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It's O.K. to Post Pictures of Kids Breastfeeding Their Dolls on Facebook
Proving that it still doesn't quite have a handle on what's offensive and what isn't, Facebook's latest apology has to do with taking down photos of young girls pantomiming breastfeeding. Ok, so the second part of that may strike you as a bit weird (especially if you don't know any girls who did that with any of their dolls), but apparently it's quite all right to post pictures of your children mock breastfeeding on the popular social media platform, as the pro-breastfeeding U.K. website Express Yourself Mums found out. The site had their Facebook page pulled and reinstated after its owners uploaded pictures (above) of their young girls breastfeeding. As The Guardian notes, "Facebook has a history of categorising photos of breastfeeding as 'obscene content' and removing them. But this is the first time a British group – or a picture of children role-playing breastfeeding – has been taken down." Facebook has also had a history peppered with controversy of keeping offensive jokes on for too long and more recently, taking down abortion instructions, which all kind of circles back to free speech and the problems of maintaining that on a money-making website. One analyst puts Facebook's censorship problems succinctly. "The risk is that it becomes associated with such acts as the US government taking down Wikileaks or the Chinese restricting Google ... On the other hand its commercial revenues depend on it not being linked to publicly odious sentiments." http://www.theatlanticwire.com/globa...acebook/47161/ ----------------------------------------------------------- Condsidering I have been mulling this over for the last hour, pictures of young children simulating breastfeeding is just not sitting well with me. I dont find breastfeeding, even in public, to be offensive. It doesnt bother me for kids to simulate what they may see at home, in the home. What does bother me, I think, is posting pictures of it on the internet. I tend to fail to see the need to people to post pictures about every aspect of the lives, or to share every deal of it with a world of virtual strangers. Something about doing this to kids seems exploitive to me. Parents go to extraordinary lengths to protect their children and the innocence of their children. Yet, they will post something for the entire world to see, some of those who are people who sexualize the innocent and playful acts of young children. Wondering if this is bugging anyone else. |
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I think that I just wrote and erased 3 different responses to this. lol I feel a bit mixed about this. Had I had facebook when my kids were younger and had I taken a picture of my oldest mock breastfeed her dolls(which is a normal behaviour as they watch mom nurse and tend to younger babies) I may have put it on my facebook, which is only open to those who are on it (friends and family) to share the cuteness. So, in that sense to share with people you love a moment that you found worth sharing there is nothing wrong with it. Not directed at you, but just a general question, what would the response be if the pictures were of little boys mimicking the same behaviours? I'm still in the air about this, I think I need to think about it a little more.
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#3 | |
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I am with you on this. Private stuffed shared with family and friends is one thing. And, if someone posted a picture of their kid playing baseball, I wouldnt give it a second thought. When I saw the title of the article, I wondered why it was such a big deal. The abstract idea didnt bother me. It was the picture that came with the article above that started me being bothered by this. I am trying to figure out why this is bugging me and if it should bug me. Was hoping some input from others would help to put things in perspective. |
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It disturbs me too, for a couple of reasons. Obviously FB makes no sense. A friend of mine who is a brilliant artist has had her FB page taken down several times because of its erotic content, they said her art was offensive. (To me, the only offensive art is bad art, but even that is subjective.)
If your FB account is private and all your settings are adjusted so that absolutely nobody can see your pictures without your consent, then I don’t see any problems. Kids are going to emulate what they see at home, little girls will try on high heels and makeup, and little boys will practice shaving. (And little boys will try on high heels and makeup, and little girls will practice shaving, but I digress.) The problem comes with the way people use FB. I regularly see people using pictures of their children as their own profile pic, leaving their photo albums open to all even though their wall might be private. I think that’s a mistake on so many levels, but if you want to share pictures of your drunk and disorderly self with the world, that’s your decision. Posting pictures of your kids anywhere on the internet needs to be considered very seriously. And yes, I’d be worried about people sexualizing the pictures of little girls breast feeding their dolls, but the truth is that a simple Google search of “little girls breast feeding their dolls” turned up a kazillion images that are available to anyone with a computer, as well as plenty of information about “the breast milk baby”, an $89 doll that comes with a special halter top with two flowers positioned where nipples would be, and makes “lifelike” suckling sounds. More on the doll here: http://thebreastmilkbaby.com/ Controversy about the doll here: http://abcnews.go.com/US/breast-milk...2#.TxMNsoFJCSo And this subject makes me think of this: |
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Kids pretending to breast feed is fine in my book. It's a good thing, maybe they will breast feed their own children one day. Posting pics of it is another matter.
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I would like to talk about another aspect of this issue. Breastfeeding dolls and breastfeeding in general. A little girl picking up her doll and putting it to her breast is one thing. And a little kid who wants to breast feed her/his doll certainly has that option. However designing a doll whose main purpose is to make sucking noises while attached to flowers on a halter top your kid is wearing feels like a whole other ball game. It harkens back to the day when people believed a woman’s real job was as a baby factory and just naturally assumed she would get with a guy and drop some babies. It’s like training for little girls to assume their proper societal roles. It is not only gendered but biologically deterministic. Of course all toy dolls further perpetuate gender roles. That can’t be helped. And to a certain degree is fine. However a milking doll takes biology to a whole other level. With all the subtly of a train wreck it reinforces societal beliefs that little girls and women are biologically inclined towards child rearing and nurturing behaviors. According to proponents of these dolls, they teach nurturing skills to little girls. I think we have always focused on teaching nurturing skills, often confused with passivity and compliance, to our female offspring. How about a little nurturing skills for our boy children? I mean since when is nurturing behavior only a good thing when done by a woman?
Another problem I see with breastfeeding dolls is how it helps to reinforce the established belief that breast feeding is the normal way to feed a baby. I understand that it is the accepted best way to feed one’s child. The benefits of breast feeding make it the good choice. It’s just that it ends up sounding like breast feeding is the only choice for good mothers. And to chose convenience instead makes you a bad mother or at the least a selfish mother who puts her own needs over the needs of her child. WIC, a program that gives assistance to women in need, has decided it can cut back on infant formula making it only supplemental because women should just breast feed. Again others are controlling women’s bodies and telling them what they should be doing with them. I believe breast feeding should be a socially accepted act. Currently it is seen as impolite at best in the western world. Maybe it’s because women’s bodies are too much viewed as sexual rather than functioning. Women’s breasts are seen as sex objects that need to be hidden away. So while I agree breast feeding needs to become more publicly acceptable, I am talking about women breast feeding not little girls breast feeding. Little girls strapping on flower nipples to breast feed their sucking dolls just seems fraught with biological determinism and a healthy degree of ickyness.
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It makes me uncomfortable.
It stems from my personal belief that breast feeding is a very intimate time between mother and child, something sacred and innocent. I don't think it's bad, just private. Most every moment is a moment of learning. We are constantly pointing our children in what we believe to be the right direction, not to say that she wasn't pointed in the right direction, just not the direction I would have chosen for my child. I do not have an issue with women breast feeding in public. I don't stare at or otherwise intrude upon someone while they are eating, no matter if they are sitting, standing or cradled in someone's arms. It just isn't polite. |
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I don’t have any problem with a women breast feeding in public. None. Not even any. Not even a hint of any. Nope. However, I do believe whether or not to breast feed one’s child is a mother’s decision. Pressure to make her feel like a bad mother or a selfish mother because she chooses, for whatever reason, not to breast feed is problematic to me. I have a problem when WIC makes the decision for mothers needing assistance by not making enough formula available for them to do anything but breast feed. I have a problem when the United States Health Resources and Services Administration makes it a national goal to have at least 75% of all mothers breast feeding. Especially since the only mothers they can really control are those needing assistance. Feeling that a woman should have the right to choose not to breast feed does not mean that I don’t feel comfortable with breast feeding anywhere or anytime. It means I feel uncomfortable when controlling or coercing the choice of what to do with a woman’s body becomes the target of society and/or the government. A woman should have the right to choose what to do with her own body. And I get that a good many people, some of them even women, do not agree.
And I feel that breast feeding dolls are just over the top. There are tons of dolls that do all kinds of things. We don’t need breast feeding ones. Contrary to what the makers of these dolls are saying, I don’t believe a little girls needs to learn how to breast feed when she is 5 or 6 or 7 or whatever. It’s a tool to perpetuate society’s need to uphold gender roles and biological determinism. And I don’t agree with the argument that little girls need to learn to nurture. All children should learn nurturing skills. It’s time we focus a bit on ways to help boys learn this skill.
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Many, many moons ago, when my daughter was a baby, I was living in the Middle East and still wearing full hijab. To let anything above the ankle, wrist, or neck show was considered taboo and yet wherever I was, and I mean wherever I was, I was comfortable enough to breast feed (albeit whilst carefully covering my breast with a shawl/scarf). Nobody looked. Nobody commented. Nobody cared. This, in a predominantly Muslim society where the majority of women covered the greater part of their bodies to 'protect themselves' from the natural inclinations of men (as some would have us believe).
The reason that nobody looked, commented, or cared is the fact that men in that society, from the time they are born until the time they die, are exposed to the act of breastfeeding and attach no sexual connotations to either the act itself or women's breasts, in that context, whatsoever. As a result, when they see a woman breastfeed in public, they not only accept it, but deliberately avoid looking in her direction out of respect not only for her privacy, but also for the act in which she's engaged. It's a beautiful thing to observe and something that never failed to touch me in one way or another. My point? I'm not sure I have one. It just seemed kind of relevant. Words |
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Also I think the only ones sexualizing breast feeding whether done by children to dolls or adults to babies is Facebook (because of the weird way they have of categorizing things, not from any personal feeling about it) and of course perverts who troll the internet looking for things that they have fetishized and sexualized. Little girls breast feeding i'm sure falls under that category for someone. And "Facebook has a history of categorising photos of breastfeeding as 'obscene content' but even they seem to agree since they apologized for removing them, pics of little girls breast feeding dolls is not obscene. I think it is disturbing for many reasons which I touched on in this thread, but I don't find it obscene or sexual in the least. Sexual and obscene is when mothers dress their little girls in slinky gowns, high heels and make up and have them parade around encouraging them to shake their booty in order to win beauty pageants. These things must be like amusement parks for sexual perverts.
The objection I have to little girls having dolls suck at flowers attached to their chests is not one of a sexual nature. I do think that the reason people have problems with adults breast feeding babies in public is because the breast is highly sexualized. More breast feeding in public may eventually help people see breasts as body parts with important functions outside of recreation. And I'm certainly all for that. Little girls breast feeding. Not so much.
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Like it or not, encouraging nurturing in the case of dolls like this is enforcing gender roles. The advertisements shared here are not asking little boys to breastfeed their dolls in order to "be like mommy," it's targeted to female children. As far as encouraging nurturing, not all children want to grow up to be "nurturers." It's not a human trait across the board. I'm not going to go and discourage a child who wants to play with that kind of doll from doing so, but neither do I want to see such heavy emphasis on "encouraging" children to be nurturing...especially when girls are so frequently the target. |
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![]() There has been so much shared here that makes sense to me. Gender focused toys do give kids messages and reinforce gender roles. For some kids, this is a good thing. It fits who they are and that is a terrific thing. For other kids, this type of marketing and messaging can be confusing and incongruent to who they perceive themselves to be. I was one of those kids, so this hits home. As a female, I rarely enjoyed those things I was supposed to enjoy as a kid. I had a different vision of who I was and who I could be as a female. I was born to be an aunt, not a mother. Progressive thinking for the 50's but not well received. I also understand the discussions about breast feeding by adult woman. There are many trains of thought as to what is healthiest for the child, what promoting one method of nutrition over the other does to those who cant or do not wish to breastfeed, breastfeeding as a political statement of a womans right to use her body as she wishes etc. I even understand the different sides of adult breastfeeding as a private or public thing. For some, it is a natural thing. For others it makes them uncomfortable. Goods arguments on both sides of the coin as far as I can see. I also understand some cultures having the tendency to sexualize, sensualize things and other cultures do not. This can pose a bit of a problem when folks are confronted with cultural things different from their own. I even understand a parents right to post pictures on the internet as a way to share special moments with relatives and friends. Makes perfect sense to me. I know all to well that there are persons in our society for whom children and the innocent behavior of children is an erotic experience. For these persons, photos of children just being children, doing children things is a sexual experience. So, what might a picture of a 4 year old girl simulating breastfeeding mean to someone like this? Is it somehow less disturbing to not know who might be fetishizing your child? I think my difficulty here is trying to reconcile how a parent who normally protects the heck out of their kid, wont let them go into the yard alone, wont leave them with a babysitter or in daycare, will protest when a sex offender moves into the neighborhood, is hypervigilant to anything that might indicate their child might be in danger of some sort, throws caution to the wind when it comes to the internet. I really just do not get this. Is it refusing to live ones life in fear 24/7 as a potential victim of others? Is it a computer screen giving one a false sense of security, much like a car can do the same thing? Is it ....???????? |
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#13 |
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![]() I should have added to the above, that as I am not a parent, I never had to grapple with this kind of stuff. So, I dont know what all goes into making a decision that works for any particular individual. So, I'm trying to understand the parental thinking process in this kind of stuff. I find I can be pretty clueless to stuff outside of my realm of experience. |
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[/QUOTE]The problem is that the child does not always choose the toy. In most cases, the child doesn't. I kept my Barbies in their boxes in the closet untouched and paid no attention to them whatsoever and extended family members (thankfully my parents were a little smarter) kept getting me Barbie's. I'm definitely not an exception, I'm definitely not the only one who experienced this. Talk to a lot of folks on this very forum (whether butch, femme or trans) and many will tell you that they had the exact same experience. Talk to your local queer community, people assigned male at birth, whether cis or trans, who preferred to play with dolls but were yelled at for even trying. People assigned female at birth who would much rather be playing sports, but were yelled at or told they couldn't because "you're a girl, act like a girl." I'm not talking about "transgendered dolls" I'm talking about society frequently forcing gender stereotypes onto children. All children. I'm talking about society telling girls or children assigned female at birth that they need to want to breastfeed, have children, be "nurturing" and play with toy kitchens.
Like it or not, encouraging nurturing in the case of dolls like this is enforcing gender roles. The advertisements shared here are not asking little boys to breastfeed their dolls in order to "be like mommy," it's targeted to female children. As far as encouraging nurturing, not all children want to grow up to be "nurturers." It's not a human trait across the board. I'm not going to go and discourage a child who wants to play with that kind of doll from doing so, but neither do I want to see such heavy emphasis on "encouraging" children to be nurturing...especially when girls are so frequently the target.[/QUOTE] Actually, you kinda proved my point. You were given Barbies and you didn't play with them. The child chooses the toy. I don't like Barbies either, for a myriad of reasons. I don't consider them a nurturing toy. I find it interesting that you're so bothered by toys that encourage caring behavior. You're also referencing marketing of toys, which is a whole different ball game. A baby doll is not inherently evil. Marketing a baby doll only to girls is. Many of the messages marketing toys is not healthy. That doesn't make a baby doll unhealthy. What you're referring to is a lack of options given to children for the toys they want to play with. That is a parenting choice, and differs entirely from the actual toy. A child should be given a healthy choice of toys geared towards their interests, whatever they may be. If a child shows interest in nurturing behavior, they should be given a toy that they can nurture.
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Because nurturing has been traditionally assigned to women, we want to discourage girls from being nurturing? That's crazy. What we want to do is encourage people of all genders to be nurturing. i think we all know this. But it did crop up here again.
Give every kid dolls. If someone doesn't want to play with them, great. But the idea that you don't encourage nurturing play, which so many kids love to do, because it might enforce gender stereotypes defies reason. People like to nurture. Kids like to, too. i used to rock my dog endlessly and sing to him. i did not grow up to even have children, but i did like that kind of play. It's seventies feminism at its worst to say to a girl or woman, oh don't like this because it's associated with women and might cause you to be disempowered by others. The opposite, i suppose, are attachment parenting people who go too far and criticize working mothers. But discouraging a child from playing with a baby dolls? Huh? Also, would young girls who do not like dolls dislike them so much if they weren't associated with enforcing stereotypes? If it weren't accompanied with the message, "be more like other girls?" i doubt it. Lots of boys like playing with dolls, and they aren't all gay boys. And look at all the men who groove on childcare. i honestly think it's an unusual child who does not enjoy nurturing something, a plant, an animal -- something. Moreover we have plenty of games that encourage competetive play and worse. i say more play that encourages nurturing behavior. |
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Just for the record when I talk about encouraging nurturing skills in any child I am talking about helping a kid learn how to give support and encouragement to others. I am talking about teaching children how to give of themselves to another human being. Not to give exclusively and not to the detriment of oneself, which is what is often taught to female children, but to be supportive and encouraging to others, especially those people who we profess to love.
I think it is a great skill to have and learning to nurture others is often critical when trying to develop a loving relationship with another human being. It is also helpful in everyday life, at work and in daily interactions with others. Being able and willing to teach and encourage is very nurturing and fosters deep meaningful connections to other human beings. I am not talking about rearing one’s children, although learning to be nurturing in relationships will be helpful to that end as well. But, as it is with so much in this world, it’s all about balance and learning limits. Being able to be a nurturing person does not mean you will always choose to nurture others. Of course, as with anything we attempt to teach to people, little people or big people, they may choose not to learn it and that is perfectly acceptable. I just think the option should be there and not just for female children. And it really, really, need not be taught by buying kids breast feeding dolls. Or any dolls for that matter. It probably should not be taught that way. Maybe even cannot be taught that way. Perhaps when people talk about ways to teach nurturing skills to little girls they are talking about something much different than I am when I speak of the need to learn to nurture other human beings.
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I find it very disturbing that people would post pics of this nature, I wonder if they thought about the pedophiles who perhaps would find them enticing...
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