AshtonBlack wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
We don't? What sort of television do you have? There are horror and other R rated flix on various cable channels where I live at all hours of the day and night.
And, keeping horror flicks off certain t.v. channels. is effectively done by market forces.
Of course, as a "good" parent, you control who watches what, when? Yes and other parental controls. Where's the advert parental controls on Jetix, Disney or similar? Because you quite rightly pointed out people should have the choice what their kids watch. If a child wants to watch a given channel that we have no choice which adverts are on.
AshtonBlack wrote:
Advertisers know full well that "pester power" is a genuine business strategy and will try to get the most profit from it.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Why not? If they're selling a lawful product...
Lego corporation really tries to get kids to pester their parents to buy them more Legos, too.
Beer is lawful, but we don't sell it to kids. There are specific regulations setting that out.
We don't sell it to kids. However, we do allow beer advertising, at all hours of the day and night. And, frankly, if there is a regulation that says you can't have a clown sell beer, I'd oppose that too, for the same reasons. It's silly symbolic measures that do nothing to protect the chil'run.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
By using pester power, the corps are influencing the adults, without their consent. (They didn't necessarily watch the advert). And that's ok? What about subliminal advertising, is that fair game too?
Coito ergo sum wrote:
As for Lego, I fail to see how a toy contributes to child hood obesity.
You haven't established how eating 2000 calories of McDonald's food makes kids fatter than 2000 calories of home made meat and potatoes.
The reality is that kids are fat because they eat too much and burn off too few calories.
AshtonBlack wrote:
You may say, "Ahh well it's the parents fault for being weak willed and giving into their brats."
Coito ergo sum wrote:
I do say that. It's a parent's job to instill self-discipline and to raise mature adults. Banning Ronald McDonald does nothing to assist in that regard.
Pretty sure I didn't say Banning Ronald anywhere, I even voted "No."
I think I said ban advertising junk food to kids, on children's channels/schedules.
Yes, you said that McDonald's should not be able to advertise to children. When would Ronald McDonald not be targeted at children? When is Ronald, Mayor McCheese and Grimace and the Hamburgler targeted at adults? After 8pm? On ABC and NBC in the afternoon?
Coito ergo sum wrote:
AshtonBlack wrote:
So can we rely on people to do the right thing with reference to family nutrition? That is the option we have now.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Yes, we can, just as we always have.
Yeah, how's that Childhood Obesity working out for the US?
You'll need to establish that eating excessive McDonald's food makes people fatter than eating excessive other foods.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
The rates are going up and you still say "do nothing."
I didn't advocate doing nothing - far fucking from it. I advocated expanding sports in schools, expanding kids walking and biking to and from school wherever possible and safe, and expanding health education in schools and even parental education to explain to them that kids need to excercise and eat less.
People are fat because they eat more than they burn.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Well fair enough.
It was decidedly unfair, since you mischaracterized my argument as "do nothing" when I specifically stated what I would do. The only thing I've argued not doing is limiting the right to advertise a lawful product based on trumped up and unsubstantiated connections between McDonald's and childhood obesity (as distinct from EXCESSIVE FOOD INTAKE and childhood obesity).
AshtonBlack wrote:
It just makes sense to me, to reduce the exposure of children to this type of advertising.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
But, should it be by force of law?
It makes sense to me to reduce children's exposure to video games. However, I would not advocate banning them.
Huh? Who's talking about banning junk food? I'm taking about the advertisements aimed at kids.[/quote]
You trust the State to determine what is "aimed at kids" and what is not?
Coito ergo sum wrote:
AshtonBlack wrote:
I will concede, it is a contentious topic and no studies either way seem to be conclusive.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Or are even persuasive...
What would persuade you?
Evidence.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
AshtonBlack wrote:
How would you combat child hood obesity? Or would you let nature take it's course and do nothing?
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Have kids eat less and exercise more. The reason kids are fat is because they watch more t.v., sit in front of video games, and sit in front of computers longer than they ever have before - we have a far more sedentary society than ever before. Kids eat more calories, and burn less of them, so they get fat.
How would I combat childhood obesity? Expand sports in school -- allow more children to walk and bike to schools wherever possible, and perhaps fund education programs and campaigns to educate people on how to not be fat.
All good points and very true, but a little strange considering:
Coito ergo sum wrote:The State should not be telling its citizens what to feed their children. I, for one, don't trust the State to make that determination anyway since, like the Food Pyramid and "Recommended Daily Allowance" recommendations we have today, these are often partially driven by politics.
So which is it?
The difference is between providing education and mandating/prohibiting.
Just as the State can run a public school system and teach different subjects and have sports in school, so too it can "expand sports." It can also facilitate the burning of calories by having students walk and bike places where possible/practical. So too schools can expand health and fitness education and have more time for recess and workouts - why not? How, exactly, is that different than having a school system in general?
Banning advertisements is limiting freedom of expression. Expanding education is.....well..."expanding education."
Plus, once again, there is no evidence that eating of fast foods SPECIFICALLY qua fast foods is what's making people fat. There is, however, evidence - firm, grounded, scientific, evidence that shows that eating more calories than you burn results in your body storing fat. So, if you eat 3000 calories of McDonalds or 3,000 calories of beans, rice and fish, it's 3,000 calories. If you only burn 2000 calories that day, well, your body is going to store what it doesn't shit, piss or burn/use. Period - end of story. If you take in 1,000 extra calories a day, then you're going to get fat, whether from McDonalds or supermarket food.
Until someone presents some evidence that McDonalds, etc., food somehow makes you gain weight faster given the same number of calories, then it's fostering a myth.
It's like this fucking High Fructose Corn Syrup woo. People out there think that we're fat because stuff has High Fructose Corn syrup in it, and there is absolutely zero empirical evidence that effect. It's just plain, flat out woo.