Consuming Kids:
How Marketing Undermines
Children’s Health, Values & Behavior
Call to Action
Enola G. Aird
The Motherhood Project
Ladies and gentlemen, we have come
to the end of our Summit—and the beginning of what
we at the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood
intend to be a new, much more vigorous phase in the
movement to end the commercialization of our
children’s lives--the movement to secure children’s
rights, as Hunter Adams said yesterday and today,
“to the privacy of their own minds.”
Think with me for a few moments about the power of
stories. A society’s stories help to shape its
people—especially its young people. In the United
States today, the chief storytellers are not
mothers. They are not fathers, or grandparents, or
teachers.
Our culture’s chief storytellers are not telling
stories that uplift our children. They are not
telling stories that give children a strong sense of
self worth, stories that enliven their imaginations,
stories that help teach children how to form strong,
caring relationships with others, stories that help
children to live healthy, whole lives. Our
children’s chief storytellers are not driven by love
for children or concern for their well-being.
No, the chief storytellers in our society today are
marketers. And they are driven by a concern for the
bottom line. In their quest to exploit the
multi-billion dollar children’s market, marketers
have chosen to tell stories that debase our
children, stories that undermine their sense of self
worth, stories that dull their imaginations and
desensitize them to the needs of others, stories
that encourage young men and young women to treat
each other like disposable objects, stories that
encourage children to live shallow,
consumption-driven lives.
Susan Linn said yesterday that “corporations market
values”--- and that “the values marketed to children
are antithetical, not only to their health and
well-being, but also to the health of democracy.”
I would go further. The values marketed by corporate
interests are threats to our children’s humanity.
They are threats to our children’s ability to grow
to be healthy, caring, responsive, and
responsible—the kinds of qualities that make us
human.
In the face of this fundamental threat to our
children’s humanity, much is required of those of us
who love children and put their well-being first.
It has become fashionable in recent months for
corporations to make gestures of corporate
responsibility. Some, as was mentioned yesterday,
send representatives to conferences like these. And
some have even taken initiatives to suggest concern
for the well-being of children.
While I do not think it is impossible that some
corporation, somewhere, some day may put children’s
interests above profits, history suggests that it is
not probable. As Ralph Nader said yesterday
afternoon, the “commercial instinct knows no
bounds.” It cannot restrain itself; it must,
therefore, be restrained.
That is where we--you and I—come in. We have got to
do a much, much better job of building the movement
to restrain corporations. We have to build public
awareness, raise consciousness, and strengthen the
public will to protect children from the excesses of
corporations.
We need many, many more people in this movement—and
we need your help to bring them on board.
First of all, we need you to help spread the word.
We have twelve excellent fact sheets available on
the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood web
site. Make sure that every member of your family and
all your friends and colleagues get access to these
fact sheets. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if each of us
could bring at least 50-100 new, highly motivated
people into this movement over the next year? Fifty
to one hundred highly motivated, new people each of
whom could reach out and bring in 50-100 more, and
on and on.
As Josh Golin and Tim Kasser said, you can form a
chapter of the Campaign for Commercial-Free
Childhood (CCFC) in your community using the
fantastic resources developed by the Quad Cities
chapter of the CCFC.
You can participate in TV Turn-Off Week, which is
coming up next month.
You can support the CCFC Statement on the Rights of
Children, Families, and Food Marketers.
You can inundate the Children’s Advertising Review
Unit, the marketers’ self-regulatory body, with your
complaints.
You can join the campaign to persuade TIAA-CREF to
pressure Coca Cola to change its marketing practices
to protect children.
And you can insist that the Congress restore the
Federal Trade Commission’s authority to regulate
marketing to children.
It is shameful that the Federal Trade Commission has
more authority to regulate marketing to adults that
it does to regulate marketing to children.
We need to stand up to marketers for our children.
I, for one, want marketers to know that if they want
my children, they will have to go through me.
The stories a society tells shapes its children and
its future.
It is up to us to decide whether our children will
continue to be awash in a steady stream of stories
that debase them, or whether we will find a way to
tell our children new, fresh stories that enliven
them and lift them up.
It is up to us—you and me.
Thank you very much for coming. We wish you a safe
journey home.
Let us go now. Let us go-- to help build this
movement to protect our children
Enola Aird JD
(egaird@juno.com)
is an activist mother. She is founder and director
of the Motherhood Project based at the Institute for
American Values in New York City. A graduate of
Barnard College and Yale Law School, she has worked
for a variety of media corporations, including the
National Association of Broadcasters and predecessor
entities of Time Warner and Viacom, as well as the
Children's Defense Fund.