Don’t turn your kid into a junkyard of….’: Investor’s message sparks parenting debate |
On Thursday, April 2, 2026, a post from investor Dilip Kumar ignited a fresh parenting debate online after he urged parents to rethink how much screen time they allow children. His blunt line, “Don’t turn your kid into a junkyard of reels and stupid videos,” quickly travelled across social media because it captured a concern many parents already feel but do not always say out loud. The message arrived alongside growing worry about childhood inactivity, screen addiction and the amount of time children now spend indoors. Scroll down to read more…
A blunt message to parents
15 Jun 2026 | 12:57
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Kumar’s post was not written in soft language. In his message on X, he said children are moving less and sitting in front of screens more, and asked parents to “do whatever it takes” to get them physically active. He argued that childhood should be designed around movement, not constant digital stimulation, and warned that an industry built on endless content depends on children never getting bored.
Why the comment spread so fast
Part of what made the post stand out was its timing. The message arrived amid growing concern over childhood obesity and declining physical activity levels among young people. According to World Health Organization data cited in reports, nearly three-quarters of Indian children do not meet recommended physical activity levels. India is also among the countries with the highest number of children living with overweight and obesity, giving Kumar’s remarks a broader public-health dimension rather than making them seem like a simple criticism of screen time.
More than a screen-time argument
Kumar’s message went beyond complaining about phones and tablets. He tied excessive screen use to deeper concerns about inactivity, convenience culture and the loss of outdoor play. In the post, he said many school-going children are being diagnosed with issues such as anxiety and depression, and urged parents to make movement non-negotiable by encouraging sport and active play. The argument struck a nerve because it reflected a wider anxiety: that children are being raised in a world where entertainment is instant, but physical habits are getting weaker.
The debate it triggered
The reaction online was predictable and divided. Some users agreed strongly, seeing the post as a timely warning about a generation growing up on reels, comfort and constant distraction. Others felt the message was too harsh in tone, even if the underlying concern was valid. Still, the post managed to do what many public-service warnings struggle to achieve: it pushed parenting, technology and childhood health into the same conversation.
Why it resonated
What gave Kumar’s words force was not just the language, but the fear behind it. The message tapped into a familiar modern tension: parents want to keep children safe and entertained, but too much screen time can quietly replace play, movement and boredom, all of which help shape a child’s development. That is why the post drew attention far beyond one investor’s opinion. It felt like a warning about a larger shift in childhood itself.