It's a fucking doll for god's sake, get over it...

Samandiriel

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Groups Threaten to Boycott American Girl

NEW YORK - American Girl, manufacturer of a highly popular line of dolls and children's books, has become the target of conservative activists threatening a boycott unless the toy maker cuts off contributions to a youth organization that supports abortion rights and acceptance of lesbians.


The protest is directed at an ongoing American Girl campaign in which proceeds from sales of a special "I Can" wristband help support educational and empowerment programs of Girls Inc., a national nonprofit organization which describes its mission as "inspiring girls to be strong, smart and bold."

American Girl, whose often patriotic products have long had a loyal following among conservatives, issued a statement Friday defending its support of Girls Inc. and assailing the protest campaign.

"We are profoundly disappointed that certain groups have chosen to misconstrue American Girl's purely altruistic efforts and turn them into a broader political statement on issues that we, as a corporation, have no position," the statement said.

The Mississippi-based American Family Association, in a campaign launched Wednesday, is urging its members to demand that American Girl halt support for Girls Inc., which it called "a pro-abortion, pro-lesbian advocacy group."

"Let American Girl know they are making a terrible mistake," AFA chairman Don Wildmon said in a statement. The AFA says it has more than 2.2 million members.

The Pro-Life Action League, a Chicago-based anti-abortion group, also is asking supporters to contact American Girl to express dismay. The league's executive director, Ann Scheidler, said her organization might call for a boycott of American Girl's products and organize picketing at its stores in Chicago and New York if the company doesn't sever ties with Girls Inc.

"Parents need to know that this effort to promote self-esteem among girls is not as innocent as it seems," Scheidler said. "While Girls Inc. has some good programs, they also support abortion, oppose abstinence-only education for girls, and condone lesbianism."

American Girl, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc., said the "I Can" initiative supports three specific Girls Inc. programs — building girls' skills in science and math, developing leadership skills, and encouraging athletic skills and team spirit.

"All of these aims are appropriate to our 7- to 12-year-old American Girl fans," the company said. "The American Girl brand exemplifies the values of wholesomeness and responsibility that we would expect any organization to commend."

Girls Inc., which traces its roots back to a center founded in Waterbury, Conn., in 1864, serves about 800,000 girls a year, many of them black or Hispanic and most from low-income families.

The "advocacy" page on its Web site lists some of the positions that roused conservative ire — for example a clear endorsement the 1973 Roe v. Wade court decision establishing a woman's right to abortion.

Girls Inc. also supports a girl's right to have access to contraception and pledges support for girls dealing with issues of sexual orientation.

Joyce Roche, the president of Girls Inc., said the New York-based organization had never before been targeted by a protest campaign.

"We were taken aback," she said in a telephone interview Friday. "Our programs are well-respected. We're all about helping girls see possibilities and dream big dreams."

She said Girls Inc. takes positions on public policy issues if it believes women's rights and opportunities are at stake. "Our philosophy is that women should have the right to make decisions about themselves," Roche said.

One of the protest coordinators, American Family Association special projects director Randy Sharp, said the campaign was noteworthy because American Girl's products have long been favored by conservatives. Its dolls (full-sized models sell for more than $80) include a series from different eras of American history — such as Felicity, from the Revolutionary War, or Addy, who escapes from slavery during the Civil War.

"American Girl has won the trust of millions of conservative families," Sharp said. "It's very popular among the home school movement because of the values the company followed."

"Now we find they're teaming up with Girls Inc., which supports the very things we oppose. It's very troubling."

Sharp said the AFA was not yet ready to call for a boycott, but he predicted that many conservative families — including his own — would be reluctant to keep buying American Girl products. "I think no question this will have a financial impact on American Girl," he said.

___
 
Shit!

Why does the adjective "conservative" keep cropping up in the attacks?

Or does it really, as I fear, really serve as an acceptable synonym for "bigotted"?
 
vamplawyer said:
Oh hell, now I have to go out and buy my daughter 1/2 dozen dolls. :D

Got to be better than Barbies and if thier donating a portion to abortion rights...
$85 smackers for the basic doll.
And then there are SO many accessories. but they are good looking, well made, and come with all the liberal propaganda mentioned in the article.
You wouldn't believe the "American Girl" store, in Chicago!
I applied for a job there, in the doll hospital. That would have been fun!
 
Any boycott would last only as long as parents can withstand the tears and screaming and pouting from their disappointed daughters.
 
i tried really hard but never got passed:
Groups Threaten to Boycott American Girl
whatever. honest to god...arent there enough things in the world to worry over, like wallpaper?!
 
This kind of thing is just so predictable and depressing I can't even get worked up over it any more.

Have you ever noticed that every hate based, anti-lesbian/gay/abortion/contraception/evolution/etc. group always has 'family' somewhere in it's title, because as we all know, the only real family is a father, mother and 1-15 kids. Oh, and they're white christians of course. Everyone else is a hethan and going to hell. :rolleyes:


Edited to add: I bought my daughter one for Christmas. :cool:
 
cheerful_deviant said:
For the doll and my daughter.

(They didn't have one in my size. :( )
no worries, this is what xmas is for.
i have a wonderful garter and fishnet just waiting for you...
 
rgraham666 said:
you rang?
well, actually, homeboy isnt taking calls tonight...seems theres these major issues hes trying to clear up over in the desert.
 
Well, I won't be buying one, not because I give a flying fart who they give their charity dollar to, but because, as was said before, no doll is worth $85. At that price it'll either never be played with or will fall apart in 10 minutes and I'll have to engage in child abuse...
 
Yah some people have nothing better to do than boycott things..like the ones who boycotted Shrek because they say it promotes homosexuality and transgenderism and the flight attendants who tried to get ppl to boycott Flight Plan...sometimes people just have way too much time on their hands!

Samandiriel said:
Groups Threaten to Boycott American Girl

NEW YORK - American Girl, manufacturer of a highly popular line of dolls and children's books, has become the target of conservative activists threatening a boycott unless the toy maker cuts off contributions to a youth organization that supports abortion rights and acceptance of lesbians.


The protest is directed at an ongoing American Girl campaign in which proceeds from sales of a special "I Can" wristband help support educational and empowerment programs of Girls Inc., a national nonprofit organization which describes its mission as "inspiring girls to be strong, smart and bold."

American Girl, whose often patriotic products have long had a loyal following among conservatives, issued a statement Friday defending its support of Girls Inc. and assailing the protest campaign.

"We are profoundly disappointed that certain groups have chosen to misconstrue American Girl's purely altruistic efforts and turn them into a broader political statement on issues that we, as a corporation, have no position," the statement said.

The Mississippi-based American Family Association, in a campaign launched Wednesday, is urging its members to demand that American Girl halt support for Girls Inc., which it called "a pro-abortion, pro-lesbian advocacy group."

"Let American Girl know they are making a terrible mistake," AFA chairman Don Wildmon said in a statement. The AFA says it has more than 2.2 million members.

The Pro-Life Action League, a Chicago-based anti-abortion group, also is asking supporters to contact American Girl to express dismay. The league's executive director, Ann Scheidler, said her organization might call for a boycott of American Girl's products and organize picketing at its stores in Chicago and New York if the company doesn't sever ties with Girls Inc.

"Parents need to know that this effort to promote self-esteem among girls is not as innocent as it seems," Scheidler said. "While Girls Inc. has some good programs, they also support abortion, oppose abstinence-only education for girls, and condone lesbianism."

American Girl, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc., said the "I Can" initiative supports three specific Girls Inc. programs — building girls' skills in science and math, developing leadership skills, and encouraging athletic skills and team spirit.

"All of these aims are appropriate to our 7- to 12-year-old American Girl fans," the company said. "The American Girl brand exemplifies the values of wholesomeness and responsibility that we would expect any organization to commend."

Girls Inc., which traces its roots back to a center founded in Waterbury, Conn., in 1864, serves about 800,000 girls a year, many of them black or Hispanic and most from low-income families.

The "advocacy" page on its Web site lists some of the positions that roused conservative ire — for example a clear endorsement the 1973 Roe v. Wade court decision establishing a woman's right to abortion.

Girls Inc. also supports a girl's right to have access to contraception and pledges support for girls dealing with issues of sexual orientation.

Joyce Roche, the president of Girls Inc., said the New York-based organization had never before been targeted by a protest campaign.

"We were taken aback," she said in a telephone interview Friday. "Our programs are well-respected. We're all about helping girls see possibilities and dream big dreams."

She said Girls Inc. takes positions on public policy issues if it believes women's rights and opportunities are at stake. "Our philosophy is that women should have the right to make decisions about themselves," Roche said.

One of the protest coordinators, American Family Association special projects director Randy Sharp, said the campaign was noteworthy because American Girl's products have long been favored by conservatives. Its dolls (full-sized models sell for more than $80) include a series from different eras of American history — such as Felicity, from the Revolutionary War, or Addy, who escapes from slavery during the Civil War.

"American Girl has won the trust of millions of conservative families," Sharp said. "It's very popular among the home school movement because of the values the company followed."

"Now we find they're teaming up with Girls Inc., which supports the very things we oppose. It's very troubling."

Sharp said the AFA was not yet ready to call for a boycott, but he predicted that many conservative families — including his own — would be reluctant to keep buying American Girl products. "I think no question this will have a financial impact on American Girl," he said.

___
 
1. Well, a boycott is a time-honored tradition. It can be effective. It can often be more effective than the numbers, the actual economic effect, would warrant, because the market is much more sensitive to this kind of thing than the bottom line is.

2. Wildmon is one of the world's biggest assholes. This is what he does for a living, is act as a focusing device, a lens for assholes. A concentrator of assholery.

I leave you to draw your own conclusions. Decrying the boycotters will have no effect whatever, even if you did it somewhere else where people would ever hear you. So I'm afraid that stuff has you no further ahead.
 
Kids, girls mostly, really do get into the American Girls. They're a little too patriotic for my tastes. I'm amazed the Wildmons of the world have chosen these people to fuck with.

Some of the American girls are very interesting, historically. They bring history alive by pegging it to real experiences. The stories seem a little comic-booky, to me, but kid's lit is a difficult tightrope to walk successfully.
 
mack_the_knife said:
Well, I won't be buying one, not because I give a flying fart who they give their charity dollar to, but because, as was said before, no doll is worth $85. At that price it'll either never be played with or will fall apart in 10 minutes and I'll have to engage in child abuse...
Actually, these dolls are very well made. They are, also, intended to engage older young girls- about eight to teen (when of course, the girls discover how to manipulate real-live boys- much more fun than plastic)
be that as it may...

the dolls are definitely meant to be played with, and don't fall apart very easily.
 
Mack, I hear you on one thing. It does really suck when a big investment turns out to be a dud. The thing, whatever it is, is actually largely ignored, I mean. It's altogether too easy to miss the wave, to meet a desire that has already passed by the time you do it.

I didn't have to deal with American Girls with my own daughter. She was grown and out of state at school when they hit it big, and there are no grandchildren yet. So I'm an observer from a certain distance on the issue. It isn't going to be personal for some time. I saw the dolls and books when I worked inthe bookstore, only.
 
Actually, the fix is done in from our 6 year old. She's requested a nice cheap Cabbage Patch Kid, only about 25 bucks. Lucky me.
 
fifty5 said:
Shit!

Why does the adjective "conservative" keep cropping up in the attacks?

Or does it really, as I fear, really serve as an acceptable synonym for "bigotted"?


Conservative is not synonamous with bigoted. However, if you are a bigot, and you need an adjective, that one has become a favorite to hork. Along with Family values, family oriented or pro life.
 
cantdog said:
1. Well, a boycott is a time-honored tradition. It can be effective. It can often be more effective than the numbers, the actual economic effect, would warrant, because the market is much more sensitive to this kind of thing than the bottom line is.

2. Wildmon is one of the world's biggest assholes. This is what he does for a living, is act as a focusing device, a lens for assholes. A concentrator of assholery.

I leave you to draw your own conclusions. Decrying the boycotters will have no effect whatever, even if you did it somewhere else where people would ever hear you. So I'm afraid that stuff has you no further ahead.


Wildmon, if the god he professes to believe in exists, has a nice, hot room in hell reserved for him. He is the poster child for the intolerant, politically active, viscious and repressive Christian. Frankly, the fact that he hasn't been disowned publically and loudly by every church that claims to believe in the teachings of Christ is a mystery. Christian love is a concept completely beyong the grasp of his little hate filled hard wired mind.
 
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