A person his age may very well have had access throughout his childhood to all the world's ugliness.
Maybe; But so did most (or at least many) people his age.
If your hypothesis, that "access throughout ... childhood to all the world's ugliness" causes people to become assassins, is correct, then how do you explain the fact that assassination remains such a rarity? Where is the spike in such assassinations, tracking the spike in Internet access in the last thirty years or so, that your hypothesis predicts?
My point is that he lived a childhood very very different from mine or even my 33 year old daughter's.
My point is that so did everyone else his age, but they are not all out there assassinating people.
More speculation than a "hypothesis".
Well, yes; That's my point. And I am asking why we should accept or care about your speculation.
Speculation from reading the Reuters article about him; his opportunities, college if he wanted and if the reports of his testing scores are accurate, he likely would have breezed through, then voctech school and a seemingly responsible home life.
Or about speculation by Reuters, for that matter.
Re-stating the question isn't an approach to an answer; I don't know what happened, and nor do you, or anyone else.
Yet you want your mere speculation to be acted upon, which seems rash.
I wonder about the influences on people his age and younger as we are just coming in to a generation immersed in not just everything on the internet but social media, if I use the rise of facebook as a benchmark.
Wonder away. Call us if you have anything more than speculation to report.
Facebook rose - and then fell. Young people don't much use it these days; It is mostly a generation X phenomenon, and its current membership is fifty-somethings who stay because it lets them keep in touch with their old friends from thirty plus years ago.
This is wholly a part of their social development and goes far beyond anything previous generations may have had to deal with.
Does it? How?
No "they are not all out assassinating people" as they do not all think with one mind. But based of reports on how social media affects the mental health of children, I don't think minors should have access to social media at all.
"Based on speculation by reporters" isn't a good reason to have an opinion, much less a good reason to limit the freedoms of others.
I see no disadvantage to their having to interact with peers the old fashion way.
I see no evidence that they don't.
I can only think of a handful of people who would be disadvantaged.
By a ban on something almost everyone does, and clearly wants to do? I suspect your nostalgia is clouding your view of what constitutes a 'disadvantage'.
I'm just not inclined to wait for a body of evidence.
That is apparent. You want to eliminate other people's freedom, based on an evidence-less hunch that feels right to you.
This very common attitude is, I contend, FAR more of a contributor to division and violence than any social media could ever be.
The mental health reports are enough.
At least now we have mental health apps. A solution to a problem that need not exist.
Mental health problems are as old as humanity. Understanding them and seeking to mitigate their effects is fairly new, but that doesn't mean that those mitigation attempts need not exist. Like antibiotics, we
needed them centuries ago, but had to muddle through without, because they hadn't been invented yet.