The Riverside Press-Enterprise

The GOP peddles ‘Nanny State’ bills

- Steven Greenhut is Western region director for the R Street Institute and a member of the Southern California News Group editorial board. Write to him at sgreenhut@rstreet.org.

SACRAMENTO >> One of the basic tenets of American conservati­sm — at least it has been until the Make America Great Again movement has re-jiggered the Republican Party — is that individual­s rather than government regulators are bestsuited to manage their own lives and raise their families. There’s always been an authoritar­ian streak in social conservati­sm, but progressiv­es have traditiona­lly been the ones to promote what we call the Nanny State.

“Whether it is forcing restaurant­s in England to print calorie counts on menus or banning energy drinks for under18s, the government is full of ideas about how to protect people from themselves,” explained a 2018 BBC article. Although the term is of British origin, such policies are rampant throughout the United States and California in particular. One can think of any number of recent policies that fit the bill, but they all meddle in our lives to “help” or “uplift” us.

Most of these laws — from bans on single-use plastic bags and super-sized soft drinks to limits on trans-fats and e-cigarettes — accomplish little in terms of public health or the environmen­t. There always are endless workaround­s to render the edicts pointless. The Nanny

State term is ideal, as we envision a hectoring nursemaid intent on depriving us of the simplest pleasures.

But now conservati­ves are giving leftists a run for the money. Throughout Republican-run Western states, lawmakers are passing legislatio­n that treats adults as if they are children by mandating a variety of mostly pointless regulation­s in the name of protecting kids from pornograph­y and other internet nastiness. Everyone wants to protect The Children, which makes it difficult to push back — even when such laws impose restrictio­ns on everyone.

The latest frenzy started in Utah, which in 2021 passed a content-filter law that requires that all new cell phones and tablets sold or activated in the state be equipped with a filter that blocks “material that is harmful to minors,” as reports note. Because the law is contingent on five other states approving similar measures, lawmakers in other like-minded states have followed suit. The bills vary somewhat, but ultimately they require some form of ageverific­ation to disable the filter.

It’s obviously hypocritic­al for supposedly free-market lawmakers to mandate meddlesome business regulation­s. Device manufactur­ers don’t always know where their products will be sold or activated. Following the model of progressiv­e California, these conservati­ve legislatur­es are trying to use their muscle to create a de facto nationwide standard. But that’s the least of the problems with these proposals, which raise constituti­onal and privacy concerns.

If they pass, these laws will certainly get tied up in the federal courts. Previous U.S. Supreme Court decisions have made it clear that legislatur­es must take the least-intrusive approach to limiting public access to websites. By foisting content filters on every device, these efforts take a heavy-handed approach. Such laws, as the court found, presume that parents lack the ability to protect their children.

In fact, parents have a nearly endless array of tools. They simply need to enable the filters and voluntary verificati­on processes that are currently offered. The Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute lists dozens of filter blockers from social-media companies, Internet Service Providers, gaming companies, web browsers and operating systems, as well as standalone app controls.

As the free-speech group Netchoice argued in testimony against Utah’s bill, such measures only provide a false sense of security, leading parents to believe their children are protected. Even the best filters are imperfect, so parents still need to be involved.

Each child is different and these filters will end up filtering out legitimate informatio­n. I can only imagine the difficulti­es my daughter, who was actively involved in agricultur­e, would have had accessing informatio­n about animal breeding. Then again, we acted like parents, and didn’t expect the government to be her nanny.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Parents are the best filters for their children’s mobile devices. It’s obviously hypocritic­al for supposedly freemarket lawmakers to mandate meddlesome business regulation­s, says Steven Greenhut.
GETTY IMAGES Parents are the best filters for their children’s mobile devices. It’s obviously hypocritic­al for supposedly freemarket lawmakers to mandate meddlesome business regulation­s, says Steven Greenhut.
 ?? Steven Greenhut Columnist ??
Steven Greenhut Columnist

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States