A
allhers
Guest
I read through the thread before posting my comment, I don’t think that anyone takes delight in it. I do see your point, however, I also see that a child is more likely to react in a way that others react around them. This I showed from the way my parents reacted to shocking things when I was a child, I find great empathy now for many things as a result of that. I do not think that it will harm a child to see these images, like I said earlier, I saw the images of the holocost, the hangings, the burning crosses, and more when I was younger. (I was young when Dr. Martin Luther King was murdered, when Lee Harvey Oswald was assinated, when President Kennedy was assinated, when the Vietnam War was gong on, etc…It never made me want to do any of those things and my parents explained to me, on my level, and reassured me and comforted me when things did at first frighten me. They did not shelter me from the reality of all those things however. It wasn’t like they made me sit in front of the t.v. and watch the news, but when I came into the room while they were watching it, they didn’t react with shock that I was in the room and turn it off either.Then perhaps things like wording, placement, context, timing, etc need to be taken into consideration.
Placing a billboard in public that highlights the torn apart remains of an abortion invites public outcry from both pro-life and pro-abortion side. As witnessed on this thread, the pro-abortion side delights in the contention it creates.
Graphic imagery has a place, and it should serve to shock people into action. But placement on a public billboard fails this purpose utterly. The lack of consideration due the audience that may see it is the downfall of this tactic. You want to shock adults into action…not shock their preschool children. Nor force the parents into dialogues with their own children that the parent feels the child is not ready for.
It frightens children, and usurps the authority of the parent.