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Is It Time To Restrict Social Media For Minors In Jammu & Kashmir

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The future of J&K lies not in screens, but in the minds and hearts of its youth

Sahil Hassan Bhat

Every generation faces its own challenges. Some face war, some poverty, some political instability. The youth of today face something far quieter—but far more invasive. It does not arrive with sirens or slogans. It slips silently into bedrooms, classrooms, and minds. It glows from a screen.

Social media, once promoted as a tool of connection and progress, has become one of the most powerful forces shaping young minds today. In Jammu & Kashmir, where children and adolescents already grow up under unique psychological, social, and emotional pressures, unrestricted access to social media is pushing an entire generation toward confusion, addiction, and moral disorientation.

This is no longer a matter of preference or parenting style. It is a public crisis.

And it demands decisive action.

The Unseen Crisis Among the Youth of J&K

Across towns and villages in Jammu & Kashmir, one can observe a striking pattern: children holding smartphones before they fully understand the world around them. Teenagers are scrolling endlessly, disconnected from family conversations, books, sports, and real friendships.

What appears harmless on the surface is producing alarming consequences underneath.

Doctors, teachers, and parents increasingly report:

Rising cases of anxiety, depression, and emotional withdrawal

Sleep disorders and chronic fatigue

Declining academic performance and loss of concentration

Irritability, aggression, and social isolation

Detachment from cultural, religious, and family values

Young people are more connected than ever—yet lonelier than ever.

The problem is not technology itself. The problem is unregulated exposure at an age when the mind is most vulnerable.

How Social Media Rewires the Young Brain

Scientific studies across the world have shown that the adolescent brain is still under development, particularly the areas responsible for judgment, impulse control, and emotional regulation. Social media platforms are deliberately designed to exploit this vulnerability.

Endless scrolling, notifications, likes, shares, and views trigger dopamine responses—the same chemical involved in addiction. For a child or teenager, this creates dependency, restlessness, and compulsive behaviour.

Over time:

Attention spans shrink

Patience disappears

Real-world challenges feel boring or overwhelming

Validation becomes external, not internal

A child who grows up measuring self-worth by online approval struggles to build confidence, resilience, and identity in real life.

Why Social Media Must Be Restricted Until 16–18 Years

Allowing unrestricted social media access to minors is equivalent to allowing them into spaces they are not emotionally equipped to navigate.

The age group below 16–18:

Lacks emotional maturity

Is highly impressionable

Is unable to distinguish reality from curated online fiction

Is more vulnerable to manipulation, bullying, and exploitation

A ban or strict restriction until 16–18 is not a denial of freedom—it is a protective boundary, just like age limits for driving, alcohol, or voting.

Such a restriction would:

Reduce screen addiction and mental health disorders

Protect children from cyberbullying and online predators

Encourage focus on education, creativity, and physical activity

Allow personality and values to develop naturally

Freedom without readiness does not empower children—it exposes them to harm.

The Adult Industry: A Silent Invasion of Childhood

Perhaps the most disturbing consequence of social media is how easily it exposes minors to the adult content industry.

Despite official age restrictions, explicit and suggestive material floods platforms through:

Short videos and reels

Influencer content

Hidden links and private groups

Messaging apps and algorithm-driven recommendations

Children are encountering explicit material at ages when they barely understand relationships or emotions.

This early exposure:

Distorts understanding of love, consent, and intimacy

Encourages objectification and disrespect, especially toward women

Creates unrealistic expectations and emotional dissatisfaction

Leads to addiction, guilt, and psychological distress

For many adolescents, this content becomes their first and most influential “education” about relationships—replacing parents, teachers, and cultural guidance.

The damage caused by this exposure is deep, silent, and often irreversible.

Cyberbullying, Comparison, and Psychological Violence

Social media does not only expose children to content—it exposes them to constant judgment.

Teenagers compare:

Their bodies to edited images

Their lives to curated lifestyles

Their worth to follower counts

Cyberbullying, body shaming, and online harassment have become normalised. A single post can subject a child to ridicule from hundreds of strangers.

Unlike traditional bullying, there is no escape.

The abuse follows them home.

It lives on their screens.

Many suffer in silence—ashamed, afraid, and emotionally broken.

Cultural Erosion and Identity Crisis

Jammu & Kashmir has a long tradition of strong family bonds, moral discipline, respect for elders, and community values. Unregulated digital spaces are weakening these foundations.

Children today are learning:

Language from influencers instead of elders

Morality from trends instead of teachings

Identity from online personas instead of real experience

Parents struggle to compete with screens. Teachers struggle to hold attention. Society watches as discipline, patience, and empathy decline.

This is not cultural evolution.

This is cultural erosion.

The Role of Tech Companies and the State

Social media companies operate with one primary goal: profit through engagement. Children are not users—they are data points.

Self-regulation has failed. Age limits are ignored. Harmful content spreads faster than safeguards.

This places responsibility on:

Governments to enforce strict age-verification laws

Institutions to introduce digital literacy and mental health education

Parents to reclaim active roles in their children’s lives

Society to demand accountability from technology companies

Protecting children cannot be left to algorithms.

What Must Be Done

Strict age-based restriction or ban on social media for users below 16–18

Mandatory, enforceable age verification mechanisms

Strong action against adult and harmful content

Digital awareness programs for parents and educators

Promotion of sports, arts, reading, and real-world engagement

Delay will only deepen the damage.

Conclusion: The Cost of Inaction

A society is judged not by how advanced its technology is, but by how well it protects its children.

If we continue to allow unregulated social media to shape young minds, we should not be surprised by rising mental illness, collapsing discipline, and moral confusion.

The question is not whether social media should be restricted for minors.

The question is whether we have the courage to act before it is too late.

The future of Jammu & Kashmir does not lie in screens.

It lies in the minds, hearts, and character of its youth.

Protect them—while we still can.

“Protect Innocence. Ban the Scroll.”

er*********@***il.com

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