The federal government should oversee, enforce, and review any online age-check law through clear rules, audits, and follow-up reports.
Answer what matters
Skip any question. Your message only uses the topics and provisions you answer.
Built from real bills
These questions come from 2 bills in Congress tied to this topic.
Track what happens
After sending, you can choose updates as votes, cosponsorships, and related bills move.
Tell us where you stand
Answer the policy questions below or skip any that do not fit your view. We'll map only your answers to the bills in Congress and draft your message.
1 bill on this topic
“The federal government should oversee, enforce, and review any online age-check law through clear rules, audits, and follow-up reports.”
1 bill on this topic
“The federal government should oversee whether online platforms follow age-check rules and should study whether those rules work.”
1 bill on this topic
“Websites that regularly make money from sexually explicit material should have to use real age checks before people can view it.”
1 bill on this topic
“Websites with adult sexual content should have to check that users are adults before letting them see it.”
1 bill on this topic
“If websites collect age-check information, they should have clear privacy rules, strong security, and limits on how long they keep that data.”
Optional, but recommended. Messages sound more real when they include one specific reason from your life.
Example: My daughter's school closed twice last fall because of wildfire smoke.
Step 2 of 3 · Add your info next
Your message will cover 2 bills in Congress
A Yale field experiment found legislators shown actual district opinion shifted their votes to match it. The ones kept in the dark? No relationship between constituent views and how they voted.
Offices log, sort, tag, and tally incoming contact, then brief the member. Constituent communications eat roughly a third of House staff resources. Your message gets counted.
92% of staff say individualized messages influence undecided lawmakers — versus 56% for form letters. Naming a specific bill with your own reasoning puts you in a different category entirely.
When offices don’t hear from constituents, they ask lobbyists instead. Not contacting your rep doesn’t leave the scale empty — it hands the weight to someone else.
These are the bills this page uses to build messages, mark time-sensitive action windows, and track votes or cosponsorships.
Where your representatives stand
Enter your ZIP to see recorded votes, cosponsorships, and public positions on the bills tied to this topic when data is available.