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[–] 15922083? ago  (edited ago)

The irony is that they promote hate and bully,ing with this. Literally had a group of libtrds bully me for using the word Retarded in a tavern. I'll be back to use the word advanced and ultimately get banned.

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[–] 15920614? 1 point -1 points (+0|-1) ago 

you sound like Tipper Gore you shrieking pussy. go censor some music you faggot.

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[–] 15923610? 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Big difference between looking/asking for state intervention or censorship and making well informed consumption decisions for your family.

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[–] 15922467? [S] ago 

this nigger likes Jew childhood programming ^^

thinks it's 'free speech'

btw, faggot... EMINEM is a Jew POS

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[–] 15920553? 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

It's true. So many movies too coming out with a child protagonist killing and beating bad guys.

It's permeated into video games with report systems that essentially cause bans which are all user operated.

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[–] 15923288? ago 

I've heard of people refer to the trope or genre as "killer cuties" adolescent, preteen, or teen girls on murdering or revenge killing sprees. Movies include: Carrie, Kickass, Hanna, Logan (wolverine spinoff), Suckerpunch, characters like XMen Rouge, and the young yakuza girl in Kill Bill, Claudia in Interview with a Vampire, and even Rey in Star Wars. Generally interpreted as addressing unspoken anxiety of society unease with adolescent girls coming of age when they discover and express independence and sexuality.

Other genres mix violence with feminine power like motherhood/reproductiive rights addressed in both Alien, Terminator, Species series.

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[–] 15924506? ago 

Alien, Terminator and the like are adult women. The other examples are of teens becoming adults. The examples OP is insinuating and the ones I was referring (without mentioning I guess? I forget) are of pre-teen children with those actual personalities. It's not like a rugrat cartoon where they are babies but have childlike personalities or like Stewy from Family Guy. They're literal children as protagonist handling guns or weapons.

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[–] 15920155? 0 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago 

I noticed this waaaay back in the iCarly days (when I stopped allowing my son to watch that crap). Parents were marginalized or missing altogether, and the adults that were included were always depicted as idiots.

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[–] 15922962? ago  (edited ago)

The hit show PJ Mask has kids sneaking out at night (in double identity costumes) to solve crimes. No parents at all.

A Netflix show Super Monsters features (double identity again) kids that turn into Frankenstein, vampire, werewolf, Cleopatra/mummy, witch, and zombie at night to solve issues. The gist is they learn to deal with their super powers.

For even younger age group, Paws Patrol has puppies and young boy independently solving crimes and safery mishaps caused by the towns adults. Frequently the waspy boomer town mayor is the issue as he is greedy and bumbling idiot.

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[–] 15923554? 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Ps...

Myth and fairy tales have long history mixing youth and adult worlds.

Sometimes children and adolescents find their way without adult/parental guidance in youth world. Either in isolatuon from adults or in a world with hapless or clueless adults that don't understand and can't help anyway.

Others with youth (seperated from their loving family) navigating a world of untrustworthy adults. Hansel and Gretel, Red Riding Hood, Narnia stories, and the Alice, Wizard of Oz, and Charlie series. The last few notably frequently noted as mind control programming content by pedo authors.

Less often do you have a healthy, integrated relationship where adults and family assist the youth in overcoming obstacles. I'd argue that Harry Potter series is one of the few modern ones. Older examples are Swiss Family Robinson, Lost In Space, etc.

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[–] 15920004? 0 points 7 points (+7|-0) ago 

THANK YOU! Almost every one of these show features at least one (usually more) mega-BRAT .. with a spoiled and selfish attitude problem always in control of the parents. I don't understand HOW parents let their children watch this garbage and not think it's going to influence them. I have people in my family who I've tried to explain this to and they don't get it. All these programs and movies need to do is throw in one good "moral of the story" scenario for them to approve. I try to explain that one good scene in a movie doesn't negate 2-hours of horrendous programming!! It's insane.

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[–] 15920693? ago 

Simpson’s, Family Guy, etc., etc.

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[–] 15919485? ago 

Thank you for taking up space on this board with something unrelated to Q Research and without any source information.

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[–] 15919480? 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

If I had kids, no television, and no public schooling.

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[–] 15921070? ago 

I'm with you on this. Unfortunately, my ex has physical custody though we split them half the time and I would home school my kids in a heartbeat if it were up to me. As far as television and pop culture influence goes, I've talked with both of them since they were old enough to understand that TV, movies, games, etc., are make-believe and that following the examples of a make-believe culture makes you something less than a person. Both of them are heavy readers (though they love some xbox, which I don't mind) and seem to have taken the lesson to heart as I have two children who are well-spoken, polite, well-read, respectful, and aren't out making trouble.

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[–] 15922164? ago 

Good for you. Good kids are a treasure.

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[–] 15919389? ago 

C'mon OP, at least list something so we can see examples.

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