lawmakers, they argue that they know what is driving the deadly crisis, and that it s social media. so today a group of bipartisan senators caught, and schatz, murphy, brit unveiled a bill that would establish an age of 13 for social media use, calling it a common sense bipartisan approach to stop the suffering. the legislation would require tech companies to get parents consent before creating accounts for users under the age of 18. this federal move follows utah last month, becoming the first state to require consent from parents before minors joined the social media platform. that s the most aggressive yet to shield kids from potential dangers online. it s not just legislators who have been active. in january the seattle public school district filed suit against parent companies of pit snapchat, tiktok, saying they had all potentially contributed to these mental health to file suit against social media companies. at the time d.a. told cnn, it is no different and opioid
to worry about whether someone s fundraising money, our purpose isn t to worry about whether someone is popular with their constituency. you, know 16 billion dollars might not be all that much to other states like new york and california, but it is a lot of money here in montana. we have a budget to put together, we have conversations about in what situations individuals lose their fundamental freedoms in this country. spendthrift their lives and selves. so i think our horry is making sure that we are able to have those conversations, without them being interrupted for political purposes. final thought, am i right that this was given priority over resolving the budget? like you still have to address that and you have very little time left on your calendar? no, the budgets moving along regularly. the only thing that did upset the budget was the fact that the house was not able to actually conduct any business for a significant amount of time. because we had a gallery full of energe