Thinking about this Frozen I / Frozen II thing and the posted.
How would you explain to your kid that something they want to watch is designed to trick them?
Do you draw the line with some things and say 'you're not watching that' or do you sit down and watch it with them and talk about some of the more malicious themes that have been shoehorned into an otherwise good story?
Are they ready to learn about who's behind it at a certain age or is that something they should discover for themselves?
Thinking about this Frozen I / Frozen II thing and the [4channer's review](https://poal.co/s/4chan/115461) @1quickdub posted.
[As a child, I was exposed to a fair amount anti-white propaganda disguised as kids programming, and only realized much later in my adulthood that's what it was. I'm sure my parents had no clue.](#spoiler)
[Anyone remember shows like Captain Planet and their episode(s) about overpopulation and how it's bad to have more than one or two kids (featuring the only two white characters)? I mean sure in my late twenties I started to learn about some of the anti-white cultural objectives and break myself of that conditioning, but there's no doubt in my mind this ubiquitous, subtle brainwashing had an effect on my decision-making before that point. AND many of my peers to this day remain unaware, so mine was a fairly good outcome.](#spoiler)
How would you explain to your kid that something they want to watch is designed to trick them?
Do you draw the line with some things and say 'you're not watching that' or do you sit down and watch it with them and talk about some of the more malicious themes that have been shoehorned into an otherwise good story?
Are they ready to learn about who's behind it at a certain age or is that something they should discover for themselves?
(post is archived)