Fairy Tales no longer permitted to be read, THANK YOU BAM!

busybody..

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Fairytales Are Not Politically Correct
January 5th, 2009
From the UK’s Telegraph:


Traditional fairytales ‘not PC enough’
Parents have stopped reading traditional fairytales to their children because they are too scary and not politically correct, according to research.

By Graeme Paton, Education Editor
Jan 2009

Favourites such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella and Rapunzel are being dropped by some families who fear children are being emotionally damaged.

A third of parents refused to read Little Red Riding Hood because she walks through woods alone and finds her grandmother eaten by a wolf.

One in 10 said Snow White should be re-named because "the dwarf reference is not PC".

Rapunzel was considered "too dark" and Cinderella has been dumped amid fears she is treated like a slave and forced to do all the housework.

The poll of 3,000 British parents - by TheBabyWebsite.com - revealed a quarter of mothers now rejected some classic fairy tales…

Two-thirds of parents said traditional fairytales had stronger morality messages than many modern children’s stories.

But many said they were no longer appropriate to soothe youngsters before bed.

Almost 20 per cent of adults said they refused to read Hansel and Gretel because the children were abandoned in a forest - and it may give their own sons and daughters nightmares.

A fifth did not like to read The Gingerbread Man as he gets eaten by a fox.

The most popular book read at bedtime is now The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle.

The simple tale, which features a greedy caterpillar eating too much food, was written in 1969.

It also emerged 65 per cent of parents preferred to read their children happier tales at bedtime, such as the Mr Men, The Gruffalo and Winnie the Pooh.

Three quarters of mothers and fathers try to avoid stories which might give their children nightmares and half of all parents would not consider reading a single fairy tale to their child until they reached the age of five.

Top bedtime stories of 2008:

1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Eric Carle (1969)

2. Mr Men, Roger Hargreaves (1971)

3. The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson (1999)

4. Winnie the Pooh, A.A. Milne (1926)

5. Aliens Love Underpants, Claire Freedman & Ben Cort (2007)

6. Thomas and Friends from The Railway Series, Rev.W.Awdry (1945)

7. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame (1908)

8. What a Noisy Pinky Ponk!, Andrew Davenport (2008)

9. Charlie and Lola, Lauren Child (2001)

10. Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Robert Southey (1837)

Top 10 fairy tales we no longer read:

1. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

2. Hansel and Gretel

3. Cinderella

4. Little Red Riding Hood

5. The Gingerbread Man

6. Jack and the Beanstalk

7. Sleeping Beauty

8. Beauty and the Beast

9. Goldilocks and the Three Bears

10. The Emperor’s New Clothes

Well, we can sure see how ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’ would not be considered politically correct.

And note that ‘The Three Little Pigs’ didn’t even make the list. (Don’t want to offend the Religion Of Peace, you know.)

Come to think of it, how do they even get away with calling them “fairytales”?
 
Disney made fairytales for children.

The Brothers Grimm is not a children's book.
 
Mr. Rogers, the world needs you now,

Alas, he's gone.
 
when i keep friend's kids, i read them poe.
 
Fairytales Are Not Politically Correct
January 5th, 2009
From the UK’s Telegraph:


Traditional fairytales ‘not PC enough’
Parents have stopped reading traditional fairytales to their children because they are too scary and not politically correct, according to research.

By Graeme Paton, Education Editor
Jan 2009

Favourites such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella and Rapunzel are being dropped by some families who fear children are being emotionally damaged.

A third of parents refused to read Little Red Riding Hood because she walks through woods alone and finds her grandmother eaten by a wolf.

One in 10 said Snow White should be re-named because "the dwarf reference is not PC".

Rapunzel was considered "too dark" and Cinderella has been dumped amid fears she is treated like a slave and forced to do all the housework.

The poll of 3,000 British parents - by TheBabyWebsite.com - revealed a quarter of mothers now rejected some classic fairy tales…

Two-thirds of parents said traditional fairytales had stronger morality messages than many modern children’s stories.

But many said they were no longer appropriate to soothe youngsters before bed.

Almost 20 per cent of adults said they refused to read Hansel and Gretel because the children were abandoned in a forest - and it may give their own sons and daughters nightmares.

A fifth did not like to read The Gingerbread Man as he gets eaten by a fox.

The most popular book read at bedtime is now The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle.

The simple tale, which features a greedy caterpillar eating too much food, was written in 1969.

It also emerged 65 per cent of parents preferred to read their children happier tales at bedtime, such as the Mr Men, The Gruffalo and Winnie the Pooh.

Three quarters of mothers and fathers try to avoid stories which might give their children nightmares and half of all parents would not consider reading a single fairy tale to their child until they reached the age of five.

Top bedtime stories of 2008:

1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Eric Carle (1969)

2. Mr Men, Roger Hargreaves (1971)

3. The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson (1999)

4. Winnie the Pooh, A.A. Milne (1926)

5. Aliens Love Underpants, Claire Freedman & Ben Cort (2007)

6. Thomas and Friends from The Railway Series, Rev.W.Awdry (1945)

7. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame (1908)

8. What a Noisy Pinky Ponk!, Andrew Davenport (2008)

9. Charlie and Lola, Lauren Child (2001)

10. Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Robert Southey (1837)

Top 10 fairy tales we no longer read:

1. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

2. Hansel and Gretel

3. Cinderella

4. Little Red Riding Hood

5. The Gingerbread Man

6. Jack and the Beanstalk

7. Sleeping Beauty

8. Beauty and the Beast

9. Goldilocks and the Three Bears

10. The Emperor’s New Clothes

Well, we can sure see how ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’ would not be considered politically correct.

And note that ‘The Three Little Pigs’ didn’t even make the list. (Don’t want to offend the Religion Of Peace, you know.)

Come to think of it, how do they even get away with calling them “fairytales”?

Well, thank God they aren't going to eliminate (NPI) our favorite fairy tale, The 120 Days of Sodom! While it may be a bit on the dark side, it results in only "good" and "healthy" nightmares.

Rad.

http://www.globusz.com/ebooks/120Days/00000010.htm
 
My daughter got Jack London bedtime stories, repeated multiple times, along with most of the non-PC ones listed below. She also got a few of the others, but I find Eric Carle to be like eating Quaker rice cakes - no flavor and you're still hungry afterward.
 
Fairytales Are Not Politically Correct
January 5th, 2009
From the UK’s Telegraph:


Traditional fairytales ‘not PC enough’
Parents have stopped reading traditional fairytales to their children because they are too scary and not politically correct, according to research.

By Graeme Paton, Education Editor
Jan 2009

Favourites such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella and Rapunzel are being dropped by some families who fear children are being emotionally damaged.

A third of parents refused to read Little Red Riding Hood because she walks through woods alone and finds her grandmother eaten by a wolf.

One in 10 said Snow White should be re-named because "the dwarf reference is not PC".

Rapunzel was considered "too dark" and Cinderella has been dumped amid fears she is treated like a slave and forced to do all the housework.

The poll of 3,000 British parents - by TheBabyWebsite.com - revealed a quarter of mothers now rejected some classic fairy tales…

Two-thirds of parents said traditional fairytales had stronger morality messages than many modern children’s stories.

But many said they were no longer appropriate to soothe youngsters before bed.

Almost 20 per cent of adults said they refused to read Hansel and Gretel because the children were abandoned in a forest - and it may give their own sons and daughters nightmares.

A fifth did not like to read The Gingerbread Man as he gets eaten by a fox.

The most popular book read at bedtime is now The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle.

The simple tale, which features a greedy caterpillar eating too much food, was written in 1969.

It also emerged 65 per cent of parents preferred to read their children happier tales at bedtime, such as the Mr Men, The Gruffalo and Winnie the Pooh.

Three quarters of mothers and fathers try to avoid stories which might give their children nightmares and half of all parents would not consider reading a single fairy tale to their child until they reached the age of five.

Top bedtime stories of 2008:

1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Eric Carle (1969)

2. Mr Men, Roger Hargreaves (1971)

3. The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson (1999)

4. Winnie the Pooh, A.A. Milne (1926)

5. Aliens Love Underpants, Claire Freedman & Ben Cort (2007)

6. Thomas and Friends from The Railway Series, Rev.W.Awdry (1945)

7. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame (1908)

8. What a Noisy Pinky Ponk!, Andrew Davenport (2008)

9. Charlie and Lola, Lauren Child (2001)

10. Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Robert Southey (1837)

Top 10 fairy tales we no longer read:

1. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

2. Hansel and Gretel

3. Cinderella

4. Little Red Riding Hood

5. The Gingerbread Man

6. Jack and the Beanstalk

7. Sleeping Beauty

8. Beauty and the Beast

9. Goldilocks and the Three Bears

10. The Emperor’s New Clothes

Well, we can sure see how ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’ would not be considered politically correct.

And note that ‘The Three Little Pigs’ didn’t even make the list. (Don’t want to offend the Religion Of Peace, you know.)

Come to think of it, how do they even get away with calling them “fairytales”?

I'm failing to see "Bam", as you call him, mentioned in the article. Nor is there a mention as to whether this study was conducted strictly in the UK, or had a wider scope.

Enlighten me, oh great "Professor" - what does this have to do with Obama?
 
I dunno

for EIGHT YEARS everything was the fault of Bush!

so this MUST be the fault of BAM:D
 
I dunno

for EIGHT YEARS everything was the fault of Bush!

so this MUST be the fault of BAM:D

Your logic (or lack thereof) is mind-boggling. Really.

For eight years, nothing has been the fault of Bush, except what was the fault of Bush. Wasn't Bush supposedly going to usher in a new era of responsibility? If so, shouldn't SOME of the fuckups of the last eight years be his?
 
Deal with it

Move on

LOL....you're hysterical. This is your typical response when someone calls you on your bullshit.

Do you do this with your "students" too?

"But Professor Busybody....the first President Bush referred to the Laffer Curve as 'Voodoo Economics,' didn't he?"

"Deal with it. Move on."

You must fall down and thank God every day that tenure exists, don't you? That is, if you are indeed a college professor. Which I doubt.

:rolleyes:
 
Politically Correct Bedtime Stories: Modern Tales for Our Life & Times by James Finn Garner is a great satire of what happens when stories become too PC. Sadly, stories will probably end up being like that.
 
Fairytales Are Not Politically Correct
January 5th, 2009
From the UK’s Telegraph:


Traditional fairytales ‘not PC enough’
Parents have stopped reading traditional fairytales to their children because they are too scary and not politically correct, according to research.

By Graeme Paton, Education Editor
Jan 2009

Favourites such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella and Rapunzel are being dropped by some families who fear children are being emotionally damaged.

A third of parents refused to read Little Red Riding Hood because she walks through woods alone and finds her grandmother eaten by a wolf.

One in 10 said Snow White should be re-named because "the dwarf reference is not PC".

Rapunzel was considered "too dark" and Cinderella has been dumped amid fears she is treated like a slave and forced to do all the housework.

The poll of 3,000 British parents - by TheBabyWebsite.com - revealed a quarter of mothers now rejected some classic fairy tales…

Two-thirds of parents said traditional fairytales had stronger morality messages than many modern children’s stories.

But many said they were no longer appropriate to soothe youngsters before bed.

Almost 20 per cent of adults said they refused to read Hansel and Gretel because the children were abandoned in a forest - and it may give their own sons and daughters nightmares.

A fifth did not like to read The Gingerbread Man as he gets eaten by a fox.

The most popular book read at bedtime is now The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle.

The simple tale, which features a greedy caterpillar eating too much food, was written in 1969.

It also emerged 65 per cent of parents preferred to read their children happier tales at bedtime, such as the Mr Men, The Gruffalo and Winnie the Pooh.

Three quarters of mothers and fathers try to avoid stories which might give their children nightmares and half of all parents would not consider reading a single fairy tale to their child until they reached the age of five.

Top bedtime stories of 2008:

1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Eric Carle (1969)

2. Mr Men, Roger Hargreaves (1971)

3. The Gruffalo, Julia Donaldson (1999)

4. Winnie the Pooh, A.A. Milne (1926)

5. Aliens Love Underpants, Claire Freedman & Ben Cort (2007)

6. Thomas and Friends from The Railway Series, Rev.W.Awdry (1945)

7. The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame (1908)

8. What a Noisy Pinky Ponk!, Andrew Davenport (2008)

9. Charlie and Lola, Lauren Child (2001)

10. Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Robert Southey (1837)

Top 10 fairy tales we no longer read:

1. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

2. Hansel and Gretel

3. Cinderella

4. Little Red Riding Hood

5. The Gingerbread Man

6. Jack and the Beanstalk

7. Sleeping Beauty

8. Beauty and the Beast

9. Goldilocks and the Three Bears

10. The Emperor’s New Clothes

Well, we can sure see how ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’ would not be considered politically correct.

And note that ‘The Three Little Pigs’ didn’t even make the list. (Don’t want to offend the Religion Of Peace, you know.)

Come to think of it, how do they even get away with calling them “fairytales”?
WTF?
Are you sure that article was about a recent event?
In the early 80s the woman's movement was censoring and rewriting a whole bunch of stuff.
In the mid 80s a book came out about fairy tales not being politically correct (PC is 90s term).
In the mid 90s, the whole thing started again, with the pledge allegiance "under god" controversy.
Don't tell me it's happening again.

I think this was an old article just reprinted.
 
WTF?
Are you sure that article was about a recent event?
In the early 80s the woman's movement was censoring and rewriting a whole bunch of stuff.
In the mid 80s a book came out about fairy tales not being politically correct (PC is 90s term).
In the mid 90s, the whole thing started again, with the pledge allegiance "under god" controversy.
Don't tell me it's happening again.

I think this was an old article just reprinted.

:rolleyes:Fairytales Are Not Politically Correct
January 5th, 2009
From the UK’s Telegraph:
 
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