By Jeremy Chen, 15, CIS
Society needs to learn to embrace human nature. The doll from The You and Me Interactive Play & Giggle Triple Dolls contains a beautiful message society is interpreting: If swearing is wrong, why do we as civilized members of society swear? If we were to ban the doll because it swears, why don’t we make swearing illegal?
Society needs to learn to embrace human nature. The doll from The You and Me Interactive Play & Giggle Triple Dolls contains a beautiful message society is interpreting: If swearing is wrong, why do we as civilized members of society swear? If we were to ban the doll because it swears, why don’t we make swearing illegal?
There is a very simple reason to this, and that’s because we can’t. We recognize swearing as something crude, offensive, foul and even at times, disgusting: yet we continue to do it anyways. This is what defines us. This is human nature. The report from AFRO states clearly that parents are more than upset about it, calling the dolls a “potty mouth”, and are not willing to “expose profanity to their children”. The report also says that a recent study states that 80% of adults swear in public, and 70% of teenagers swear. We need to stop blaming dolls and reflect upon our own actions. Children don’t learn to swear from dolls, children learn to swear from us. In order to stop children from swearing, we must stop ourselves from swearing.

We need to stop making excuses. If we really want to improve the conditions of society for children, we must recognize that we are the problem. Banning dolls isn’t going to stop your child from swearing. Waking up from denial and choosing to improve yourself will.