PUGalicious
01-02-2006, 05:48 PM
(Originally posted here (http://independentchristianvoice.com/2006/01/02/concerned-women-for-american-says-barbie-website-promotes-gender-confusion/))
Concerned Women for America (http://www.cwfa.org/articles/9788/CWA/misc/) has issued a warning to parents:
The iconic Barbie Doll has become another tool for promoting gender confusion among children. On the Barbie Web site, www.Barbie.com (http://www.Barbie.com), there is a poll that asks children their age and sex. The age choices are 4-8, but as Bob Knight, Director of CWA’s Culture & Family Institute, notes children are given three options for their choice of gender. Click here (http://www.cwfa.org/play.asp?id=cw20051230a) to listen.
I am a father of two daughters, so this item piqued my interest. I listened to what Bob Knight had to say, but I admit I was still skeptical. So I checked out the website and it indeed gives the view three options. Is this part of a proactive homosexual agenda, as Mr. Knight contends? Is Mattel executing a campaign to confuse little girls into questioning their sexual identity? Is the part of a grander scheme of the vast homosexual conspiracy to compel Corporate America to destroy traditional Christian values and destroy America’s children? I don’t know. Mr. Knight said little that was convincing, when you take what he says in the context of CWA’s stated agenda.
But, as a father of two daughters trying to instill Christ’s values in their lives, I do not see this Barbie poll as the biggest threat to my daughters, in the same way that I didn’t see Sponge Bob Square Pants, Tinky Winky and Lenny the Shark were threats to my daughters’ morality. Even if it was, it’s my responsibility as a parent to educate my girls about Christ’s teachings and scripture, to pray for them and to guide them as they grow. I firmly believe that if you were to ask my girls who has the most influence in their lives, they would say their parents. We are very involved in their lives, work hard to build steadfast open lines of communication, spending significant time each week talking with them.
My girls will face all kinds of corrupting influences in their lives, while they live with us and after they move on. Our goal as parents is not to shelter them from every possible negative influence; rather, as they face negative influences, we walk them through those challenges, explaining why those influences are not in their best interest and allowing them to choose the correct path. Rather than imposing morality upon them, we are trying to instill a moral compass that guides them in the right direction. We cannot be with them 24/7/365 and be their morality police; it has to come from within them in order for them to make right choices when we’re not around.
I do not know why Mattel chose to list three choices for gender on the Barbie poll. Is it part of a surreptitious scheme to instill (or at minimum, validate) gender confusion in little girls’ minds? It’s possible, but I have reasonable doubts. In any case, it doesn’t change my role as a parent. A solid, moral foundation helps a child ignore or reject those things that are contrary to their moral compass — like a “sinister” third option for gender selection on a Barbie poll.
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Concerned Women for America (http://www.cwfa.org/articles/9788/CWA/misc/) has issued a warning to parents:
The iconic Barbie Doll has become another tool for promoting gender confusion among children. On the Barbie Web site, www.Barbie.com (http://www.Barbie.com), there is a poll that asks children their age and sex. The age choices are 4-8, but as Bob Knight, Director of CWA’s Culture & Family Institute, notes children are given three options for their choice of gender. Click here (http://www.cwfa.org/play.asp?id=cw20051230a) to listen.
I am a father of two daughters, so this item piqued my interest. I listened to what Bob Knight had to say, but I admit I was still skeptical. So I checked out the website and it indeed gives the view three options. Is this part of a proactive homosexual agenda, as Mr. Knight contends? Is Mattel executing a campaign to confuse little girls into questioning their sexual identity? Is the part of a grander scheme of the vast homosexual conspiracy to compel Corporate America to destroy traditional Christian values and destroy America’s children? I don’t know. Mr. Knight said little that was convincing, when you take what he says in the context of CWA’s stated agenda.
But, as a father of two daughters trying to instill Christ’s values in their lives, I do not see this Barbie poll as the biggest threat to my daughters, in the same way that I didn’t see Sponge Bob Square Pants, Tinky Winky and Lenny the Shark were threats to my daughters’ morality. Even if it was, it’s my responsibility as a parent to educate my girls about Christ’s teachings and scripture, to pray for them and to guide them as they grow. I firmly believe that if you were to ask my girls who has the most influence in their lives, they would say their parents. We are very involved in their lives, work hard to build steadfast open lines of communication, spending significant time each week talking with them.
My girls will face all kinds of corrupting influences in their lives, while they live with us and after they move on. Our goal as parents is not to shelter them from every possible negative influence; rather, as they face negative influences, we walk them through those challenges, explaining why those influences are not in their best interest and allowing them to choose the correct path. Rather than imposing morality upon them, we are trying to instill a moral compass that guides them in the right direction. We cannot be with them 24/7/365 and be their morality police; it has to come from within them in order for them to make right choices when we’re not around.
I do not know why Mattel chose to list three choices for gender on the Barbie poll. Is it part of a surreptitious scheme to instill (or at minimum, validate) gender confusion in little girls’ minds? It’s possible, but I have reasonable doubts. In any case, it doesn’t change my role as a parent. A solid, moral foundation helps a child ignore or reject those things that are contrary to their moral compass — like a “sinister” third option for gender selection on a Barbie poll.
.