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Yeah! The Bratz are banned..... - Page 2  

post #21 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by ~Mom2thhts~ View Post
Blu Razzberri that was very well said!...

Aww, thanks.

And to the Barbie story. Barbies are SO trashy! And I totally used to play with them as a kid. :
post #22 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Blu Razzberri View Post

5) If Scholastic had been carrying a line of books that encourage pre-teens to have sex, do drugs, make porn, or any and all other inappropriate activities for pre-teens; would you be ok with a "ban" then; or does it still apply that you're against banning books? [/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT]
Yes, it still applies.
post #23 of 40
Oh, I can't stand The Bratz. Who are they supposed to look like? IMO they look gross and their clothes are tacky
post #24 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Freefromitall View Post
I don't support book bans, however, this is not a ban. The books are still allowed to be published/distributed. This company just chooses not to be the one doing the publishing/distributing.
Big difference imho


100% exactly precisely correct.

They're not pushing them to kids on school book lists. That's it.

That's not banning.
post #25 of 40
choli, i'm genuinely intrigued to know why you would still support a book that encourages pre-teens to have sex, do drugs or make porn? i have my own opinion, but i'd like to hear yours too if you don't mind sharing.

i know that sooner or later they are going to exposed to those subjects and parents will need to be there to talk to the child about making an informed and appropriate decision. but how many parents will actually do that? how many parents leave sex ed's up to the school to teach as it is? how many parents actually realize that thier children are being sexualized at a young age?

THIS is what i take into account when considering that some books are better off restricted in publishing. i don't think "oh poor child, whatever will they read now?"
i'm all for reading, but i'm going to be frank, there is some crap out there that needs to be restricted/banned and anything that encourages CHILDREN to behave as adults fits that category.
for example, i would let my kids read the harry potter books even though we as a family don't believe in wizardry (we're catholic). to me, a 8 year old becoming intriguied in magic after reading HP is a far cry from a 8 year old wanting to dress up in stilleto's and a mini skirt because apparently it's the going thing.. "you know mom, if it's in a book, it HAS to be good right?"

there are so many books that are available to read, restricting where bratz books can be purchased from is not the end of the world.

i'd wish they ban the dolls. i'd cheer then.
post #26 of 40
I like the Bratz. I wish they had been around when I was a kid.

The Bratz books aren't any less literarily (it's a word, I looked it up) stimulating than the Pokemon, Care Bears or any other book made just to market dolls and such. I think this is a pretty empty move from Scholastic (of whom I am not a big fan anyway).

It always surprises me to hear how objectionable people find the clothes. What's with all the judging a book by its cover? The Bratz outfits are pretty much just what the young women I know wear. I don't use their wardrobe to make assumptions about their morals, behavior or sex lives. Sure, the Bratz do wear some outfits I would not purchase for my young dds, but many of the dolls and figures they play with wear stuff not for young children (armor, uniforms, etc). But most of the outfits that come with the Bratz dolls are really not all that salacious. (Besides, the dolls here generally end up naked and that's how they play. Doll nudist colony, don'tchaknow.)

All this is not to say that I don't have some objections to the Bratz---they are the same issues I take with Barbie and her ilk and have mainly to do with body image and the One True Definition of being a Girl/Woman. I wish dolls out there were a little more diverse in shape, wardrobe and image. In the mean time, I'll take my Bratz over Barbie any day of the week.
post #27 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr.Worm View Post
I hear ya on the clothes! I am weird because I want my little girl to look like a little girl she is 8...I guess it's time to wear makeup and short tight minis to school.
Um I think you are forgetting about the padded bra. Hello how's a girl supposed to look sexy without the bra!

(Total sarcasm there just in case there was any doubt.)

I HATE the over sexualized things that are marketed for our kids. Fortunately this year the clothing trends seem to have shifted. About time too!
post #28 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mackenzie View Post
I am torn on this. I LOATHE that line of doll/books/movies/etc... absolutely loathe it and will not allow them in my house.

But I have a really really hard time supporting any kind of book banning. Reading crap is better than not reading and parents always have the choice ot not allow it, as have many of us. By banning things like that, we are, in effect, taking that choice away from parents and saying "oh we've got this, you don't have to worry about it" I don't think that I can tell a parent that they can't allow their kids to read stuff like this any more than I can fathom telling them they have to let their kids read Harry Potter, if they've decided not, no matter how misguided I think they are


sigh, it's a toughie...
I don't think this about banning books or making a choice for what parents are "allowed" to expose their kids to, as much as it's a companies choice not to provide the material. (Unless I've completely missed the mark on this)
post #29 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tinker View Post
Um I think you are forgetting about the padded bra. Hello how's a girl supposed to look sexy without the bra!

(Total sarcasm there just in case there was any doubt.)

I HATE the over sexualized things that are marketed for our kids. Fortunately this year the clothing trends seem to have shifted. About time too!
yeah..how could I forget that?
post #30 of 40
Personally, I would like to see scholastic stop marketing ALL the cartoon advertising crap literature,(including Barbie and all the little toys etc. they sell at book faires) and live up to their wholesome reputation and the trust so many parents put in them. Bratz is a start. I hate censorship, but can refusing to market commercialistic, low-quality, pseudo-educational products really in the same ballpark as book burning?
I think calling it a ban to start with got us off on an unintended train of thought.
post #31 of 40
I've been saying that forever. When I send my kids money for a book fair, I want them to come home with real books, not cartoon crapola.
post #32 of 40
"One of America's largest distributors of books to schools has stopped listing Bratz books"....

I don't read this as "banned" at all. I read it as this particular company is no longer going to market these particular books to children through the school system.
post #33 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by bigeyes View Post
I've been saying that forever. When I send my kids money for a book fair, I want them to come home with real books, not cartoon crapola.
So teach your kids to make intelligent choices, instead of relying on others to make your children buy the kind of books that you prefer.
post #34 of 40
teaching your kids to make intelligent choices is one thing, getting them to do what you want when they're out of sight and have an attachment disorder is a whole different story.

Attachment disorders equal defiance and doing the opposite of what is expected. Do I give one child money for the book fair and tell the other one she can't have any because she can't be trusted? Or do I keep giving her opportunities to do better and hope the school isn't selling cr@p this year? :

A book fair should sell books, yk, volumes with actual words in them?

I don't think that's too much to ask.
post #35 of 40
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Originally Posted by llamalluv View Post
I thought censorship was a BAD thing.
It is and I am disgusted that anyone would be happy about this.
post #36 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mackenzie View Post
That very well maybe, and you are probably correct about the content, having not read one myself. However, should we as parents, or Scholastic as a purveyor, make that decision for all? What is different between that and the banning of Rowling, or Blume, or Hemingway, or any number of other greatly challenged books? It all boils down to a matter of opinion and I am just not comfortable with banning of the printed word, no matter if I agree with the subject content or not. Believe me, I wish I could consciously organize a mass pire out of Limbaugh and Dobson for a start...
I agree - and don't forget Ann Coulter.

I especially think inane, stupid books should be allowed to speak for themselves.
post #37 of 40
I don't think that is banning if scholastic chooses not to offer a particular book. That said, book banning is never a good thing.
Saying that because a parent allows their child to read a book about a trendy toy or tv series does not mean that they are crappy parents or that they don't have the sense to know that it is not on the same level as Mark Twain or Hemmingway is unjust. What if you have a child who has absolutely no desire to read, isn't trying at all, but sees a book that catches their eye that contains cartoon characters or TV series characters and they actually want to read? Some parents may find this an opening to help a child learn to love to read. When my kids have struggled with loving to read, I tell them that when they find a book or series that they really can get into, they will love it.
My kids are really voracious readers. They read a diverse selection of books. When Harry Potter came out, teachers and other adults were soooo against kids reading the books because they might make them believe in magic and could lead them to trying to fly. When my kids came and told me about what these adults had said about the books, I asked them if they knew that the things in the book were not real. They did, and that was all I had to say about it.
The same can be said about cartoon books. Do you talk to your kids and let them know that it is not real? Do they know the difference between imagination and real life? I love to read murder mysteries. It does not mean that I wish to become a murderer.
I am rambling now, sorry.
post #38 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by thisiswhatwedo View Post
can I just side track enough to tell you about this birthday gift a boy from my daughters preschool gave her. I think the mom may have been clueless because she has all boys (?) but they gave my 5 year old this Barbie doll that had a real slutty miniskirt and jacket with stiletto heels and a big bag that came with credit cards fashion magazines and a cell phone. It also had a latte with one of those cardboard hand protectors. The best part was her other outfit was a black and pink mesh baby doll nightie.
I kinda think of the bratz as packing less than a punch than that.
I actually thought it was funny, I mean it was like some SNL skit.
I'd love to have one of those...to put it outside our house for Halloween night...very scary!!

I always wonder to myself when I see weird stuff like that, "What do these poor Chinese factory workers think about this stuff when they are making it?"
post #39 of 40
Quote:
Originally Posted by Otterella View Post
There's a big difference between "banning" a book and declining to market it to an inappropriate audience. You wouldn't expect to see Danielle Steele marketed in Scholastic flyers, would you? It's an inappropriate audience. Nobody is telling the kids "You're not allowed to read these books no matter where you get them." That would be a ban. But I applaud the decision to stop advertising them to children.
ITA. No one is banning these books from all book sellers in the country. Scholastic simply made a good decision not to offer Bratz.
post #40 of 40
Isn't kind of like taking candy bars out of the vending machines at school?
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