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Juan_Bottom wrote:What is with programs about teenager's target audience being little kids? I don't understand why Hannah Montana(to single out one) is a show for 8 year old girls. Is that not a completely silly role model?
And why the hell is Wal*Mart selling "training bras" to seven year olds? Even make-up kits?
Bratz Dolls are taking space away from Barbie, and yet they ain't helping. They are pretty literly tramp dolls.
Are we teaching children to dress sexy to feel self-worth?
What is the cure? Are we trying to get kids to get themselves pregnant or something?







Hologram wrote:Eh. Cultures shift. Who cares if the next generation is more free with their bodies? Sexual morality is a construct.
austrianeagle wrote:Hologram wrote:Eh. Cultures shift. Who cares if the next generation is more free with their bodies? Sexual morality is a construct.
True enough, though I still think that it is slightly disturbing














jnd94 wrote:Well that was at a time where that needed to happen. The age average has jumped significantly since the middle ages.
Hologram wrote:jnd94 wrote:Well that was at a time where that needed to happen. The age average has jumped significantly since the middle ages.
So? Puberty is puberty. If you can reproduce at 11, why wouldn't you?





jnd94 wrote:Survival of the Fittest.
The smart ones with smart people around them will learn not to do what they do. The others will get pregnant and have shitty lives.
















Juan_Bottom wrote:Are we teaching children to dress sexy to feel self-worth?
What is the cure?













muy_thaiguy wrote:Juan_Bottom wrote:What is with programs about teenager's target audience being little kids? I don't understand why Hannah Montana(to single out one) is a show for 8 year old girls. Is that not a completely silly role model?
And why the hell is Wal*Mart selling "training bras" to seven year olds? Even make-up kits?
Bratz Dolls are taking space away from Barbie, and yet they ain't helping. They are pretty literly tramp dolls.
Are we teaching children to dress sexy to feel self-worth?
What is the cure? Are we trying to get kids to get themselves pregnant or something?
A little late on the uptake, by about 3-4 generations. Look at Madonna, Britney Spears, and all the others. Besides, its not the programs I have a problem with, it is the parents that actually buy the stuff that worries me.
















jnd94 wrote:Survival of the Fittest.
The smart ones with smart people around them will learn not to do what they do. The others will get pregnant and have shitty lives.





Another thing that has to do with culture though. In our culture we don't let kids work and force them to go to school until they're 18. It's not a good way to let pregnant teens provide for their kids.Frigidus wrote:Hologram wrote:jnd94 wrote:Well that was at a time where that needed to happen. The age average has jumped significantly since the middle ages.
So? Puberty is puberty. If you can reproduce at 11, why wouldn't you?
Well, not being able to realistically provide for your children for one.
Hologram wrote:Eh. Cultures shift. Who cares if the next generation is more free with their bodies? Sexual morality is a construct.













Ditocoaf wrote:Hologram wrote:Eh. Cultures shift. Who cares if the next generation is more free with their bodies? Sexual morality is a construct.
To me, this isn't about being free with their bodies, it's about teaching them to advertise their bodies like a product they're selling. I believe in individual worth, and while it may still be torn down by the "morals are relative" standby, I think the dehumanization of any people is depressing.
Actually, scratch that concession to "morals are relative." How about this: I'm not going to use religious or societal standards of morals, I'm going to define ethics by an objective, absolute standard, using humanism as my basis. This is wrong because it will ultimately lead to a net unhappiness. Which means that: if these girls really do feel more fulfilled and happy in the end, having seen themselves as sexual objects since age 8, then by all means it's fine. But I doubt that it'll work out that way for the vast majority. Having a strong positive self-image is, I believe, proven to be important in the overall happiness of a human being, and this will wear away at that.
















InkL0sed wrote:Moral relativism doesn't hold much water.
InkL0sed wrote:Moral relativism doesn't hold much water.
















Hologram wrote:Of course it doesn't, because everyone thinks that their own morals are right.
Now, there are common themes, such as thou shalt not kill (at least not your friends' friends), but as far as sexuality goes, many cultures view sexuality in many different ways.
















Hologram wrote:Of course it doesn't, because everyone thinks that their own morals are right.
Now, there are common themes, such as thou shalt not kill (at least not your friends' friends), but as far as sexuality goes, many cultures view sexuality in many different ways.


Ditocoaf wrote:Hologram wrote:Of course it doesn't, because everyone thinks that their own morals are right.
Now, there are common themes, such as thou shalt not kill (at least not your friends' friends), but as far as sexuality goes, many cultures view sexuality in many different ways.
I'm not talking about socially acceptable morals. I'm talking about something else, I'm talking about what makes people happy, and that is important. I believe that this will end up with an overall loss of happiness in the long run. I don't care if something is unappealing to me or to society, if it makes people happy and hurts no-one. In that case, it is a good thing. But if society condones it, even if I condone it, and it's hurting people more than it's making people happy, then it is not a good thing. That is my standard.
This is still "relative," you can say, but it's definite: If what makes people happy changes, then what's right changes. But what's right doesn't depend on personal opinion. This is my humanist definition of morals.
















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