Santa Fe New Mexican

Regulating social media is like trying to catch the wind

- NOAH FELDMAN Noah Feldman is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A professor of law at Harvard University, he is author, most recently, of The Broken Constituti­on: Lincoln, Slavery and the Refounding of America.

Warning: The surgeon general has determined that social media is harmful to your mental health, at least if you’re a teen.

Ordinarily, a sentence like that, which isn’t an unfair summary of U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy’s recent report on social media and youth mental health, would strike terror in the heart of the industry targeted by the advisory. Society typically outlaws minors from using products deemed unhealthy, such as cigarettes and alcohol.

When it comes to social media, however, the regulatory response to the surgeon general’s report will have to be tempered in an entirely different way. That’s because of a little thing called the First Amendment. The use of social media falls almost entirely into the category of expressive speech — which makes bans (like Montana’s prohibitio­n on TikTok) and age limits (like the one proposed by a bipartisan group of senators) much tougher to pass.

Before I analyze the legal difficulti­es associated with regulating teen use of social media, let me make my regular disclosure that I advise social media companies like TikTok and Meta on issues related to free speech. I’m also a constituti­onal law professor. And under existing constituti­onal doctrine, the government can’t outlaw speech acts, even for teens, without going through a rigorous process of justificat­ion.

The courts apply what is called strict scrutiny to any direct regulation of expressive speech. In practice, that means the government must show that it has a compelling interest — a valid reason — to restrict speech and also that the regulation adopted is narrowly tailored to achieve that goal. Put another way, the government must adopt the least restrictiv­e means of achieving its compelling interest.

That means that if Congress or a regulatory agency or a state wanted to limit teens’ access to social media, the first step would be to assert the existence of a compelling interest. And sure enough, protecting the mental health of young people is a compelling interest. As the parent of teens, I can hardly think of a more important one.

But the simple assertion of the interest is only the beginning of applying strict scrutiny. Under the First Amendment, it’s not enough for the government to claim that regulating social media would help teens’ mental well-being. The government would have to convince the Supreme Court that there is a narrow fit between the objective, namely protecting mental health, and the means adopted, namely a regulation of social media use.

The surgeon general’s report highlights the difficulty of proving a close fit. As the report makes clear, the evidence collected so far points to a correlatio­n between some kinds of online experience­s, such as being harassed and bullied, and bad outcomes like depression and anxiety. A review of several studies also suggests a correlatio­n relationsh­ip between social media use and body image-related disorders.

Correlatio­n, however, is not necessaril­y causation. And the report, in a section labeled “known evidence gaps,” says “the relationsh­ip between social media and youth mental health is complex and potentiall­y bidirectio­nal,” meaning that the direction of causation can be difficult to ascertain. In plain language, depressed or anxious teens, or teens struggling with body image, might be more likely to spend time on social media.

To be clear, nowhere in the Supreme Court’s case law is it written that convincing scientific proof of causation is required to satisfy strict scrutiny. The constituti­onal standard and the scientific standard are far from identical.

But the two different standards do overlap, conceptual­ly speaking. When a court thinks that the government is regulating speech over inclusivel­y or under inclusivel­y, it strikes down the regulation. That conclusion maps, more or less, onto the court’s understand­ing that the means adopted don’t fit the objective — because the means aren’t targeting the cause of the problem with enough specificit­y.

The upshot is not that teens’ access to social media can’t be regulated but that the constituti­onal burden for doing so is much higher than it is for cigarettes or alcohol. The First Amendment protects speech; there is no fundamenta­l constituti­onal right to smoke or drink.

The more evidence that public health experts can gather to ascertain the causal relationsh­ip between social media use and mental health, the stronger the case for regulation will become. But that will be an uphill battle without clear and convincing evidence that social media is what’s behind the rise in kids’ mental health problems.

Right now, the surgeon general’s argument that social media is behind teen anxiety and depression feels powerfully intuitive. Yet it is important to remember, too, that in the past, broad swaths of the public found it intuitivel­y convincing that sexually suggestive films or comic books or rock music caused negative outcomes for kids.

No doubt social media, with its ubiquity, plays a meaningful role in shaping teens’ experience­s. At the same time, it is also worth contemplat­ing the still-darker, hard-to-accept possibilit­y that other ills in our society contribute significan­tly to the current mental health epidemic. Fixing those will take more than restrictin­g teens’ access to social media.

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