I know this has been covered but this is good analysis from a high school student.
was this written by ai?
The statistics show that much of young people’s declining mental health is caused by social issues such as the cost-of-living crisis, housing insecurity and fears about the climate emergency, much of which can be sheeted home to government policies.
really 10 year olds worried about cost of living and housing??
Where does it say they’re 10? Generally, high school doesn’t even start until 12/13.
ban is for under 16s
i also strongly doubt that social media is doing much to help the kids who are stressing about those things
What are you on about
How does the social media ban being targetted at U/16s = the author being 10?
I’ve met primary school kids who have an interest in social issues. I’m surprised you haven’t.
I used to be one of those. It kind of makes me chuckle when I see comments like above, I used to write similarly from when I was about 14. I had many people online accuse me of being a fake child, too (their words)
A lot of people seem to have this idea that being a child or teenager is on the same level as being a toddler just learning how to talk. Like there’s some kind of magical switch that gets flicked when you turn 18 that takes you from babbling to writing long winded and formal emails with as much jargon as you can muster up. It’s really weird, but I think it’s probably a combination of jealousy and feeling irrelevant and out of touch for some folks
Sure is annoying as the person on the other end though
They sure as fuck are when it means they only have one meal a day and can’t afford to join a sport club.
Besides, the point was pretty obvious, I thought. They might not care about it directly, but their mental health is affected by it just the same. When it affects their wellbeing directly, through their access to the food they need to learn and grow. When it affects the opportunities they have in life, especially if they might see others around them who do have opportunities.
That’s without going into the fact that parents can pick up on their parents’ distress more than they often get given credit for.