4 Thing’s you CANNOT say about the UK’s “Social Media Ban”
The UK's "Social Media Ban" is official - Here's how you should talk about it.
Kit Knightly
It’s official, the United Kingdom is getting its own Australia-style “social media ban” for everyone under 16.
In fact it’s going to be “Australia-plus” according to insiders, with some kind of ‘curfew’ expected to part of the final roll-out.
We are banning social media access for under 16s.
These days kids must find their feet in a world where technology intrudes into every area of their life.
I just can’t let that go on anymore. So we’re giving children their childhoods back. pic.twitter.com/jn7iQrcwk8
— Keir Starmer (@Keir_Starmer) June 15, 2026
Yes, Sir Keir Starmer has been sitting on that pot for quite sometime and finally decided to…well, you know.
The total list of platforms the proposed ban will target hasn’t yet been released, but it is known that YouTube, X (Twitter), Meta (Facebook), Snapchat, TikTok and Instagram will be hit, and that some others – including BlueSky – will not be.
Despite claims to be empowered to move “speedily”, the ban isn’t expected to come into force until next spring, which gives a nice little window for a few things to potentially happen.
But I’m not here to analyze the ban or speculate on agendas or next steps.
The ban is announced, it will likely happen, and it’s on all of us to resist it, and the first stage of resistance is acknowledging the real problem.
How we talk about and argue against these things matters. – A lot.
Because discourse that doesn’t acknowledge or understand the real nature of the problem can unwittingly aid the push for authoritarianism.
Already we’re seeing the public discussion around the ban be steered, either intentionally or otherwise, in directions that actually support the government position.
So, here’s four arguments you must NOT make against the social media ban.
1. “It won’t work”
Many people’s – and MSM outlet’s – first instinct is to argue against the ban on the grounds that it won’t work.
This is a mistake.
Firstly, as a point of principle, it is never correct to argue pragmatism when faced with a moral wrong. People have a right to privacy, the state breaching that right is morally wrong whether or not it works toward their stated aim.
In the case of the social media ban, arguing to ineffectiveness is doubly wrong because the government do not care if it works or not. There’s no point in arguing effectiveness, because the government’s stated aim is a lie. They don’t want to protect children, they don’t care about protecting children, so arguing that the social media ban won’t protect children is a waste of time. That’s not what it’s for.
If anything, as far as the government is concerned, the less it works the better because it will give them an excuse to “clampdown” even MORE in the future.
2. “Let’s compromise!”
Another common argument doing the rounds is that a social media ban isn’t the best tool for tackling the alleged “problem”, and that we should deploy something else instead.
Common “something elses” include digital curfews, smartphone bans, screen-time limits. The trouble with any and all of the mooted suggestions is that they are all enforced the exact same way – age verification.
As I wrote a couple of weeks ago…
This is very much an “any colour you want so long as it’s black” situation.
Choose an outright ban – “Great, please submit your ID to prove you’re over 16 and exempt from the social media ban.”
Choose screen time limits – “Great, please submit your ID to prove you’re over 16 and exempt from screen time limitations.”
Choose digital curfews – “Great, please submit your ID to prove you’re over 16 and exempt from the digital curfew.”
Any proposed “compromise measure” or “alternative plan” that also involves age verification or ID scanning is – by definition – neither a compromise OR an alternative, because the age verification and ID scanning is the entire point of the scheme.
3. “Why isn’t [platform A] included?”
Too many people have already started arguing that the ban is “unfair” or “hypocritical” because some platforms are not included.
The most commonly cited example is BlueSky, which Team Right members have been harping on about all day, often calling BlueSky a home for groomers and paedophiles.
Here’s GBNews screaming out…
Left-wing social media network could be exempt from Keir Starmer’s mass internet clampdown
This is a terrible argument, do you know why?
“The government has heard your concerns, and decided to bow to public pressure and include BlueSky in the ban moving forward.”
There, now what?
You’ve accepted the state’s position that there is a problem and that something must be done about it, and allowed them to paint themselves as reasonable by changing their plans in line with your objections.
Congratulations, you just played yourself.
As with everything else on this list, you cannot win the argument by accepting any part of the government’s position.
4. “[platform B] should be excluded!”
The same as point three, but reversed. Some are arguing that the presence of YouTube on the list is denying an important educational resource to school-age children, especially those taking their GCSEs (ages 15-16).
As above, if you make this argument all the government has to do is say…
“You’re right, YouTube is an important resource the nation’s children should have access to. We will exclude them from the ban on those grounds.”
…and you’re done.
And, let’s be honest, part of the reason the rollout is delayed until next spring is to facilitate discussions exactly like this. These back-and-forth “conversations” make the public feel involved and consulted and help with the illusion that the system is working – and cares.
All the while, behind the scenes, we can be absolutely certain insanely corrupt deals are going back and forth as tech CEOs lobby to get their platform excluded at the expense of rivals or reach sweetheart agreements where the government will pay them fees to cover the loss of advertising revenue from under-age users.
Conclusion – Reality matters
In case you didn’t notice there’s a common thread in all four of the weak arguments I discuss, and that is accepting the government’s position as stated.
Argument and rhetoric – like all strategy – is all about choosing your ground.
As long as you argue with tyrants on their own terms, and accept the foundational lies they build their positions on, you will always lose the argument.
Truth is the only level playing field, always start from there.
And in this case the truth is very simple:
The ban is not about protecting children. The ban is about monitoring adults.
Unless you accept that, and understand it, you will never be able to argue against it.
Moving forward we will address – as we, and others, have done in the past – practical steps to work around this kind of privacy-breaking law. What tech firms to use, where to buy de-googled phones. Tor, VPNs, independent social media platforms. They all have a place in the discussion.
But talking comes first. How we talk about things matters. Honesty matters. Reality matters.
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The onesided (stacked) consultation that’s led us here.
StarmerOut (@ForeverScept): “UK ‘public consultation’ on the social media ban notice how they didn’t give the option to say no? Illusion of democracy.” | nitter.poast.org
The EU is about to follow suit – in ending private communications online.
CRG (@MacroCRG): “they’re trying to end private communication wake up” | nitter.poast.org
Yes its being foisted on us under the guise of protecting children, this from the man (Starmer) who was head of England’s (CPS) Crown Prosecution Service – and he failed to prosecute the prolific sex offender Jimmy Savile, or more than likely he was instructed not to as Savile had friends in high places.
Its the first step in taking control over what we can and cannot access on the web, the goal as I see it will be to stop us accessing sites that provide good information and analysis, on current affairs like this one and many other I could mention – it will star with social media platforms and spread to all platforms, surely those social media platforms will kick back at the English governments proposed plans – they’ll loose revenue and clicks, Starmer has said he’ll prosecute those executives from the social media platforms that don’t comply with his plans.
Starmer’s plan must be stopped, its one of the first steps on keeping us blind to what’s going on in the world – and it will stop us assessing situations – because we won’t have access to information to make informed decisions for ourselves.
Meanwhile.
Mossad agent/IDF co-ordinates with the Met (all but instructing them) on who to arrest (protestors against genocide, and the sale of Palestinian lands in the West Bank) on the Edgeware road.
This video is truly unbelievable.
https://nitter.poast.org/doctor_rahmeh/status/2066556423945818357#m
I just overheard a conversation in the local bakery about how Musk is objecting to this banning of the kids because “it’s losing him money”.
So the propaganda works. Evil Elon! Save the kids!
“It needs additional safeguards to protect privacy”.
Like the safeguards that protected the PROMIS software or emails from the NSA….
“I’m asked Starmer’s ban but support the ban by [insert preferred leader/party]”
The Reform UK version is probably already drafted.
“Who won the football?”
Wot ? Making an OK hand gesture can be called antisemitic !
Wot Next ? Preferring white loo paper makes me a racist ?
When our so called political leaders here in Australia started banging on about “protecting the kids” by bringing in age verification restrictions for the internet and social media platforms, I saw the writing on the wall and begun building my own library of books; subjects like transhumanism, geoengineering, technocracy, terrain theory, Agenda 2030, Zionism, Jesuits, Freemasons, Kabbalah… in fact a whole range of topics with authors such as David Livingstone, Jacob Nordangard, Elana Freeland, Iain Davis, David A Hughes, Patrick Wood, Christopher Jon Bjerknes, Robert Sepehr, Tom Cowan, Drs Sam & Mark Bailey, Neil Postman, DeAnne Loper, and numerous other authors. Because I thought once age verification restrictions came in I would no longer have access to the internet or social media platforms. Yes, I was wrong. I don’t use a VPN, but I still have full access to the internet including YouTube, as well as Instagram, Threads and Telegram. And because I was wrong, I’ve now gained a whole library of very interesting books on very relevant topics. And less time scrolling. No regrets about that. And yes, this was never about keeping children safe. It’s blatantly obvious it was always about digital identity and surveillance.
Australia is now the benchmark for digital gulag operations?
Rather like during the Scamdemic era when1 overzealous little State commissars, such as Dan Andrews, Mark McGowan and Gladys whats-her-name, gleefully subjected the serfs to full-on totalitarianism, stopping just short of carting off vak-zine dissidents to real gulags.
Using Oz as a testbed the controllers pulled that one off rather easily and yet the Ozzies still haven’t learned that operations have since moved onto the digital gulag phase.
It will interesting to see if the Brits figure out the real aim of these social media “it’s for the children” controls and put up more of a resistance over the next few months.
aUStralia doesn’t breed leaders, just Corporate arse kissers.
Yeah ! I remember Gladys whats-her-name !
Gladys Berejiklian (NSW premier) wasn’t the worst one. I spent the first two years of covid in the Hermit Kingdom of Palaszczuk (aka Queensland, whose premier at the time was Annastacia Palaszczuk).
It was Annastacia who closed the QLD-NSW border and implemented all sorts of ridiculous “public health” measures that were among the most extreme in the country.
Lest we forget.
“Starmer vows new sanctions on Russia and nuclear energy support for UkraineG7 told ‘we will stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes’, with Russia’s finance networks and shadow fleet targeted”
OmG is mum to this “Sir” playing Russian roulette with nuclear missiles on be halve of the whole UK. Used to be called MADness during the rational first Cold war, now in the second one the emotional woke SM & MSM pretend it to be normal. Thinking is out of the brains and the windows. Tunnel vision on a fake threat 1700 miles east of London.
All other stuff here is chicken feed compared to THAT. Unless you’re suicidal.
No nuclear material to the Ayatollah in Iran!! Nuclear material to Zelensky, sure, how much??
R I D I CU L O U S.
When nationally you’re running low on energy, Piracy on The High Seas, nabbing
“Russian Shadow Tankers’ full of the stuff you need……. What’s not to like about it ?
THIS is the plague we need:
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2026/06/15/dain-j15.html
Look, they’re gonna taste incredibly foul, sour, and full of fat and gristle, but it’s time to ‘Eat the Rich’
What’s for dessert?
Off topic.
KPMG, one of the big players in the corparasite world has been ‘naughty’.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-06-16/kpmg-freeze-on-government-contracts-amid-corruption-referral/106802576
Gee, corruption at the top. Who would’ve thunk it?
Well, don’t get me wrong, I’m as anti-establishment as it gets, and certainly not for this kind of thing, but there’s larger discussion to be had that simply isn’t being done regarding our governments, our societies, and personal freedom. Like, isn’t buying cigarettes “banned” for everyone under 19 in Britain? How about alcohol? Or driving a car? Owning a gun? (I owned a gun when I was 12). It’s against the “law” isn’t it? Now you can argue that that’s different in a nuanced way, i.e., that those bans are for the good of their health, or in the case of driving, that they could put others in danger. But in the end, isn’t that what this is? The state saying it’s for children’s own good? Or society’s good? I’m sure there are many other examples of laws prohibiting children from this or that or requiring this or that (like helmets when riding bikes, etc.) Isn’t that all about “monitoring adults”, i.e., trying to do their fucking jobs for them, at least in theory? So where is the line, should there be a line, and who gets to say what that line is? As far as arguing against this “ban”, perhaps unless we go for the whole ball of wax, it’s not just a waste of time, but hypocritical and short sighted. And that’s just the part about kids.
As someone else put it a while back “Why should children be the only ones to benefit?” It would be much better to completely ban these companies. They serve absolutely no purpose and effectively foment problems. Shut them down.
If you don’t eat your meat, how can you have any pudding?
Wrong. Do it again!
How can you have any pudding if you don’t eat your meat?
The severity of that threat largely depends on the talent of the cook
Well, you’ll starve if you’ve got an allergy to red meat (Alpha-Gal syndrome).
What is Alpha-Gal Syndrome ?
https://unbekoming.substack.com/p/what-is-alpha-gal-syndrome
This is a rehash of ongoing deflection from the outrageous modern jabs. When they mess up genes or maintenance of genes, EVERY type of problem of EVERY severity can occur including
-. ANY new or relapsed “infection”
-. auto-immune harm to ANY organ or system (including allergy).
And the incessant violence and sexualisation of almost everything that spews out of televisions, pop ‘music’ videos and advertising?
When will that be restricted?
Shit no, the Market is King.
“Protect The Children” from What ?
Note that Substack chose from the outset to add itself to the list of age-restricted platforms, even though the Australian government did not, and still has not, and the gov’t guidelines for self-assessment (seriously) make it clear that Substack would be exempt from such a requirement.
And yet Substack went ahead and restricted its platform anyway. Now let’s see what Substack does to the Brits…
Also note the following details:
Meta owns both Facebook and Instagram. Instagram belongs to the Meta stable of extractive and exploitive products.
BlueSky self-reported to the AU eSafety Commission in November 2025, one month before the social media ban came into effect: “These are services which have notified eSafety of their view that they are age-restricted social media platforms and have agreed to being listed on this page: BlueSky, match services (Tinder, Hinge, etc.) [and several others].”
YouTube Kids is explicitly excluded from the AU social media ban, and has been from the beginning, effectively neutering that argument.
Expect a rise in outdoor anti-social behaviour and crime from youngsters who before the restrictions would have sat quietly indoors with their iPads.
There’ll be a solution for that….
Curfews!
Absolutely nailed it. Thank you. The naivety and gullibility of the average “politically active” person in the West is quite shocking. Most people have no grasp of the utterly psychopathic, estranged and monstrous nature of the power structure that runs our lives.
My source of hope is that their incompetence curtails their insane ambitions.
You are right. However, there’s another dimension to ‘most people’, as was widely observed across the Western world: Their tendency to approve of authoritarian intervention by the higher ups.
“The average ‘politically active’ person in the West”.
Much of it is bots.
Thanks to nanotechnology biosensors embedded in masks, tests, vaccines, food, air, soil, water, animals and human bodies they no longer require us to have cell phones
The Internet of Everything has exploded onto the built environment (Cognitive Cities) enabling ubiquitous surveillance under the skin via 6G, the Internet of Bio-Nano Things and the WBAN (Wireless Body Area Network IEEE802.15.6) contrary to the Criminal Code of Canada and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which protects us against unreasonable searches and seizures.
They are likely weaning the younger generation off of outdated technology because they are already programming/manipulating/gene-editing us remotely using molecular communication and our digital twins under the guise of AI Precision Healthcare.
https://www.the-sun.com/tech/15311586/t-mobile-4g-phase-out-network-plan-lte/
https://factsoverfear.substack.com/p/science-and-society-meetings-xi-prof