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Quote by: Zhavric Advertising that targets adults is bad, but it's nowhere near as sinister or as effective as advertising that targets children.
More information can be found at the website for " Campaign For A Commercial-Free Childhood" • Children see about 40,000 advertisements a year on TV alone, a figure that does not include product placement.5
• Children see advertisements on the Internet, at the movies, on school buses, in their classrooms and cafeterias.
• Almost every major media program for children has a line of licensed merchandise used to sell fast-food, breakfast cereals, snacks and candy.
• Many toys, such as Coca-Cola Barbie and McDonald’s Play-Doh are actually
advertisements for junk food.
• In their effort to establish cradle-to-grave brand loyalty, marketers even target babies through licensed toys and accessories featuring media characters.
• Until the age of about 8 children do not understand advertising’s persuasive intent.
• Very young children can’t distinguish between commercials and program content; even older children sometimes fail to recognize product placement as advertising.
• Marketers often use older children’s desire to fit in with their peers and tendency to rebel against authority figures as selling points for their products. A recent Pepsi ad celebrated teens who had been arrested for downloading music illegally.
Maybe you want someone to steel all your money and kick you out of your house? Maybe you'd prefer to eat garbage than regular food. Maybe you'd prefer to not have access to health care and watch your body rot away? Maybe you'd prefer to be ignored by all of society even when you need help? Maybe you'd prefer to be routinely abused? Maybe you'd prefer to smell like a toilet 24/7 and live in your own filth?
Sounds great, eh? Like to sign up? |
As for your reference to adverstising and children: It is called parental control. Plain and simple.
As for your reference to the homeless, your rhetoric aimed at me makes no sense at all. :rolleyes: We have "homeless" people in Norwich CT. A very close friend of mine is a Norwich Police officer. He knows almost everyone one of the "homeless". We offer them shelter and they refuse only to set up shanties along the river. We offer them hot meals which, occasionally, they take them. We offer them the opportunity of an alternative lifestyle that will put them on the path to a new life and we offer them job training. Many refuse. We offer them substance abuse counselling, and they refuse it. What do you suggest? And better yet, what do YOU do to help people in need?