What's with stupid american animated shows?!


Question: why are the following words so offensive?

'Die'
'Kill'
'Damn'

those words are considered offensive and shoudn't be heard by kids, what a bunch of sissies!! WHY?!


Answers: why are the following words so offensive?

'Die'
'Kill'
'Damn'

those words are considered offensive and shoudn't be heard by kids, what a bunch of sissies!! WHY?!

Kids know alot more then that. Words like that wouldn't make them bad or anything, we hear worse things from family and friends. American cartoons are getting more and more stupid.

I dont think that those words are offensive and if the kids parents dont want their kids to watch animated shows with those words then they should tell their kids not to watch it

Because "soccer moms" think their kids are absolute idiots and need to be protected from everything.

coz of pressure from other animation producing countries, american animated is out of resource...

the parents are afraid that their kids might role play in the back yard, saying those words. then the crabby old lady next door gets offended and calls the cops for child negligence.

at least, thats what my parents told me in one of their lectures, if u know what i mean.

another thing is, is that, say u had a younger sibling. u may be able 2 watch the cartoons, but the sibling may be too young to understand and actually try to do those things, leading to the suicide killers of today. plus, parents want to keep the younger ones as cute and innocent as they can, for as long as they can.

both american and japanese animated shows are stupid.

Hmmmm.....
Children are too imature to comprehend the true nature of the malevolence of those dastardly vocabularies.
lol
I talked smart-likes^.^
Who knows....But The D word is frowned upon though...

Blame a group called ACT (Action for Children's Television) which was founded back around 1970 or so. ACT was initially concerned with the link between Saturday morning cartoons and sugary cereal (back in the days before the proliferation of cable "networks," Saturday mornings were the main time when children could watch cartoons for hours on end (there was also a two hour block of time after schools were out on weekdays when cartoons were shown but all three commercial networks had blocks of new made-for-television cartoons).

In the days when the FCC still had teeth and could dictate what could and couldn't be shown on television, the FCC did start passing rulings about what could and couldn't be shown or said in children's programs, once the main issue switched from sponsorship to content.

Censorship isn't as much of an issue as it once was, thanks to "narrowcasting" (i.e. the fact that there would be a "network" devoted to showing almost nothing but cartoons) but some things linger on. Are you absolutely positive that the three term you listed are somehow forbidden? I think you are making an assumption which you could not back up by citing empirical evidence.



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