In the grand British tradition of moral panics, where every generation discovers that the latest amusement might corrupt the young and promptly demands that the state do something about it, we have arrived at the social media age limit. The government, ever obliging when it comes to expanding its own prerogatives, has committed to raising the barrier to sixteen. Parents, teachers, health professionals and sundry concerned parties cheer this as a victory for the children. One pictures them linking arms and singing hymns of deliverance, much as the villagers once did when the witch was safely ducked.
It is a touching spectacle. One is reminded of Sheila Broflovski in South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, that tireless crusader whose rallying cry—“Think of the children!”—launched wars, censorship campaigns and quite a lot of gratuitous musical numbers. The comparison may be unfair; Sheila was at least cartoonishly direct in her hysteria, whereas our modern parental lobbyists cloak their demands in the soothing pastel tones of safeguarding and evidence-based policy. Still, the family resemblance is hard to deny. The impulse is the same: protect the innocents by restricting everyone else’s access to the dangerous toy. And, as in South Park, the road to hell is paved with good intentions and funded by the taxpayer.
The ostensible problem is real enough. Endless scrolling, algorithmic outrage, and the peculiar social dynamics of platforms designed to maximise engagement have not, on the whole, produced a generation of stoic philosophers. Mental health statistics for adolescents flicker with warning lights; grooming and exploitation lurk in the darker corners. No sane observer denies that unlimited smartphone access at age eleven has its drawbacks. The old solution—family computer in the living room, a sturdy Nokia brick for emergencies, and the gentle art of saying “no”—has been unfashionable for years. It required actual parenting: supervision, boundaries, the occasional row. Far easier, it seems, to outsource the heavy lifting to Whitehall.
Yet herein lies the quiet comedy of our age. In their zeal to shield little Timmy and Emily from TikTok’s siren song, campaigning parents have lobbied for measures that necessitate robust age assurance. “Highly effective” is the regulatory euphemism. In practice, this means identity verification: facial scans, biometric estimation, digital wallets, government-issued credentials, perhaps even linkage to NHS numbers or Open Banking data. What begins as a polite request to keep the under-sixteens off Instagram swiftly mutates into infrastructure capable of checking every internet user’s credentials before granting passage. The state does not build such systems for one narrow purpose and then politely dismantle them once the children are safe. Bureaucracies are not known for their minimalist aesthetic.
One almost admires the sleight of hand. Parents animated by left-leaning ideals—those who instinctively reach for collective solutions, who view private restraint as insufficient and state intervention as enlightened—have helped midwife a mechanism of universal surveillance. They did not set out to erect an Orwellian apparatus, of course. They merely wanted the harms mitigated. But good intentions have a habit of arriving at unintended addresses. The same cohort that once tut-tutted at CCTV creep and data retention now finds itself applauding the digital equivalent of an ID card for the entire online realm. The children were the Trojan horse; the surveillance state slipped in behind them while everyone was busy virtue-signalling concern.
Compare this with the low-tech alternative so unfashionable among the digitally anxious: place the family computer in plain sight, hand the offspring a device incapable of infinite doom-scrolling, and accept that raising humans involves some friction. It worked tolerably well when the greatest online peril was a dodgy Geocities page. It requires no national database, no facial recognition middleware, and—no small mercy—no new quango to oversee compliance. Yet such measures lack the grandeur of legislation. They cannot be announced with fanfare in the Commons or celebrated as a “huge win.” They demand responsibility from actual parents rather than the comforting abstraction of society.
Instead, we march toward the logical terminus: every citizen presenting digital papers at the gates of the internet. Refuse, and access is denied or throttled. The infrastructure, once built for the protection of minors, will prove irresistibly useful for other purposes—content moderation, behavioural scoring, the quiet expansion of what constitutes “harmful” material. Today it is social media for sixteen-year-olds; tomorrow the definition of acceptable discourse may tighten further, always in the name of safety, always with the most compassionate rhetoric. The censors of yesteryear at least had the decency to be obvious about it. Our modern variant prefers to arrive wearing the concerned frown of a safeguarding officer.
The irony is particularly rich for those parents steeped in progressive instincts. Many who would recoil at old-fashioned authoritarianism have cheered measures that hand the state potent new tools of control. They imagined a gentle nanny state gently patting errant algorithms on the head. What they are helping construct is something closer to a panopticon with better branding. The state, ever hungry for legitimacy, gratefully accepts the mandate: “You asked us to protect the children; we shall require certain assurances from everyone.” Slippery slopes are dismissed as paranoid until one finds oneself halfway down, clutching a biometric token and wondering how it came to this.
There is, naturally, an antidote more elegant than regulation. It is called parental responsibility, exercised in the analogue world before the digital one consumes it entirely. It is the willingness to endure the mild social awkwardness of saying your child does not have the latest device. It is the dull, unglamorous business of conversation, example, and occasional confiscation. Supplement this with a cultural commitment to free expression—something like the ASI Freedom of Speech Bill, which seeks to push back against the creeping censorship apparatus—rather than layering ever more rules atop the existing ones.
In the end, Britain risks sleepwalking into a peculiarly polite dystopia: not the jackboot of classic totalitarianism, but the soft, data-driven embrace of perpetual verification “for the children.” Sheila Broflovski would recognise the script, even if the accents have improved and the musical numbers are now delivered via algorithmic recommendation. The tragedy is not that parents care; it is that they have been persuaded to care in the manner most likely to empower the very forces least suited to genuine guardianship. The state makes a poor surrogate parent. It is, however, an excellent custodian of power once granted.
One can only hope that enough citizens retain the wit to notice the swap: the promised shield for the young quietly reforged into chains for all. Otherwise, we shall find ourselves, in a few short years, logging on with our digital papers in order, murmuring the updated mantra: “Think of the children”—while the state smiles indulgently and tightens the net.