Aww, thanks.
And
to the Barbie story. Barbies are SO trashy! And I totally used to play with them as a kid.
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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] |
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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 |
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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. |
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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... ![]() |
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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! |

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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...
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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. ![]() |
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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.
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