say is shortening the attention spans of young people by deluging them with videos, computer games, messaging, and other trivial distractions.
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But the governor and attorney general are just scapegoating here.
Grabbing attention always has been the objective of all communications businesses — newspapers, magazines, radio, and television — not just internet sites and social media. There’s no making money without gaining an audience, and short of threats there’s no communication that doesn’t have the protection of the First Amendment, which covers people of all ages.
If, as the governor and attorney general contend, social media is turning young people into twitching, unteachable zombies, shouldn’t their parents have noticed by now? But there is little clamor from parents about this. Parents keep buying their children mobile telephones and computers and paying for their internet access without paying much attention to what their children are doing with it because more parenting might get in the way of their own addiction to television shows.
If there is a problem here, parents can always take the mobile phones and computers away from their kids or limit the services to which they have access.
That is what the governor and attorney general would have state law due in lieu of parenting: prescribe restrictive “default settings” for the social media accounts of minors, settings that could not be undone without parental consent.
But kids probably would find ways around the “default settings” if they couldn’t persuade their parents to exempt them in the first place.
Besides, if young people are too distracted from the real world by social media, it is partly state government’s own fault. Young people might pay more attention to important things if Connecticut’s public schooling was more serious and operated by proficiency testing instead of social promotion.
After all, why shouldn’t kids spend their days on social media when their performance in school makes little difference, since they’ll all be advanced to the next grade and given high school diplomas without having to learn anything.
Indeed, many Connecticut children — in the cities, 25% or more — don’t even attend school regularly despite all the pretty-pleasing done by social workers. The chronically absent children would have far less time to diddle their lives away on their mobile phones if they spend more time in school, especially since many schools now quarantine mobile phones.
But Connecticut long ago stopped trying to enforce school attendance along with academic standards.
State government is deficient in many ways quite apart from education. Connecticut’s big and neglected problems have nothing to do with social media. But scapegoating social media is useful for distracting from those problems.
TRUMP AND LAMONT FAKE IT: President Trump keeps saying the national economy is great but most people don’t think so. They sense that their wages still are trailing inflation, and many resent the president’s constant involvement in conflicts abroad.
Governor Lamont says Connecticut’s economy is great but most people don’t think so either.
The state actually lost jobs in 2025 while the nation gained jobs. Connecticut apparently would have lost population last year as well if not for illegal immigration, since Connecticut is a “sanctuary state,” a state that obstructs immigration law enforcement, even as the governor and attorney general deny it.
The governor says he has been losing sleep lately worrying about how to keep people safe amid violence by federal immigration agents. But most of that violence involves confrontations provoked by people striving to obstruct immigration law enforcement. To keep people safe, the governor could just urge people not to interfere with enforcement. After all, that’s a felony.
There are many more important things close to home for the governor to lose sleep over, things for which he has much responsibility.
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)