It’s no secret that Trump-administration-in-waiting at the Heritage Foundation supports KOSA because it thinks it will be useful in achieving some of the most extreme goals of Project 2025, a project Heritage created. Last year they came out and said that they supported KOSA because “keeping trans content away from children is protecting kids.”
With KOSA stalled out in the House as many Republicans have rightly realized that it makes no sense and can be used to censor content they might support, as well as content they don’t support, Heritage Foundation has kicked off a new push to flip House Republicans. This comes the same week that supporters of KOSA brought a bunch of misguided parents to the Hill to push for the bill under the false premise that it would protect children. It won’t.
One of the things Heritage is passing around is a “myth vs. fact” sheet that is so batshit crazy that I had four different people in DC send me copies on Friday pointing out how crazy it is. I don’t have the time or patience to go through all of the nonsense in the document, but I want to call out a few things.
Heritage knows that KOSA can be used to suppress abortion infoLast year we wrote about the potential for KOSA to be used to suppress abortion info, and received some angry emails from Democrats who insisted that the bill was carefully written to avoid that. Heritage, though, makes it clear in this document that they fully expect if President Trump wins, that they can twist KOSA to silence pro-abortion content.
In a section pushing back on a claim that Democrats could use the “Kids Online Safety Council” created in the bill to push for pro-choice messaging, they say that this is “the status quo,” but as long as Trump wins, they’ll get to use this same mechanism to get anti-abortion people to control the council:
A Republican administration could fill the council with representatives who share pro-life values.
In other words, they know that whichever party is in the White House gets to control the council that will determine what content is considered safe for kids and which is not. That should automatically raise concerns for everyone, as it means whichever party they dislike, if in power, will have tremendous sway over what content will be allowed online.
Heritage knows that “online bullying and harassment” are too broadly defined, but want you to ignore thatResponding to the very real concern that KOSA doesn’t clearly define “online bullying” and “harassment of a minor” meaning that it would lead to “subjective interpretation and dubious claims,” Heritage jumps into a word salad that never actually responds to that concern beyond saying “but bullying is, like, really bad.”
The inclusion of “online bullying and harassment of a minor” is deliberate phrasing due to the indisputable impact of these behaviors on children and teens. According to a 2022 Pew survey. nearly half of American teens (46%) experienced bullying online. Multiple academic studies cited by the Cyberbullying Research Center and other research aggregators indicate that online bullying and harassment is related to a number of adverse psychological and physiological outcomes in young people, such as poor self-esteem, suicidal ideation, anger, substance use, and delinquency. Seventy-four percent of teens said in the same 2022 Pew survey that social media platforms aren’t doing enough to prevent digital bullying on their services.
The claim that the inclusion of “online bullying” and “harassment” could be weaponized by the FTC or attorneys general elides the legitimate, deleterious impact of online bullying and harassment on young people. These are genuine problems that impact millions of American minors. Overly broad interpretations of digital “bullying” and “harassment” can be prevented by clearly defining both terms. These definitions, plainly articulated and scoped, could limit the legislation’s reach to actions that legitimately threaten the physical safety and mental health of American youth.
Except, um, they’re not clearly defined, not clearly scoped, and are wide open to abuse.
Furthermore, if you actually look at the Pew Survey from 2022, it’s not quite as horrifying as Heritage makes it out to be. That 46% of kids who experienced “bullying” is actually… mostly kids who experienced “name calling.” To be honest, I’m kind of surprised the number is not higher. Kids in school get called names all the time and did so prior to the internet as well. We don’t need a law to deal with that.
Indeed, more serious forms of bullying, such as stuff having to do with explicit images, is way further down the list:
Indeed, this study kinda makes the point that Heritage is trying to deny. That “cyberbullying” is vague and not well-defined, and people use it to include all sorts of things from “name calling” to sharing of explicit imagery or threats. Name-calling can be an issue, but it’s not one that the federal government needs to be involved in. It’s the type of issue for parents and schools to deal with locally.
Later in the document, Heritage offers up its own definitions of “online bullying” and “harassment” that it hopes the House will add. Notably, those definitions, which included that the activity must happen “consistently and pervasively” does not at all match up with what the Pew study found and reported. They present no evidence about how widespread the activity is that would meet Heritage’s definition.
Heritage knows that KOSA will lead to protected speech being removed, but claims it’s okay because platforms already moderateThis part is Heritage (1) not understanding the First Amendment, and (2) telling on themselves. Responding to the claim that KOSA will have a chilling effect on free speech, encouraging platforms to remove certain disfavored content, they admit:
Big Tech platforms already censor and suppress conservative views on a massive scale. KOSA wouldn’t cause that but it would oblige platforms to take kids’ safety into account.
So, first of all, no, “Big Tech platforms” do not “already censor and suppress conservative views on a massive scale.” That’s a myth. It has been debunked so many times. Indeed, over and over what has been found is that the platforms bend over backwards to allow conservatives to break the rules without punishment to avoid the false claim of censoring conservative viewpoints.
But more to the point, this talking point does not actually respond to the claim. The fact that social media sites already have their own moderation rules and policies and enforcement is an entirely different thing than having to craft policies to comply with a law to “protect the children.”
This is, in effect, Heritage admitting that KOSA violates the First Amendment, but saying “it’s fine because social media already moderates.” That’s a very confused understanding of the First Amendment. The First Amendment allows social media companies to moderate how they see fit. If they are moderating to comply with the law, then that violates the First Amendment. So here you have Heritage saying “it’s okay to violate the First Amendment, because of this other thing which isn’t even happening, and wouldn’t violate the First Amendment if it did happen.”
Either the people at Heritage who wrote this don’t understand anything about the First Amendment or they’re just hoping the people they send this to are too dumb to understand the First Amendment.
Heritage thinks age verification for social media is fine, because of the MPAA rating systemJust to make it doubly clear that Heritage has no fucking clue about the First Amendment, in a section defending age verification (hilariously right after they claim KOSA doesn’t require age verification), they say that age verification is totally constitutional. That’s wrong. The Supreme Court ruled on this 20 years ago Ashcroft v. ACLU.
Then they claim that the MPAA rating system proves its legal:
Age verification reliably mitigates such harms in analog contexts like bars, adult venues, R-rated films, and online gambling.
Of course, only one of those is really about speech: movies. And, notably, the MPAA rating system is totally voluntary and not backed up by law. That’s because everyone knows if it was backed up by law, it would be unconstitutional.
There’s another big Supreme Court case on that question. California tried to pass a law mandating similar age ratings for video games, and the Supreme Court threw it out as unconstitutional in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association fourteen years ago.
You’d think Heritage would be familiar with that case, given that it was written by their hero Justice Scalia. Justice Alito wrote a concurrence in that case, in which he went on one of his preferred “history trips” insisting that you can’t regulate access to violence because there is no long history of the US censoring violent content.
The same would be true of basically every category of content KOSA looks to restrict.
In the end, Heritage here is trying to walk a very fine line. They’re trying to signal to the GOP that this bill is still useful for the kinds of culture war nonsense they want to propagate, silencing LGBTQ+ and pro-abortion content. But they can’t say that part out loud. So instead this document makes it clear that “wink-wink, nudge-nudge, if Trump wins, we get our people in their to define this stuff.”
All this document really shows is why no Democrat should ever be seen to support KOSA. And, any Republican who can read between the lines should see why they should be equally worried about this bill in the hands of a Democratic administration.
No matter who is in power, KOSA is a dangerous, likely unconstitutional attack on free expression.