Actually your the one bashing people for displaying these signs by your hypothesis that children will be scarred for life by seeing them. Support your statement. Also support your assertations that these signs are not effective and while your at it, list those items which you consider to be more effective.
It is the general societal norm, as well as supported by arguments already cited specifically from the Catholic Church, that showing graphic images of violence to young children is neither desirable or beneficial and that what is considered appropriate for teens and adults is not across the board appropriate for preschoolers. Society also has a norm that it is not desirable for young children to receive unwanted and non-age appropriate sex education from random strangers on the street. I have already stated multiple arguments for this.
Hollywood manages to get it and uses rating systems, television manages to get it and has rating systems, video games and music publishers manage to get it and have ratings and labels. Public libraries and bookstores manage to get it and put the children’s books separate from the adult books. Newspapers manage to get it and in general have some concern for the pictures they put on the front page vs. the inside pages or publish at all. Schools manage to get it and have different curricula for older vs. younger children. There are laws that differentiate between what it is appropriate behavior for an adult with a child and for an adult with an adult. The Church seems to get it, based on the works on sexuality that I have cited (
vatican.va/roman_curia/po…uality_en.html—
I particularly refer you to numbers 77, 83, 84, 142, and 148).
It is, of course, possible for a parent who so desires to circumvent any and all of these, but that is a matter of choice. It is also possible for others to circumvent and violate these norms, but that usually is not looked upon well by society.
When challenged about going against these societal norms, the justification continues to be “it’s the best way we have to get the word out” and that “if it were not the case, they would gladly never show such images to young children” (though I will agree, IIRC, that you are an across the board advocate of doing so on general principles). I am challenging any of you to show
something concrete that such is indeed the case. You must have
some basis other than a few anecdotes to think that this method is superior enough to other methods employed by other prolife activists that you are willing to “tolerate” what your own people say are undesirable side effects.
I would have thought so as well, but bmmckinney’s experience seems to indicate otherwise:
“BUT it is ok to do so if we are targeting their parents, why? Because many women who have children already end up aborting, even women who march at the March for Life end up aborting in crisis pregnancies only because they didn’t know how awful abortion is.”
And do this how. Unlimited money for pamphlets? Unlimited availability of labor for distribution? Please explain more.
If you do not have unlimited money for pamphlets and unlimited labor for distribution, why in the world are you wasting your time, energy and resources on strategies whose effectiveness you do not know?
Actually it is the general public who need to be educated in such matters. It doesn’t make much sense to preach to the choir.
Again, I am deferring to bmmckinney’s reports that says that such is necessary because the “choir” evidently isn’t learning much from the presence of the graphic posters at the March for Life event that they are attending.
Another way of saying shift the target audience from being the general public to specifically targeting pre-schoolers. Not as effective.
No, in that case, it is just “unintended” that the preschoolers in the class might see the posters because the “intended” target is the teacher. What is the difference between that and the “intended” target being a bus driver and the “unintended” being the kids on the school bus or day care van driving by your signs? What is the threshold concentratrion of the same children beyond which it is no longer acceptable to show these images to them and why does concentration make a difference?