Agreed. I don’t know anyone suggesting forcing children to look at them. We are mostly dismantling the absurdity that graphic images should not be used at all on the possibility of children seeing them.
Then you are arguing against something that has not been proposed.
If you read my posts on this subject for the last several months you will see a continual theme. Use the pictures if you feel they are effective, but use them with **reasonable discrimination ** in areas where any person is going to reasonably expect that there will be large numbers of young children.
This discussion (and all the others that have preceded it) has
never been about “don’t use the pictures at all in any situation”. There are folks who are using these photos in ways that are reaching the public without having to also reach children under the age of 7. Vern and his friends keep pointing me toward testimonials on websites…which refer to people whose minds have been changed by the photos
on the website. They keep bringing up picketing at abortion clinics—I have specifically said many times that I can see the justification for using these in and directly outside abortion clinics. I have said repeatedly that I can see the justification for using these on college campuses, in sex ed classes, at publicized rallies, etc.
I
cannot see a reasonable justification for parading these outside a toy store, flying them behind planes over public beaches and towns, driving them on tractor trailer trucks around cities, parking them in neighborhoods and outside unsuspecting churches without permission, plastering them on people’s cars in grocery store parking lots when you can clearly see that there is a child’s booster seat in the back, leaving them on restaurant tables and in public restrooms in businesses frequented by parents with young children. Note that none of these are in the vicinity of abortion clinics.
These are indeed “forcing” children to see these images without their parents’ prior permission or cooperation. These are people who are deliberately going
out of their way to find places where families gather with their young children. This is not “accidental exposure” or “unintentional”, it is a deliberately planned strategy.
Reasonable discrimination in use would include: handing the material directly to an adult, restricting their use to places that are not reasonably expected to have large numbers of young children present unless their parents choose to bring them there, using them in your own religion’s sex education classes and religious education classes with the consent and cooperation of the parent, using other options in situations where you know there are likely to be numbers of young children.