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02-28 How Bad Therapy Hijacked Our Nation’s Schools – Thoughts, Warriors?

American kids are the freest, most privileged kids in all of history. They are also the saddest, most anxious, depressed, and medicated generation on record. Nearly a third of teen girls say they have seriously considered suicide. For boys, that number is an also alarming 14 percent.

What’s even stranger is that all of these worsening mental health outcomes for kids have coincided with a generation of parents hyper-fixated on the mental health and well-being of their children.

What’s going on?

That mystery is the subject of Abigail Shrier’s fascinating, urgent new book: Bad Therapy: Why the Kids Aren’t Growing Up.

Read more here.

lynnswarriors02-28 How Bad Therapy Hijacked Our Nation’s Schools – Thoughts, Warriors?
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02-26 The Dangers of Parents Sharing Their Children’s Lives on Social Media

A new investigation looks at the disturbing world of so-called “kidfluencers” and the moms who run their accounts. One in three preteens say being an influencer is a career goal, but the reality poses serious risks to underage girls. Stephanie Sy discussed those concerns with New York Times reporter Michael Keller.

Read more here.

lynnswarriors02-26 The Dangers of Parents Sharing Their Children’s Lives on Social Media
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02-25 FACT CHECK. Proposed Kids Online Safety Act Does Not Require Websites to Verify Government IDs

So many falsehoods surrounding the bipartisan Kids Online Safety Act #KOSA now awaiting vote in Senate.

The Warriors always shares truths not fears. This bill(S.1409) will protect ALL children.

Learn the facts and share information with family and friends.

It’s 2024. You can no longer sit on the sidelines. We can and must take action.

#communitycreateschange #KOSA #protectkidsonline #BeAWarrior

Learn more here. 

lynnswarriors02-25 FACT CHECK. Proposed Kids Online Safety Act Does Not Require Websites to Verify Government IDs
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02-24 One Third of Missing Children Enticed Online are Recovered in a Different State: New Analysis

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) is releasing a brand-new analysis of children who were lured out of their homes and were reported missing to NCMEC. The report analyzed 476 cases reported missing to NCMEC between 2020 and 2023.

Online enticement is a broad category including online grooming, sextortion and sending, receiving or sharing sexually explicit images and videos. The cases addressed within this analysis contained serious scenarios where the offender ultimately met up with the child to commit a sexual offense or abduction, leading them to become a missing child. 

By reviewing these cases and learning more about these children’s experiences, the National Center hopes to better inform parents, caregivers, law enforcement, child welfare professionals and others who work to prevent this crime and bring missing children home safely.

Staca Shehan, vice president of NCMEC’s Analytical Services Division, the team who worked on the analysis, says that this information is important because it uncovered additional data and trends related to children and youth who went missing after being enticed online and expands upon anything NCMEC has released previously. This includes information on the child being targeted by adults online before going missing and age differences between the offender and the child.  

Within the analysis, NCMEC found that 41% of offenders in these cases were more than 10 years older than the child. The largest age difference was 48 years.

“These age differences demonstrated that although the rates of missing children enticed online are low when compared to the number of children online, when they do occur much older adults are targeting kids and using their vulnerabilities against them,” Shehan said.

Read more here. 

lynnswarriors02-24 One Third of Missing Children Enticed Online are Recovered in a Different State: New Analysis
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02-23 Lawmakers Propose Maryland Online Child Protection Act to Shield Minors from Obscene Content

BALTIMORE — More than 68% of youth reported exposure to online pornography, according to the National Institute of Health.

Experts say exposure to this kind of material at an early age can cause psychological and even physical harm. However, Maryland lawmakers have proposed a solution to protect children from this harmful content.

The Maryland Online Child Protection Act would mandate safety settings on phones, tablets, and game devices marketed to minors, that would automatically block obscene content.

“A lot of people think that it just stops there, but it doesn’t,” said De’ Asia Wiggins, a survivor of online trafficking.

For De’Asia Wiggins – who lost her mother when she was just 11 – being exposed to pornography while she was in foster care, led to unwanted real-life encounters.

Read more here. 

lynnswarriors02-23 Lawmakers Propose Maryland Online Child Protection Act to Shield Minors from Obscene Content
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02-22 Gov. Kristi Noem Warns Mexican Cartel Is Trafficking Kids in South Dakota – And We Know in Other States As Well. Wake Up America!

“They’re not just at the border, they’re here in South Dakota and they’re bringing fentanyl in that’s killing our kids and trafficking our children,” she said.
lynnswarriors02-22 Gov. Kristi Noem Warns Mexican Cartel Is Trafficking Kids in South Dakota – And We Know in Other States As Well. Wake Up America!
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02-19 SOUND THE ALARM! The Hidden Dangers of Kid’s Phones in the Bedroom

When it comes to having phones in the bedroom, it seems every parent has a different opinion. Some parents are hands-off about it, while others have their bedtime routine written in stone. We know it can be hard to determine what’s best for your child when there are so many voices saying different things. That’s why we put together the research about what happens when kids have their phones in the bedroom — and why it’s probably better to avoid it.

Read more here. 

lynnswarriors02-19 SOUND THE ALARM! The Hidden Dangers of Kid’s Phones in the Bedroom
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