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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: Re: MUST READ: Commodifying Children: The
Forgotten Crisis
I cannot for a minute, imagine HOW - parents
could be so indulgent - so irresponsible; that they would
'continually' let their children eat the slop at fast food
restaurants. God knows what's in the stuff?
There were NO fast food McSlop etc joints in our town (Pa).
The local restaurant and diner all had down home cooking/
try to find that today! Note how bloated and flabby a lot of
kids are today. Imagine little kids already overweight and
having blood pressure/diabetic issues!! With all the
processed foods/dyes in foods -plus children with
undeveloped immune systems being deluged with upwards (thus
far!) of 26 vaccines before entering school (vaccines
contain mercury - as a preservative, crosses blood barrier
in brain) then all kinds of boosters ----is it any wonder,
duh, that AUTISM is pandemic across the land/ in every
state!!
Growing up - we had the occassional learning disabled child,
but not schools filled with Special Needs children!! I got
so pissed the other day listening to this unemployed mom
bragging about the SS disability CHECKS ( $635.00 per kid)
for her 'learning disabled kids'!! Imagine/ especially when
people with legitmate claims, who've worked their entire
lives and become disabled (cancer etc) and have to BEG -
apply again and again!
Other industrailized nations have 'outlawed' vaccines with
mercury/ also FLU shots (hmm - the great increase in
Altzeimers?). To deal with this - what do we get/ my God,
kids given psycotropic drugs such as Ritalin (which cures
nothing!!).
The US is the largest user in the world of this drug!!
People take NO time in doing a search 'Truth about Ritalin'
or whatever drug/ drones are advising they MUST have!!
It's about profits!
Two groups of children show NO autism/ the Amish and a group
in Ill - Homestead. This medical group deals with over
30,000 children/ children who are homeschooled and offspring
of educated/informed folks who do not subscribe to the herd
mentality of injecting their youngsters with pharmecutical
voodoo vaccines.
They also do not have a problem with childhood diabetes /
bloated overweight kids. Other: Imagine ( I observed this in
neighbor children - relatives children) spending obsene
amounts of money on designer jeans - sneakers and VIDEO
games!! Enough money for some of those games to feed a
family for a week.
Children DEMAND this stuff!! They no longer are seen playing
outdoors - creating their own games/ race cars etc. They
become addicted to these GAMES playing for hours and hours.
Today many urban schools are chaotic and filled with
violence. This is not reported on the major media / the drop
out rate in some parts of the nation are over 50% - some
higher.
Social engineering (public not private schools) has replaced
teaching. Children are graduating unable to read - or do
simple math (ex: watch what happens when a computer goes
down in a store). McDonalds I am told - has symbols on their
registers / in place of numbers! Yikes.
Today we have kids that DRIVE to school/ they insist
on a car at age 16!! Sadly - with the economy in such dire
straits it is these children who are the worst off / they
can't imagine a world without materialistic excess. SAD -
Since we've had to be inundated with this ridiculous BS from
Gingrich/Cheney/Obama about torture done years ago ----there
has been zero media attention given to the FACT that the
Dept of Education (Dugan) via orders from the White House;
has cancelled the Washington D.C. ( 1900 kids!!) VOUCHER
program.
What a son of a bitching shame for this kids. Attending for
the past few years their scores (reading - math etc) jumped
almost overnight (professional teachers - attention - no
violence ) by TWO years!! Parents whose childre got accepted
into the highly competitive VOUCHER program were thrilled -
thrilled that their kids were going to get the education,
afforded the President's kids - Senators - CEOs - Cabinet
members etc. Listening to a independent TV report --parents
told of how they'd gotten 2nd and 3rd jobs for the extras
that VOUCHERS don't cover / which the wealthy kids take for
granted.
Parents spoke of how devasted their children , attending
Sidwell with the President' kids, were when told they had to
go back to the chaotic, ill maintained, decaying, violent
D.C. Schools. Ya didn't see these Black parents on CNN -
MSNBC or Fox!! Jesse couldn't say Jack shi*t --since his
FIVE kids went to the elite schools in Georgetown/ paid for
by his poverty pimping!! Ha - even the new director of
Education doesn't send his kids to Washington's public
schools, nor does R.Emanuel - Obama's Chief of Staff. What a
terrible injustice suffered by these kids and by a Black
president. Go figure!! JM
--- On Sun, 5/24/09, Lajocanda@aol.com <Lajocanda@aol.com>
wrote:
From: Lajocanda@aol.com <Lajocanda@aol.com>
Subject: MUST READ: Commodifying Children: The Forgotten
Crisis
To: Psyche1948@aol.com, Drichatl@aol.com, LiberationPoet@aol.com,
OlBooRadley@aol.com, tdietlin@sbcglobal.net, cwolman@mcn.org,
CougarDen@msn.com, annefrank1210@yahoo.com, GypsyJuno@aol.com,
GaiaSpirit@aol.com
Date: Sunday, May 24, 2009, 2:08 PM
Commodifying
Children: The Forgotten Crisis By Henry A. Giroux
http://countercurrents.org/giroux090409.htm
Commodifying
Children: The Forgotten Crisis
By Henry A. Giroux
09 April, 2009
Truthout
As
the United States and the rest of the world enter into
an economic free fall, the current crisis offers an
opportunity not only to question the politics of
free-market fundamentalism, the dominance of economics
over politics, and the subordination of justice to the
laws of finance and the accumulation of capital, but
also the ways in which children's culture has been
corrupted by rampant commercialization,
commodification and consumption.
There is more at stake in this crisis than stabilizing
the banks, shoring up employment and solving the
housing problem. There is also the issue of what kind
of public spaces and values we want to make available,
outside of those provided by the market, for children
to learn the knowledge, skills and experiences they
need to confront the myriad problems facing the
twenty-first century.
The road to recovery cannot be simply about returning
to modified free-market capitalism and a
re-established, utterly bankrupt consumer society.
Given all the pain and suffering that the vast
majority of Americans have endured, we should ask
ourselves if there is not a teachable moment here.
What kind of society and future do we want for our
children given how obviously unsustainable and
exploitative the now failed market-driven system has
proven to be?
In a society that measures its success and failure
solely through the economic lens of the Gross National
Product (GNP), it becomes difficult to define youth
outside of market principles determined largely by
criteria such as the rate of market growth and the
accumulation of capital. The value and worth of young
people in this discourse are largely determined
through the bottom-line cost-benefit categories of
income, expenses, assets and liabilities.
The GNP does not measure justice, integrity, courage,
compassion, wisdom and learning, among other values
vital to the interests and health of a democratic
society. Nor does it address the importance of civic
participation, public goods, dissent and the fostering
of democratic institutions. In a society driven
entirely by market mentalities, moralities, values and
ideals, consuming, selling and branding become the
primary mode through which to define agency and social
relations - intimate and public - and to shape the
sensibiliti es and inner lives of adults as well as
how society defines and treats its children.
While the "empire of consumption" has been
around for a long time,(1) American society in the
last thirty years has undergone a sea change in the
daily lives of children - one marked by a major
transition from a culture of innocence and social
protection, however imperfect, to a culture of
commodification.
This is culture that does more than undermine the
ideals of a secure and happy childhood; it also
exhibits the bad faith of a society in which, for
children, "there can be only one kind of value,
market value; one kind of success, profit; one kind of
existence, commodities; and one kind of social
relationship, markets."(2) Children now inhabit a
cultural landscape in which they can only recognize
themselves in terms preferred by the market.
Subject to an advertising and marketing industry that
spends over $17 billion a year on shaping children's
identities and desires,(3) American youth are
commercially carpet-bombed through a never-ending
proliferation of market strategies that colonize their
consciousness and daily lives. Multibillion-dollar
corporations, with the commanding role of commodity
markets as well as the support of the highest reaches
of government, now become the primary educational and
cultural force in shaping, if not hijacking, how young
people define their interests, values and relations to
others.
Juliet Schor, one of the most insightful and critical
theorists of the commodification of children, argues
that, "These corporations not only have enormous
economic power, but their political influence has
never been greater. They have funneled unprecedented
sums of money to political parties and officials....
The power wielded by these corporations is evident in
many ways, from their ability to eliminate competitors
to their ability to mobilize state power in their
interest."(4)
As the sovereignty of the market displaces state
sovereignty, children are no longer viewed as an
important social investment or as a central marker for
the moral life of the nation. Instead, childhood
ideals linked to the protection and well-being of
youth are transformed - decoupled from the "call
to conscience [and] civic engagement"(5) and
redefined through what amounts to a culture of
cruelty, abandonment and disposability.
Childhood ideals increasingly give way to a
market-driven politics in which young people are
prepared for a life of objectification while
simultaneously drained of any viable sense of moral
and political agency. Moreover, as the economy
implodes, the financial sector is racked by corruption
and usury, the housing and mortgage market is in free
fall, and millions of people lose their jobs, the
targeting of children for profits takes on even more
insistent and ominous tones.
This is especially true in a consumer society in which
children more than ever mediate their identities and
relations to others through the consumption of goods
and images. No longer imagined within language of
responsibility and justice, childhood begins with what
might be called the scandalous philosophy of money -
that is, a logic in which everything, including the
worth of young people, is measured through the
potentially barbaric calculations of finance, exchange
value and profitability. And this is part of the
economic crisis that is barely mentioned in the
mainstream media.
What is distinctive about this period in history is
that the United States has become the most
"consumer-oriented society in the world."
Kids and teens, because of their value as consumers
and their ability to influence spending, are not only
at "the epicenter of American consumer
culture," but are also the major targets of those
powerful marketing and financial forces that service
big corporations and the corporate state.(6)
In a world in which products far outnumber shoppers,
youth have been unearthed not simply as another
expansive and profitable market, but as the primary
source of redemption for the future of capitalism -
even as it implodes. Erased as future citizens of a
democracy, kids are now constructed as consuming and
saleable objects. Gilded Age corporations, however
devalued, and their army of marketers, psychologists
and advertising executives now engage in what Susan
Linn calls a "hostile takeover of
childhood,"(7) poised to take advantage of the
economic power wielded by kids and teens.
With spending power increasing to match that of
adults, the children's market has greatly expanded in
the last few decades, in terms of both direct spending
by kids and their influence on parental acquisitions.
While figures on direct spending by kids differ,
Benjamin Barber claims that "in 2000, there were
31 million American kids between twelve and nineteen
already controlling 155 billion consumer dollars. Just
four years later, there were 33.5 million kids
controlling $169 billion, or roughly $91 per week per
kid."(8)
Schor argues that "children age four to twelve
made ... $30.0 billion" in purchases in 2002,
while kids aged twelve to nineteen "accounted for
$170 billion of personal spending."(9) Molnar and
Boninger cite figures indicating that pre-teens and
teenagers command "$200 billion in spending
power."(10) Young people are attractive to
corporations because they are big spenders, but that
is not the only reason. They also exert a powerful
influence on parental spending, offering up a market
in which, according to Anap Shah, "Children
(under 12) and teens influence parental purchases
totaling over ... $670 billion a year."(11)
One measure of the corporate assault on kids can be
seen in the reach, acceleration and effectiveness of a
marketing and advertising juggernaut that attempts to
turn kids into consumers and childhood into a saleable
commodity. Every child, regardless of how young, is
now a potential consumer ripe for being commodified
and immersed in a commercial culture defined by
brands.
According to Lawrence Grossberg, children are
introduced to the world of logos, advertising and the
"mattering maps" of consumerism long before
they can speak: "Capitalism targets kids as soon
as they are old enough to watch commercials, even
though they may not be old enough to distinguish
programming from commercials or to recognize the
effects of branding and product placement."(12)
In fact, American children from birth to adulthood are
exposed to a consumer blitz of advertising, marketing,
educating and entertaining that has no historical
precedent. There is even a market for videos for
toddlers as young as four months old. One such baby
video called Baby Gourmet alleges to "provide a
multi-sensory experience for children designed to
introduce little ones to beautiful fruits and
vegetables ... in a gentle and amusing way that
stimulates both the left and right
hemispheres."(13)
This would be humorous if Madison Avenue were not dead
serious in its attempts to sell this type of hype -
along with other baby videos such as Baby Einstein,
Brainy Baby, Sesame Street Baby, and Disney's Winnie
the Pooh Baby - to parents eager to provide their
children with every conceivable advantage over the
rest. Not surprisingly, this is part of a growing $4.8
billion market aimed at the youngest children.(14)
Schor captures perfectly the omnipotence of this
machinery of consumerism as it envelops the lives of
very young children:
At age one, she's watching Teletubbies and eating the
food of its "promo partners" Burger King and
McDonald's. Kids can recognize logos by eighteen
months, and before reaching their second birthday,
they're asking for products by brand name. By three or
three and a half, experts say, children start to
believe that brands communicate their personal
qualities, for example, that they're cool, or strong,
or smart. Even before starting school, the likelihood
of having a television in their bedroom is 25 percent,
and their viewing time is just over two hours a day.
Upon arrival at the schoolhouse steps, the typical
first grader can evoke 200 brands. And he or she has
already accumulated an unprecedented number of
possessions, beginning with an average of seventy new
toys a year.(15)
Complicit, wittingly or unwittingly, with a politics
defined by market power, the American public offers
little resistance to children's culture being
expropriated and colonized by Madison Avenue
advertisers. Eager to enthral kids with invented fears
and lacks, these advertisers also entice them with
equally unimagined new desires, to prod them into
spending money or to influence their parents to spend
it in order to fill corporate coffers.
Every child is vulnerable to the many advertisers who
diversify markets through various niches, one of which
is based on age. For example, the DVD industry sees
toddlers as a lucrative market. Toy manufacturers now
target children from birth to ten years of age.
Children aged eight to twelve constitute a tween
market and teens an additional one.
Children visit stores and malls long before they enter
elementary school, and children as young as eight
years old make visits to malls without adults. Disney,
Nickelodeon and other mega companies now provide web
sites such as "Pirates of the Caribbean" for
children under ten years of age, luring them into a
virtual world of potential consumers that reached 8.2
million in 2007, while it is predicted that this
electronic mall will include 20 million children by
2011.(16 )
Moreover, as Brook Barnes points out in The New York
Times, these electronic malls are hardly being used
either as innocent entertainment or for educational
purposes. On the contrary, she states, "Media
conglomerates in particular think these sites - part
online role-playing game and part social scene - can
deliver quick growth, help keep movie franchises alive
and instill brand loyalty in a generation of new
customers." (17) But there is more at stake here
than making money and promoting brand loyalty among
young children: there is also the construction of
particular modes of subjectivity, identification and
agency.
Some of these identities are on full display in
advertising aimed at young girls. Market strategists
are increasingly using sexually charged images to sell
commodities, often representing the fantasies of an
adult version of sexuality. For instance, Abercrombie
& Fitch, a clothing franchise for young people,
has earned a reputation for its risque catalogues
filled with promotional ads of scantily clad kids and
its over-the-top sexual advice columns for teens and
preteens; one catalogue featured an ad for thongs for
ten-year-olds with the words "eye candy" and
"wink wink" written on them.(18)
Another clothing store sold underwear geared toward
teens with "Who needs Credit Cards ...?"
written across the crotch.(19) Children as young as
six years old are being sold lacy underwear, push-up
bras and "date night accessories" for their
various doll collections. In 2006, the Tesco
department store chain sold a pole dancing kit
designed for young girls to unleash the sex kitten
inside .
Encouraging five- to ten-year-old children to model
themselves after sex workers suggests the degree to
which matters of ethics and propriety have been
decoupled from the world of marketing and advertising,
even when the target audience is young children. The
representational politics at work in these marketing
and advertising strategies connect children's bodies
to a reductive notion of sexuality, pleasure and
commodification, while depicting children's sexuality
and bodies as nothing more than objects for
voyeuristic adult consumption and crude financial
profit.
For the last few decades, critics such as Thomas
Frank, Kevin Phillips, David Harvey and many others
have warned us, and rightly so, that right-wing
conservatives and free-market fundamentalists have
been dismantling government by selling it off to the
highest or "friendliest" bidder. But what
they have not recognized adequately is that what has
also been sold off are both our children and our
collective future, and that the consequences of this
catastrophe can only be understood within the larger
framework of a politics and market philosophy that
view children as commodities and democracy as the
enemy.
In a democracy, education in any sphere, whether it be
the public schools or the larger media, is, or should
be, utterly adverse to treating young people as
individual units of economic potential and as walking
commodities. And it is crucial not to
"forget" that democracy should not be
confused with a hypercapitalism.
Inevitably, humans must consume to survive. The real
enemy is not consumption per se, but a market-driven
consumer society fueled by the endless cycle of
acquisition, waste and disposability, which is at the
heart of an unchecked and deregulated global
capitalism. Under such circumstances, there are few
remaining spaces in which to imagine a mode of
consumption that rejects the logic of commodification
and embraces the principles of sustainability while
expanding the reach and possibilities of a substantive
democracy.
Juliet Schor touches on this issue by rightly arguing
that the real issue is "what kind of consumers do
we want to be?"(20) Or, to put it more broadly,
what kind of society and world do we want to live in?
As politics embraces all aspects of children’s
lives, it is crucial to make clear that the rising
tide of free markets has less to do with ensuring
democracy and freedom than with spreading a rein of
terror around the globe, affecting the most vulnerable
populations in the cruellest of ways.
The politics of commodification and its underlying
logic of waste and disposability do irreparable harm
to children, but the resulting material, psychological
and spiritual injury they incur must be understood not
merely as a political and economic issue but also as a
pedagogical concern.
At the same time, simply criticizing the market, the
privatization of public goods and the
commercialization of children, while helpful, is not
enough. Stirring denunciations of what a market
society does to kids do not go far enough. What is
equally necessary is developing public spaces and
social movements that help young people develop
healthy notions of self, identities and visions of
their future no longer defined - more accurately,
defiled - by market values and mentalities.
Obama's road to recovery must align itself with a
vision of a democracy that is on the side of children,
particularly young children in need. It must enable
the conditions for youth to learn, to
"grow," as John Dewey once insisted, as
engaged social actors more alive to their
responsibilities to future generations than
contemporary adult society has proven capable.
Such a project requires constructing a politics that
refuses to be animated by populist rage so easily
misdirected, or by a disdain for the social state, for
mutuality, reciprocity and compassion, among other
democratic values. In short, it must reject a society
whose essence is currently refracted in the faces of
children compelled to confront a future that as yet
offers very little hope of happiness, or even
survival.
References:
(1) Lizabeth Cohen, "A Consumer's Republic: The
Politics of Mass Consumption in Postwar America"
(New York: Vintage, 2003).
(2) Lawrence Grossberg, "Caught In the Crossfire:
Kids, Politics, and America's Future" (Boulder:
Paradigm Publishers, 2005), p. 264.
(3) See Josh Golin, "Nation's Strongest School
Commercialism Bill Advances Out of Committee,"
Common Dreams Progressive Newswire (August 1, 2007).
Online: http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/newsprint.cgi?file=/news2007/0801-06.htm.
Juliet Schor argues that total advertising and
marketing expenditures directed at children in 2004
reached $15 billion. See Juliet B. Schor, "Born
to Buy" (New York: Scribner, 2005), p. 21.
(4) Juliet Schor, "When Childhood Gets
Commercialized Can Childhood Be Protected," in
Regulation, Awareness, Empowerment: Young People and
Harmful Media Content in the Digital Age, ed. Ulla
Carlsson (Sweden: Nordicom, 2006), pp. 114ñ115.
(5) Kiku Adatto, "Selling Out Childhood,"
Hedgehog Review 5: 2 (Summer 2003), p. 40.
(6) Schor, "Born to Buy," p. 20.
(7) Susan Linn, "Consuming Kids" (New York:
Anchor Books, 2004), p. 8.
(8) Benjamin R. Barber, "Consumed: How Markets
Corrupt Children, Infantilize Adults, and Swallow
Citizens Whole" (New York: W. W. Norton &
Company, 2007), pp. 7ñ8.
(9) Schor, "Born to Buy," p. 23.
(10) Alex Molnar and Faith Boninger, "Adrift:
Schools in a Total Marketing Environment," Tenth
Annual Report on Schoolhouse Commercialism Trends:
2006-2007 (Tempe: Arizona State University, 2007), pp.
6-7.
(11) Anup Shah, "Children as Consumers,"
Global Issues (January 8, 2008). Online: http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated
/Consumption/Children.asp.
(12) Grossberg, "Caught in the Crossfire,"
p. 88.
(13) Linn, "Consuming Kids," p. 54.
(14) Molnar and Boninger, "Adrift," p. 9.
(15) Schor, "Born to Buy," pp. 19-20.
(16) Cited in Brooks Barnes, "Web Playgrounds of
the Very Young," New York Times, (December 31,
2007). Online at: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/31
/business/31virtual.html?_r=1&oref=slogin.
(17) Barnes, "Web Playgrounds of the Very
Young."
(18) Editorial, "Clothier Pushes Porn, Group Sex
to Youths," WorldNetDaily.com (November 15,
2003). Online: http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35604.
See also Editorial, "Tell Nationwide Children's
Hospital: No Naming Rights for Abercrombie &
Fitch," Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood
(June 2006). Online: http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/621/t/540
1/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=23662.
(19) Tana Ganeva, "Sexpot Virgins: The Media's
Sexualization of Young Girls," AlterNet (May 24,
2008). Online: http://www.alternet.org/story/85977/.
(20) Juliet Schor, "Tackling Turbo Consumption:
An Interview With Juliet Schor," Soundings 34
(November 2006), p. 51.
Henry A. Giroux holds the Global TV Network chair in
English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in
Canada.
**************
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