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Think of the children

"Think of the children" (also "What about the children?") is a cliché that evolved into a rhetorical tactic.[1][2][3] In the literal sense, it refers to children's rights (as in discussions of child labor).[4][5][6] In debate, it is a plea for pity that is used as an appeal to emotion, and therefore may become a logical fallacy.[1][2][3]

Five uses of "think of the children" before the United States Congress

Art, Argument, and Advocacy (2002) argued that the appeal substitutes emotion for reason in debate.[1] Ethicist Jack Marshall wrote in 2005 that the phrase's popularity stems from its capacity to stunt rationality, particularly discourse on morals.[2] "Think of the children" has been invoked by censorship proponents to shield children from perceived danger.[7][8] Community, Space and Online Censorship (2009) argued that classifying children in an infantile manner, as innocents in need of protection, is a form of obsession over the concept of purity.[7] A 2011 article in the Journal for Cultural Research observed that the phrase grew out of a moral panic.[9]

It was an exhortation in the 1964 Disney film Mary Poppins, when the character of Mrs. Banks pleaded with her departing nanny not to quit and to "think of the children!"[10] The phrase was popularized as a satiric reference on the animated television program The Simpsons in 1996,[11][12] when character Helen Lovejoy pleaded variations of "Will someone please think of the children?"[13][14][15] multiple times during a contentious debate by citizens of the fictional town of Springfield.[13][16][17]

In the 2012 Georgia State University Law Review, Charles J. Ten Brink called Lovejoy's use of "Think of the children" a successful parody.[13] The appeal's subsequent use in society was often the subject of mockery.[8] After its popularization on The Simpsons, an appeal to the welfare of children has been called "Lovejoy's Law",[15] the "Lovejoy argument", the "Mrs. Lovejoy fallacy",[18] the "Helen Lovejoy defence", "Helen Lovejoy syndrome",[19] the "Lovejoy Trap",[20] and "think-of-the-children-ism".[21][22]

Child advocacy

Think of the children ... freed of the crushing burden of dangerous and demeaning work.

 —Bill Clinton[23]

"Think of the children" has been used in its literal sense to advocate for the rights of children.[4][5][6] Early usage during the 20th century included writings in 1914 by the National Child Labor Committee criticizing child labor standards in the United States.[4] U.S. President Bill Clinton used the phrase in a 1999 speech to the International Labour Organization,[23] asking his audience to imagine a significant reduction in child labor: "Think of the children ... freed of the crushing burden of dangerous and demeaning work, given back those irreplaceable hours of childhood for learning and playing and living."[23]

The phrase's literal use extends into the 21st century, with Sara Boyce of the Children's Law Centre in Northern Ireland drawing on it to advocate for the legal rights of the region's children.[5] The 2008 book Child Labour in a Globalized World used the phrase to call attention to the role of debt bondage in child labor.[24] Sara Dillon of Suffolk University Law School used the phrase "What about the children" in her 2009 book, International Children's Rights, to focus on child-labor program conditions.[25] Benjamin Powell used the phrase differently in his book, Out of Poverty: Sweatshops in the Global Economy, writing that in the absence of child labor some youth faced starvation.[26] In a 2010 book on human rights, Children's Rights and Human Development, child psychiatrist Bruce D. Perry used the phrase "think of the children" to urge clinicians to incorporate a process sensitive to developmental stages when counseling youth.[6]

Debate tactic

Logical fallacy

In their 2002 book, Art, Argument, and Advocacy: Mastering Parliamentary Debate, John Meany and Kate Shuster called the use of the phrase "Think of the children" in debate a type of logical fallacy and an appeal to emotion.[1] According to the authors, a debater may use the phrase to emotionally sway members of the audience and avoid logical discussion.[1] They provide an example: "I know this national missile defense plan has its detractors, but won't someone please think of the children?"[1] Their assessment was echoed by Margie Borschke in an article for the journal Media International Australia incorporating Culture and Policy, with Borschke calling its use a rhetorical tactic.[3]

Ethicist Jack Marshall described "Think of the children!" as a tactic used in an attempt to end discussion by invoking an unanswerable argument.[2] According to Marshall, the strategy succeeds in preventing rational debate.[2] He called its use an unethical manner of obfuscating debate, misdirecting empathy towards an object which may not have been the focus of the original argument.[2] Marshall wrote that although the phrase's use may have a positive intention, it evokes irrationality when repeatedly used by both sides of a debate.[2] He concluded that the phrase can transform the observance of regulations into an ethical quandary, cautioning society to avoid using "Think of the children!" as a final argument.[2]

In his 2015 syndicated article "Think Of The Children", Michael Reagan criticized the phrase's use by politicians.[27] According to Reagan, politicians needed to stop using children as tools when arguing for favored governmental programs.[27] He called the tactic an illogical argument, an act of desperation by those who felt they had a weaker case with reason-based arguments.[27] Noting that it has been used by Democrats and Republicans alike in the United States,[27] Reagan called the tactic "obvious political BS".[27]

Moral panic

The phrase, used by Congresswoman Mia Love

The Journal for Cultural Research published an article in 2010 by Debra Ferreday,[28] which was republished in the 2011 book Hope and Feminist Theory.[9] According to Ferreday, media use of "Won't someone think of the children!" had become common in a climate of moral panic.[9] She suggested that the phrase was becoming so common that it could become another Godwin's law.[9]

In a 2011 article for the journal Post Script, Andrew Scahill wrote about the power of children in rhetoric to create an untenable stance for an opposing viewpoint.[29] According to Scahill, an individual arguing "for the children" makes it extremely difficult for an opponent to hold a "not for the children" position.[29] Cassandra Wilkinson discussed the impact of "think of the children" rhetoric in a 2011 article for IPA Review.[30] Wilkinson cited research by No Fear: Growing Up in a Risk-Averse Society author Tim Gill that hypersensitivity in defending children from potential harm has the adverse effect of contributing to the inability of youth to own their choices and react to dangerous situations.[31] In the New Statesman, Laurie Penny characterized the tactic as a political belief system and called it "think-of-the-children-ism".[21]

Elizabeth Stoker Bruenig wrote in a 2014 article for First Things that moralizing with the phrase was commonly seen in discussions of sexuality,[22] attributing this to society's increasing perception of morality as a feminine domain.[22] Bruenig also cited the labeling of NBC's refusal to broadcast a movie trailer about abortion as "think-of-the-children-ism".[22]

Censorship

Scott Beattie wrote in his 2009 book, Community, Space and Online Censorship, that the question "Will no one think of the children?" was often raised by individuals advocating censorship out of a concern that youth might view material deemed inappropriate.[7] According to Beattie, youngsters were cast as potential casualties of online sexual predators to increase regulation of the Internet; characterizing children as infantile evoked a concept of innocence which was a form of obsession over the concept of purity.[7]

For Make magazine, Cory Doctorow wrote in a 2011 article that "Won't someone think of the children?!" was used by irrational individuals to support arguments about the dangers to youth of the "Four Horsemen of the Infocalypse": "pirates", terrorists, organized crime, and child pornographers.[32] According to Doctorow, the phrase was used to stifle discussion of underlying issues and halt rational analysis.[32] He observed its frequent use when society was determining an appropriate approach to the legal aspects of computing.[32]

In his 2013 book, Fervid Filmmaking, Mike Watt discussed the history of censorship relative to the United Kingdom's Obscene Publications Act 1959 and noted that films banned during that period became known as "video nasties".[33] Watt called a current interpretation of such censorship the "Think of the Children" characterization.[33] Brian M. Reed wrote in his book, Nobody's Business (also published that year), that the phrase was devoid of substance and could be replaced for comic effect with "How many kittens must die?"[34]

For Reason in 2015, journalist Brendan O'Neill wrote that Marjorie Heins' Not in Front of the Children: Indecency, Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth cited the centuries-long use by governments of the prevention of "harm to minors" as an excuse to increase censorship and control.[35] According to O'Neill, the use of "Won't somebody please think of the children?" in contemporary culture had greatly increased and was a means of exerting moral authority with emotional blackmail.[35]

Popularization

Film and television

According to Kathryn Laity, early use of the phrase may have stemmed from its appearance in the 1964 Walt Disney Pictures film Mary Poppins.[10] In an opening scene, the character of Mrs. Banks pleads with her nanny not to quit by begging her to "think of the children!".[10] Laity wrote that the popular use of the phrase evokes strong feelings in those who object to a nanny state,[10] pointing out the conflict in the United States between the country's conservatism (derived from the Puritans) and its desire to use sex in advertising.[10]

Before the phrase's exposure in The Simpsons, most Americans first became accustomed to it during the 1980s in a charity commercial with Sally Struthers for Christian Children's Fund. At the end of the commercial Struthers pleaded with the viewers, "Won't somebody please think of the children?"

It was also used in John Huston's 1982 film Annie, spoken by Eleanor Roosevelt as Annie sings "Tomorrow" to Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House in order to get Oliver Warbucks' begrudging support for New Deal policies he opposes.

"Think of the children" was popularized largely by character Helen Lovejoy, wife of Reverend Lovejoy, on the television program The Simpsons.[13][14][15] Lovejoy (who first appeared in 1990)[36][37] repeatedly exclaimed, "Think of the children!" in several episodes of the series.[15][38][39] She first used the phrase in the episode "Much Apu About Nothing" by David X. Cohen, which aired in 1996, imploring the city mayor to keep bears from crossing the wildland–urban interface.[11][12][40] Lovejoy's exhortation became increasingly overwrought with each subsequent use.[40]

The Simpsons writer Bill Oakley said in the 2005 DVD commentary on the episode that the motivation for the phrase on the show was to emphasize how "think of the children" was used in debate; irrelevant, it sidetracked discussion from the original issues.[12] Lovejoy used variations of the phrase, including "Oh, won't somebody please think of the children"[11][16] and "What about the children",[13][41] shrieking it most often when residents of the fictional town of Springfield debated a contentious problem or argued about politics[16][17] and logic failed.[19] Lovejoy's comic use of the phrase on The Simpsons[16] satirized its use in public discourse.[15]

Lovejoy's Law

The Simpsons character Helen Lovejoy delivering her signature line, "Ohhh, won't somebody please think of the children!"

After the popularization of the phrase on The Simpsons, its use in society was often ridiculed, and came to be referred to as "Lovejoy's Law" in internet culture as early as 2006, probably independently coined several times.[8] In the Toronto Star, journalist Edward Keenan defined "Lovejoy's Law" as a warning that the phrase is a probable diversion from a weak logical stance, writing that true empathy toward children involved rational argument rather than manipulation.[15] In an article for Ireland's Sunday Independent, Carol Hunt called the use of the phrase in political debate the "Helen Lovejoy defence" and wrote that it is also known as the "Helen Lovejoy syndrome". According to Hunt, it is often invoked in reference to hypothetical children rather than real children affected by a problem.[19]

In a Georgia State University Law Review article, Michigan State University College of Law professor Charles J. Ten Brink wrote that Helen Lovejoy's signature phrase was an adept and effective parody.[13] According to The Canberra Times, the phrase's 2009 use to support Internet censorship by the Department of Communications of the government of Australia was evocative of Helen Lovejoy.[41]

In his book, The Myth of Evil, Phillip A. Cole wrote that Helen Lovejoy's plea assumed that children were pure, unadulterated potential casualties who required constant defense from danger.[42] Cole contrasted this notion with character Bart Simpson, who prefers creating disorder to conformity and adherence to regulations.[42] According to Cole, this exemplifies the dual perception of children by society: guileless potential prey and malevolent entities to be distrusted.[42] Cole wrote that throughout history, the child has represented humanity's savage past and its optimistic future.[42] Jo Johnson contributed a chapter, "Won't Somebody Think of the Children?", to the book Mediating Moms, in which she analyzed the phrase's use in animated media (including The Simpsons).[43] According to Johnson, the phrase was a key example of popular cultural depictions of mothers as neurotic and filled with anxiety about moral values.[43]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Meany 2002, p. 65.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Marshall 2005
  3. ^ a b c Borschke 2011, p. 17.
  4. ^ a b c National Child Labor Committee 1914, pp. 39, 73.
  5. ^ a b c Boyce 2003
  6. ^ a b c Perry 2010, p. 498.
  7. ^ a b c d Beattie 2009, pp. 165–167.
  8. ^ a b c Keenan (October 1, 2014), p. GT4.
  9. ^ a b c d Coleman 2011, p. 99.
  10. ^ a b c d e Laity 2013, pp. 118–119, 128.
  11. ^ a b c Cohen 1996
  12. ^ a b c Cohen 2005
  13. ^ a b c d e f Ten Brink 2012, p. 789.
  14. ^ a b Shotwell 2012, p. 141.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Keenan (April 26, 2014), p. IN2.
  16. ^ a b c d Patrick 2000, p. B5.
  17. ^ a b Kitrosser 2011, p. 2395.
  18. ^ @linkskywalker (April 18, 2012). "The Appeal to Reproduction can alternatively be dubbed "the Mrs. Lovejoy Fallacy" if you are so inclined" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  19. ^ a b c Hunt 2014, p. 27.
  20. ^ Hamad, Ruby (2020). White tears brown scars : how white feminism betrays women of color. New York. ISBN 9781948226745.
  21. ^ a b Penny 2011
  22. ^ a b c d Bruenig 2014
  23. ^ a b c Clinton 1999
  24. ^ Nesi 2008, p. 7.
  25. ^ Dillon 2009, p. 117.
  26. ^ Powell 2014, p. 5.
  27. ^ a b c d e Reagan 2015
  28. ^ Ferreday 2010, pp. 409–429.
  29. ^ a b Scahill 2011, pp. 69–81.
  30. ^ Berg 2011
  31. ^ Wilkinson 2011
  32. ^ a b c Doctorow 2011, p. 31.
  33. ^ a b Watt 2013, p. 233.
  34. ^ Reed 2013, p. 110.
  35. ^ a b O'Neill 2015
  36. ^ Groening 1997, p. 25.
  37. ^ Martyn 2000
  38. ^ Sagers 2009
  39. ^ TelevisionWeek 2008, p. 4.
  40. ^ a b Chappell 2014
  41. ^ a b McLennan 2009, p. A15.
  42. ^ a b c d Cole 2006, p. 122.
  43. ^ a b Johnson 2012, pp. 65–66.

References

  • Beattie, Scott (2009). Community, Space and Online Censorship. Ashgate. pp. 165–167. ISBN 978-0-7546-7308-8.
  • Berg, Chris (September 1, 2011). "From the Editor". IPA Review. ISSN 1329-8100 – via HighBeam Research.
  • Best, Joel (1993). Threatened Children: Rhetoric and Concern about Child-Victims. University of Chicago Press. pp. 3–6. ISBN 978-0-226-04426-2.
  • Borschke, Margie (November 2011). "Rethinking the rhetoric of remix". Media International Australia Incorporating Culture and Policy. University of Queensland, School of Journalism and Communication. 141: 17. doi:10.1177/1329878X1114100104. S2CID 146356976 – via InfoTrac.
  • Boyce, Sara (2003). "Northern Ireland's Bill of Rights: A Children's Rights Perspective". ChildRIGHT. Children's Legal Centre (183). ISSN 0265-1459. OCLC 749128561.
  • Bruenig, Elizabeth Stoker (June 30, 2014). . First Things. Archived from the original on September 16, 2014. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
  • Chappell, Les (July 13, 2014). . The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
  • Clinton, Bill (June 16, 1999). . International Labour Conference, 87th Session. International Labour Organization. Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
  • Cole, Phillip A. (2006). "Bad Seeds". The Myth of Evil: Demonizing the Enemy. Praeger. p. 122. ISBN 978-0-275-99216-3.
  • Cohen, David X. (1996). Much Apu About Nothing. The Simpsons (Television episode). 20th Century Fox (published May 5, 1996). Event occurs at 4:23; 5:51; 6:21. Production code: 3F20; Episode no. 151; Season 7: Episode 23. Think of the children!
  • Cohen, David; Matt Groening; Bill Oakley (2005). The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode "Much Apu About Nothing" (DVD). 20th Century Fox.
  • Dillon, Sara (2009). International Children's Rights. Carolina Academic Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-59460-115-6.
  • Doctorow, Cory (July 1, 2011). . Make magazine. Sebastopol, California: Maker Media. 27: 31. ISSN 1556-2336. Archived from the original on October 31, 2013. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  • Ferreday, Debra (2010). "Reading Disorders: Online Suicide and the Death of Hope". Journal for Cultural Research. 14 (4): 409–426. doi:10.1080/14797581003765366. S2CID 144648542.
  • Ferreday, Debra (2011). "Reading Disorders: Online Suicide and the Death of Hope". In Coleman, Rebecca; Ferreday, Debra (eds.). Hope and Feminist Theory. Routledge. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-415-61852-6.
  • Groening, Matt (1997). Richmond, Ray; Coffman, Antonia (eds.). The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family (1st ed.). New York: HarperPerennial. p. 25. ISBN 0-06-095252-0. LCCN 98141857. OCLC 37796735. OL 433519M.
  • Hunt, Carol (January 5, 2014). "Don't use our children as shields to protect status quo; The Helen Lovejoy argument against gay adoption is simply discrimination in a 'caring' guise, writes Carol Hunt". Sunday Independent. Independent Newspapers Ireland Limited. p. 27 – via LexisNexis.
  • Johnson, Jo (2012). "'Won't Somebody Think of the Children?': The Nineties Subversion of the Animated Mother". In Podnieks, Elizabeth (ed.). Mediating Moms: Mothers in Popular Culture. McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 53–68. ISBN 978-0-7735-3979-2.
  • Keenan, Edward (April 26, 2014). "'Won't somebody please think of the children!'; The Simpsons has taught us not to trust anyone who stoops to use the corruptibility of children to advance a political argument". The Toronto Star. p. IN2 – via LexisNexis.
  • Keenan, Edward (October 1, 2014). "Thinking of the children is no laughing matter". The Toronto Star. p. GT4 – via LexisNexis.
  • Kitrosser, Heidi (May 2011). "Symposium: Presidential Influence Over Administrative Action: Scientific Integrity: The Perils and Promise of White House Administration". Fordham Law Review. Fordham University School of Law. 79: 2395 – via LexisNexis.
  • Laity, Kathryn A. (2013). "Chapter Nine: 'Won't somebody please think of the children?' The case for Terry Gilliam's Tideland". In Birkenstein, Jeff; Froula, Anna; Randell, Karen (eds.). The Cinema of Terry Gilliam: It's a Mad World. Directors' Cuts. Wallflower Press. pp. 118–119, 128. ISBN 978-0-231-16534-1.
  • Marshall, Jack (February 16, 2005). . Ethics Scoreboard. Alexandria, Virginia: ProEthics, Ltd. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved November 1, 2014.
  • Martyn, Warren; Wood, Adrian (2000). . BBC Homepage: Entertainment; The Simpsons. BBC. Archived from the original on January 2, 2009. Retrieved May 6, 2007.
  • McLennan, David (December 18, 2009). "Grey areas taint web blacklist". The Canberra Times. Australia. p. A15 – via LexisNexis.
  • Meany, John; Kate Shuster (2002). Art, Argument, and Advocacy: Mastering Parliamentary Debate. New York: International Debate Education Association. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-9702130-7-5. OCLC 438996525.
  • National Child Labor Committee (1914). "Mr. Coal's Story". The Child Labor Bulletin. Manhattan, New York. 3 (2): 39, 73. ISSN 0360-0823. OCLC 612770438.
  • Nesi, Giuseppe; Nogler, Luca; Pertile, Marco, eds. (2008). Child Labour in a Globalized World. Ashgate. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-7546-7222-7.
  • O'Neill, Brendan (April 19, 2015). . Reason. ISSN 0048-6906. Archived from the original on May 2, 2015. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
  • Patrick, Jeremy (December 2, 2000). "Don't forget, GLBT people have children, too". Lincoln Journal Star. Nebraska. p. B5 – via LexisNexis.
  • Penny, Laurie (January 17, 2011). "This divorce tax is emotional terrorism". New Statesman – via HighBeam Research.
  • Perry, Bruce D. (2010). Willems, Jan (ed.). Children's Rights and Human Development. Maastricht Series in Human Rights. Intersentia. p. 498. ISBN 978-94-000-0032-2.
  • Powell, Benjamin (2014). Out of Poverty: Sweatshops in the Global Economy. Cambridge Studies in Economics, Choice, and Society. Cambridge University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-107-02990-3.
  • Reagan, Michael (March 23, 2015). "Think of the children". Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan. Cagle Cartoons; CagleCartoons.com. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
  • Reed, Brian M. (2013). Nobody's Business: Twenty-First Century Avant-Garde Poetics. Cornell University Press. p. 110. ISBN 978-0-8014-5157-7.
  • Sagers, Aaron (May 12, 2009). "Pop 20: When sexual discomfort reaches our legislative branch". The Monitor. McAllen, Texas. McClatchy-Tribune News Service – via LexisNexis.
  • Scahill, Andrew (2011). "The Sieve or the Scalpel: The Family Movie Act of 2004, Infantile Citizenship, and the Rhetoric of Censorship". Post Script: Essays in Film and the Humanities. 30 (2): 69–81. ISSN 0277-9897 – via InfoTrac.
  • Shotwell, Mikaela (Winter 2012). "Won't Somebody Please Think of the Children?!". The Journal of Gender, Race & Justice. Iowa City, Iowa: University of Iowa. 15: 141 – via LexisNexis. The Simpsons character Helen Lovejoy popularized this phrase.
  • TelevisionWeek staff (February 18, 2008). "Blink". TelevisionWeek. Crain Communications: 4 – via LexisNexis.
  • Ten Brink, Charles J. (Spring 2012). "Gayborhoods: Intersections of Land Use Regulation, Sexual Minorities, and the Creative Class". Georgia State University Law Review. Georgia State University. 28: 789 – via LexisNexis.
  • Watt, Mike (2013). Fervid Filmmaking. McFarland. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-7864-7066-2.
  • Wee, Vivienne (1995). Stephens, Sharon (ed.). Children and the Politics of Culture. Princeton University Press. p. 188. ISBN 978-0-691-04328-9.
  • Wilkinson, Cassandra (September 1, 2011). "Let Kids Be Kids". IPA Review. ISSN 1329-8100 – via HighBeam Research.

Further reading

External links

  • Kantor, Andrew (July 16, 2004). . USA Today. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  • Marshall, Jack (February 16, 2005). . Ethics Scoreboard. Alexandria, Virginia: ProEthics, Ltd. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved November 1, 2014.

think, children, also, what, about, children, cliché, that, evolved, into, rhetorical, tactic, literal, sense, refers, children, rights, discussions, child, labor, debate, plea, pity, that, used, appeal, emotion, therefore, become, logical, fallacy, five, uses. Think of the children also What about the children is a cliche that evolved into a rhetorical tactic 1 2 3 In the literal sense it refers to children s rights as in discussions of child labor 4 5 6 In debate it is a plea for pity that is used as an appeal to emotion and therefore may become a logical fallacy 1 2 3 Five uses of think of the children before the United States Congress Art Argument and Advocacy 2002 argued that the appeal substitutes emotion for reason in debate 1 Ethicist Jack Marshall wrote in 2005 that the phrase s popularity stems from its capacity to stunt rationality particularly discourse on morals 2 Think of the children has been invoked by censorship proponents to shield children from perceived danger 7 8 Community Space and Online Censorship 2009 argued that classifying children in an infantile manner as innocents in need of protection is a form of obsession over the concept of purity 7 A 2011 article in the Journal for Cultural Research observed that the phrase grew out of a moral panic 9 It was an exhortation in the 1964 Disney film Mary Poppins when the character of Mrs Banks pleaded with her departing nanny not to quit and to think of the children 10 The phrase was popularized as a satiric reference on the animated television program The Simpsons in 1996 11 12 when character Helen Lovejoy pleaded variations of Will someone please think of the children 13 14 15 multiple times during a contentious debate by citizens of the fictional town of Springfield 13 16 17 In the 2012 Georgia State University Law Review Charles J Ten Brink called Lovejoy s use of Think of the children a successful parody 13 The appeal s subsequent use in society was often the subject of mockery 8 After its popularization on The Simpsons an appeal to the welfare of children has been called Lovejoy s Law 15 the Lovejoy argument the Mrs Lovejoy fallacy 18 the Helen Lovejoy defence Helen Lovejoy syndrome 19 the Lovejoy Trap 20 and think of the children ism 21 22 Contents 1 Child advocacy 2 Debate tactic 2 1 Logical fallacy 2 2 Moral panic 2 3 Censorship 3 Popularization 3 1 Film and television 3 2 Lovejoy s Law 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksChild advocacy EditThink of the children freed of the crushing burden of dangerous and demeaning work Bill Clinton 23 Think of the children has been used in its literal sense to advocate for the rights of children 4 5 6 Early usage during the 20th century included writings in 1914 by the National Child Labor Committee criticizing child labor standards in the United States 4 U S President Bill Clinton used the phrase in a 1999 speech to the International Labour Organization 23 asking his audience to imagine a significant reduction in child labor Think of the children freed of the crushing burden of dangerous and demeaning work given back those irreplaceable hours of childhood for learning and playing and living 23 The phrase s literal use extends into the 21st century with Sara Boyce of the Children s Law Centre in Northern Ireland drawing on it to advocate for the legal rights of the region s children 5 The 2008 book Child Labour in a Globalized World used the phrase to call attention to the role of debt bondage in child labor 24 Sara Dillon of Suffolk University Law School used the phrase What about the children in her 2009 book International Children s Rights to focus on child labor program conditions 25 Benjamin Powell used the phrase differently in his book Out of Poverty Sweatshops in the Global Economy writing that in the absence of child labor some youth faced starvation 26 In a 2010 book on human rights Children s Rights and Human Development child psychiatrist Bruce D Perry used the phrase think of the children to urge clinicians to incorporate a process sensitive to developmental stages when counseling youth 6 Debate tactic EditLogical fallacy Edit In their 2002 book Art Argument and Advocacy Mastering Parliamentary Debate John Meany and Kate Shuster called the use of the phrase Think of the children in debate a type of logical fallacy and an appeal to emotion 1 According to the authors a debater may use the phrase to emotionally sway members of the audience and avoid logical discussion 1 They provide an example I know this national missile defense plan has its detractors but won t someone please think of the children 1 Their assessment was echoed by Margie Borschke in an article for the journal Media International Australia incorporating Culture and Policy with Borschke calling its use a rhetorical tactic 3 Ethicist Jack Marshall described Think of the children as a tactic used in an attempt to end discussion by invoking an unanswerable argument 2 According to Marshall the strategy succeeds in preventing rational debate 2 He called its use an unethical manner of obfuscating debate misdirecting empathy towards an object which may not have been the focus of the original argument 2 Marshall wrote that although the phrase s use may have a positive intention it evokes irrationality when repeatedly used by both sides of a debate 2 He concluded that the phrase can transform the observance of regulations into an ethical quandary cautioning society to avoid using Think of the children as a final argument 2 In his 2015 syndicated article Think Of The Children Michael Reagan criticized the phrase s use by politicians 27 According to Reagan politicians needed to stop using children as tools when arguing for favored governmental programs 27 He called the tactic an illogical argument an act of desperation by those who felt they had a weaker case with reason based arguments 27 Noting that it has been used by Democrats and Republicans alike in the United States 27 Reagan called the tactic obvious political BS 27 Moral panic Edit source source source source source source source source track The phrase used by Congresswoman Mia Love The Journal for Cultural Research published an article in 2010 by Debra Ferreday 28 which was republished in the 2011 book Hope and Feminist Theory 9 According to Ferreday media use of Won t someone think of the children had become common in a climate of moral panic 9 She suggested that the phrase was becoming so common that it could become another Godwin s law 9 In a 2011 article for the journal Post Script Andrew Scahill wrote about the power of children in rhetoric to create an untenable stance for an opposing viewpoint 29 According to Scahill an individual arguing for the children makes it extremely difficult for an opponent to hold a not for the children position 29 Cassandra Wilkinson discussed the impact of think of the children rhetoric in a 2011 article for IPA Review 30 Wilkinson cited research by No Fear Growing Up in a Risk Averse Society author Tim Gill that hypersensitivity in defending children from potential harm has the adverse effect of contributing to the inability of youth to own their choices and react to dangerous situations 31 In the New Statesman Laurie Penny characterized the tactic as a political belief system and called it think of the children ism 21 Elizabeth Stoker Bruenig wrote in a 2014 article for First Things that moralizing with the phrase was commonly seen in discussions of sexuality 22 attributing this to society s increasing perception of morality as a feminine domain 22 Bruenig also cited the labeling of NBC s refusal to broadcast a movie trailer about abortion as think of the children ism 22 Censorship Edit Scott Beattie wrote in his 2009 book Community Space and Online Censorship that the question Will no one think of the children was often raised by individuals advocating censorship out of a concern that youth might view material deemed inappropriate 7 According to Beattie youngsters were cast as potential casualties of online sexual predators to increase regulation of the Internet characterizing children as infantile evoked a concept of innocence which was a form of obsession over the concept of purity 7 For Make magazine Cory Doctorow wrote in a 2011 article that Won t someone think of the children was used by irrational individuals to support arguments about the dangers to youth of the Four Horsemen of the Infocalypse pirates terrorists organized crime and child pornographers 32 According to Doctorow the phrase was used to stifle discussion of underlying issues and halt rational analysis 32 He observed its frequent use when society was determining an appropriate approach to the legal aspects of computing 32 In his 2013 book Fervid Filmmaking Mike Watt discussed the history of censorship relative to the United Kingdom s Obscene Publications Act 1959 and noted that films banned during that period became known as video nasties 33 Watt called a current interpretation of such censorship the Think of the Children characterization 33 Brian M Reed wrote in his book Nobody s Business also published that year that the phrase was devoid of substance and could be replaced for comic effect with How many kittens must die 34 For Reason in 2015 journalist Brendan O Neill wrote that Marjorie Heins Not in Front of the Children Indecency Censorship and the Innocence of Youth cited the centuries long use by governments of the prevention of harm to minors as an excuse to increase censorship and control 35 According to O Neill the use of Won t somebody please think of the children in contemporary culture had greatly increased and was a means of exerting moral authority with emotional blackmail 35 Popularization EditFilm and television Edit According to Kathryn Laity early use of the phrase may have stemmed from its appearance in the 1964 Walt Disney Pictures film Mary Poppins 10 In an opening scene the character of Mrs Banks pleads with her nanny not to quit by begging her to think of the children 10 Laity wrote that the popular use of the phrase evokes strong feelings in those who object to a nanny state 10 pointing out the conflict in the United States between the country s conservatism derived from the Puritans and its desire to use sex in advertising 10 Before the phrase s exposure in The Simpsons most Americans first became accustomed to it during the 1980s in a charity commercial with Sally Struthers for Christian Children s Fund At the end of the commercial Struthers pleaded with the viewers Won t somebody please think of the children It was also used in John Huston s 1982 film Annie spoken by Eleanor Roosevelt as Annie sings Tomorrow to Franklin D Roosevelt at the White House in order to get Oliver Warbucks begrudging support for New Deal policies he opposes Think of the children was popularized largely by character Helen Lovejoy wife of Reverend Lovejoy on the television program The Simpsons 13 14 15 Lovejoy who first appeared in 1990 36 37 repeatedly exclaimed Think of the children in several episodes of the series 15 38 39 She first used the phrase in the episode Much Apu About Nothing by David X Cohen which aired in 1996 imploring the city mayor to keep bears from crossing the wildland urban interface 11 12 40 Lovejoy s exhortation became increasingly overwrought with each subsequent use 40 The Simpsons writer Bill Oakley said in the 2005 DVD commentary on the episode that the motivation for the phrase on the show was to emphasize how think of the children was used in debate irrelevant it sidetracked discussion from the original issues 12 Lovejoy used variations of the phrase including Oh won t somebody please think of the children 11 16 and What about the children 13 41 shrieking it most often when residents of the fictional town of Springfield debated a contentious problem or argued about politics 16 17 and logic failed 19 Lovejoy s comic use of the phrase on The Simpsons 16 satirized its use in public discourse 15 Lovejoy s Law Edit source source source source source source source source track The Simpsons character Helen Lovejoy delivering her signature line Ohhh won t somebody please think of the children After the popularization of the phrase on The Simpsons its use in society was often ridiculed and came to be referred to as Lovejoy s Law in internet culture as early as 2006 probably independently coined several times 8 In the Toronto Star journalist Edward Keenan defined Lovejoy s Law as a warning that the phrase is a probable diversion from a weak logical stance writing that true empathy toward children involved rational argument rather than manipulation 15 In an article for Ireland s Sunday Independent Carol Hunt called the use of the phrase in political debate the Helen Lovejoy defence and wrote that it is also known as the Helen Lovejoy syndrome According to Hunt it is often invoked in reference to hypothetical children rather than real children affected by a problem 19 In a Georgia State University Law Review article Michigan State University College of Law professor Charles J Ten Brink wrote that Helen Lovejoy s signature phrase was an adept and effective parody 13 According to The Canberra Times the phrase s 2009 use to support Internet censorship by the Department of Communications of the government of Australia was evocative of Helen Lovejoy 41 In his book The Myth of Evil Phillip A Cole wrote that Helen Lovejoy s plea assumed that children were pure unadulterated potential casualties who required constant defense from danger 42 Cole contrasted this notion with character Bart Simpson who prefers creating disorder to conformity and adherence to regulations 42 According to Cole this exemplifies the dual perception of children by society guileless potential prey and malevolent entities to be distrusted 42 Cole wrote that throughout history the child has represented humanity s savage past and its optimistic future 42 Jo Johnson contributed a chapter Won t Somebody Think of the Children to the book Mediating Moms in which she analyzed the phrase s use in animated media including The Simpsons 43 According to Johnson the phrase was a key example of popular cultural depictions of mothers as neurotic and filled with anxiety about moral values 43 See also Edit Language portal Linguistics portal Philosophy portalAge appropriateness Appeal to consequences Appeal to fear Appeal to worse problems Best interests Blood libel Child protection Daisy advertisement Every time you masturbate God kills a kitten False dilemma Family values Family friendly Ignoratio elenchi Lie to children List of fallacies Moral suasion Save Our Children a slogan made famous by Anita Bryant Thought terminating clicheNotes Edit a b c d e f Meany 2002 p 65 a b c d e f g h Marshall 2005 a b c Borschke 2011 p 17 a b c National Child Labor Committee 1914 pp 39 73 a b c Boyce 2003 a b c Perry 2010 p 498 a b c d Beattie 2009 pp 165 167 a b c Keenan October 1 2014 p GT4 a b c d Coleman 2011 p 99 a b c d e Laity 2013 pp 118 119 128 a b c Cohen 1996 a b c Cohen 2005 a b c d e f Ten Brink 2012 p 789 a b Shotwell 2012 p 141 a b c d e f Keenan April 26 2014 p IN2 a b c d Patrick 2000 p B5 a b Kitrosser 2011 p 2395 linkskywalker April 18 2012 The Appeal to Reproduction can alternatively be dubbed the Mrs Lovejoy Fallacy if you are so inclined Tweet via Twitter a b c Hunt 2014 p 27 Hamad Ruby 2020 White tears brown scars how white feminism betrays women of color New York ISBN 9781948226745 a b Penny 2011 a b c d Bruenig 2014 a b c Clinton 1999 Nesi 2008 p 7 Dillon 2009 p 117 Powell 2014 p 5 a b c d e Reagan 2015 Ferreday 2010 pp 409 429 a b Scahill 2011 pp 69 81 Berg 2011 Wilkinson 2011 a b c Doctorow 2011 p 31 a b Watt 2013 p 233 Reed 2013 p 110 a b O Neill 2015 Groening 1997 p 25 Martyn 2000 Sagers 2009 TelevisionWeek 2008 p 4 a b Chappell 2014 a b McLennan 2009 p A15 a b c d Cole 2006 p 122 a b Johnson 2012 pp 65 66 References EditBeattie Scott 2009 Community Space and Online Censorship Ashgate pp 165 167 ISBN 978 0 7546 7308 8 Berg Chris September 1 2011 From the Editor IPA Review ISSN 1329 8100 via HighBeam Research Best Joel 1993 Threatened Children Rhetoric and Concern about Child Victims University of Chicago Press pp 3 6 ISBN 978 0 226 04426 2 Borschke Margie November 2011 Rethinking the rhetoric of remix Media International Australia Incorporating Culture and Policy University of Queensland School of Journalism and Communication 141 17 doi 10 1177 1329878X1114100104 S2CID 146356976 via InfoTrac Boyce Sara 2003 Northern Ireland s Bill of Rights A Children s Rights Perspective ChildRIGHT Children s Legal Centre 183 ISSN 0265 1459 OCLC 749128561 Bruenig Elizabeth Stoker June 30 2014 Clutch your pearls and think of the children First Things Archived from the original on September 16 2014 Retrieved May 2 2015 Chappell Les July 13 2014 Review The Simpsons Classic Much Apu About Nothing Won t somebody PLEASE think of the children The A V Club Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Retrieved May 2 2015 Clinton Bill June 16 1999 Address by Mr Bill Clinton President of the United States International Labour Conference 87th Session International Labour Organization Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved November 4 2014 Cole Phillip A 2006 Bad Seeds The Myth of Evil Demonizing the Enemy Praeger p 122 ISBN 978 0 275 99216 3 Cohen David X 1996 Much Apu About Nothing The Simpsons Television episode 20th Century Fox published May 5 1996 Event occurs at 4 23 5 51 6 21 Production code 3F20 Episode no 151 Season 7 Episode 23 Think of the children Cohen David Matt Groening Bill Oakley 2005 The Simpsons season 7 DVD commentary for the episode Much Apu About Nothing DVD 20th Century Fox Dillon Sara 2009 International Children s Rights Carolina Academic Press p 117 ISBN 978 1 59460 115 6 Doctorow Cory July 1 2011 Four Horsemen of the 3D Printing Apocalypse Make magazine Sebastopol California Maker Media 27 31 ISSN 1556 2336 Archived from the original on October 31 2013 Retrieved November 3 2014 Ferreday Debra 2010 Reading Disorders Online Suicide and the Death of Hope Journal for Cultural Research 14 4 409 426 doi 10 1080 14797581003765366 S2CID 144648542 Ferreday Debra 2011 Reading Disorders Online Suicide and the Death of Hope In Coleman Rebecca Ferreday Debra eds Hope and Feminist Theory Routledge p 99 ISBN 978 0 415 61852 6 Groening Matt 1997 Richmond Ray Coffman Antonia eds The Simpsons A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family 1st ed New York HarperPerennial p 25 ISBN 0 06 095252 0 LCCN 98141857 OCLC 37796735 OL 433519M Hunt Carol January 5 2014 Don t use our children as shields to protect status quo The Helen Lovejoy argument against gay adoption is simply discrimination in a caring guise writes Carol Hunt Sunday Independent Independent Newspapers Ireland Limited p 27 via LexisNexis Johnson Jo 2012 Won t Somebody Think of the Children The Nineties Subversion of the Animated Mother In Podnieks Elizabeth ed Mediating Moms Mothers in Popular Culture McGill Queen s University Press pp 53 68 ISBN 978 0 7735 3979 2 Keenan Edward April 26 2014 Won t somebody please think of the children The Simpsons has taught us not to trust anyone who stoops to use the corruptibility of children to advance a political argument The Toronto Star p IN2 via LexisNexis Keenan Edward October 1 2014 Thinking of the children is no laughing matter The Toronto Star p GT4 via LexisNexis Kitrosser Heidi May 2011 Symposium Presidential Influence Over Administrative Action Scientific Integrity The Perils and Promise of White House Administration Fordham Law Review Fordham University School of Law 79 2395 via LexisNexis Laity Kathryn A 2013 Chapter Nine Won t somebody please think of the children The case for Terry Gilliam s Tideland In Birkenstein Jeff Froula Anna Randell Karen eds The Cinema of Terry Gilliam It s a Mad World Directors Cuts Wallflower Press pp 118 119 128 ISBN 978 0 231 16534 1 Marshall Jack February 16 2005 Think of the Children An Ethics Fallacy Ethics Scoreboard Alexandria Virginia ProEthics Ltd Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved November 1 2014 Martyn Warren Wood Adrian 2000 Jacques To Be Wild BBC Homepage Entertainment The Simpsons BBC Archived from the original on January 2 2009 Retrieved May 6 2007 McLennan David December 18 2009 Grey areas taint web blacklist The Canberra Times Australia p A15 via LexisNexis Meany John Kate Shuster 2002 Art Argument and Advocacy Mastering Parliamentary Debate New York International Debate Education Association p 65 ISBN 978 0 9702130 7 5 OCLC 438996525 National Child Labor Committee 1914 Mr Coal s Story The Child Labor Bulletin Manhattan New York 3 2 39 73 ISSN 0360 0823 OCLC 612770438 Nesi Giuseppe Nogler Luca Pertile Marco eds 2008 Child Labour in a Globalized World Ashgate p 7 ISBN 978 0 7546 7222 7 O Neill Brendan April 19 2015 Conversion Therapy and Other For the Children Measures As Efforts to Curtail Liberty Reason ISSN 0048 6906 Archived from the original on May 2 2015 Retrieved May 2 2015 Patrick Jeremy December 2 2000 Don t forget GLBT people have children too Lincoln Journal Star Nebraska p B5 via LexisNexis Penny Laurie January 17 2011 This divorce tax is emotional terrorism New Statesman via HighBeam Research Perry Bruce D 2010 Willems Jan ed Children s Rights and Human Development Maastricht Series in Human Rights Intersentia p 498 ISBN 978 94 000 0032 2 Powell Benjamin 2014 Out of Poverty Sweatshops in the Global Economy Cambridge Studies in Economics Choice and Society Cambridge University Press p 5 ISBN 978 1 107 02990 3 Reagan Michael March 23 2015 Think of the children Yankton Daily Press amp Dakotan Cagle Cartoons CagleCartoons com Retrieved May 2 2015 Reed Brian M 2013 Nobody s Business Twenty First Century Avant Garde Poetics Cornell University Press p 110 ISBN 978 0 8014 5157 7 Sagers Aaron May 12 2009 Pop 20 When sexual discomfort reaches our legislative branch The Monitor McAllen Texas McClatchy Tribune News Service via LexisNexis Scahill Andrew 2011 The Sieve or the Scalpel The Family Movie Act of 2004 Infantile Citizenship and the Rhetoric of Censorship Post Script Essays in Film and the Humanities 30 2 69 81 ISSN 0277 9897 via InfoTrac Shotwell Mikaela Winter 2012 Won t Somebody Please Think of the Children The Journal of Gender Race amp Justice Iowa City Iowa University of Iowa 15 141 via LexisNexis The Simpsons character Helen Lovejoy popularized this phrase TelevisionWeek staff February 18 2008 Blink TelevisionWeek Crain Communications 4 via LexisNexis Ten Brink Charles J Spring 2012 Gayborhoods Intersections of Land Use Regulation Sexual Minorities and the Creative Class Georgia State University Law Review Georgia State University 28 789 via LexisNexis Watt Mike 2013 Fervid Filmmaking McFarland p 233 ISBN 978 0 7864 7066 2 Wee Vivienne 1995 Stephens Sharon ed Children and the Politics of Culture Princeton University Press p 188 ISBN 978 0 691 04328 9 Wilkinson Cassandra September 1 2011 Let Kids Be Kids IPA Review ISSN 1329 8100 via HighBeam Research Further reading EditHeins Marjorie 2001 Not in Front of the Children Indecency Censorship and the Innocence of Youth Hill amp Wang ISBN 978 0 374 17545 0 Lim Elvin T June 2002 Five Trends in Presidential Rhetoric An Analysis of Rhetoric from George Washington to Bill Clinton PDF Presidential Studies Quarterly 32 2 328 348 doi 10 1111 j 0360 4918 2002 00223 x Archived from the original PDF on September 6 2015 Retrieved September 30 2015 Lim Elvin T 2008 The Substantive Impoverishment of Presidential Rhetoric The Anti Intellectual Presidency Oxford University Press pp 71 73 ISBN 978 0 19 534264 2 Meany John Kate Shuster 2002 Art Argument and Advocacy Mastering Parliamentary Debate New York International Debate Education Association p 65 ISBN 978 0 9702130 7 5 OCLC 438996525 Meyer Anneke February 2007 The Moral Rhetoric of Childhood Childhood SAGE Publications 14 1 85 104 doi 10 1177 0907568207072532 ISSN 0907 5682 LCCN 94645087 OCLC 41963991 S2CID 143886803 Sherr Susan A January 1 1999 Scenes from the Political Playground An Analysis of the Symbolic Use of Children in Presidential Campaign Advertising Political Communication Routledge 16 1 45 59 doi 10 1080 105846099198767 External links Edit Look up think of the children in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Think of the children Wikiquote has quotations related to Think of the children Kantor Andrew July 16 2004 Won t someone think of the children USA Today Archived from the original on October 23 2012 Retrieved October 5 2015 Marshall Jack February 16 2005 Think of the Children An Ethics Fallacy Ethics Scoreboard Alexandria Virginia ProEthics Ltd Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved November 1 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Think of the children amp oldid 1148557018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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