Posted on 11/10/2005 3:57:53 AM PST by Diago
This is a WorldNetDaily printer-friendly version of the article which follows.
Tuesday, November 8, 2005 All dolled up and no place to go Posted: November 8, 2005 1:00 a.m. Eastern
By Rebecca Hagelin
A new catalog from the American Girl doll company arrived in the mail recently something my daughter Kristin and I used to really look forward to.
We've ordered from the company many times, and one of my fondest memories is of a trip I made with Kristin to the huge American Girl store in Chicago. The occasion was my ahem, 40th birthday as well as that of my best childhood friend, Suzanne Ebel. We decided to take our daughters and spend a weekend doing girlie fun stuff that we would all enjoy, mainly to teach our girls the importance of developing true female friendships. Our weekend highlight was a play and lunch at American Girl.
Tragically, it seems that the place we carefully chose to help teach our daughters important life lessons about sacrifice, selflessness and friendship now promotes the "me first" mantra of selfish feminism.
The company has decided to donate money from the sale of its "I Can" bracelets to Girls Inc., a group that promotes an agenda that sounds as if it was ripped from the pages of Planned Parenthood.
I know it sounds like something that just can't be true. And believe me, it pains me deeply to say it. Like thousands of other mothers who work to uphold traditional values, I have long appreciated the American Girl dolls for their wholesome image and the way they help our daughters learn about the enormous sacrifices mothers and fathers have made throughout history to provide a better life for their children. The storybooks featuring Kirsten, for example the doll my daughter owns focus on what life was like in Minnesota in 1854 for a girl whose hard-working immigrant parents made the difficult decision to move their family from Sweden to America.
But what an unwelcome education we're getting now about the company that makes these wonderful dolls. On the company's website, you'll find (on the "Shop" page) a picture of a black bracelet with a red star that says, "I Can." When you click on the link to find out about buying the bracelet, it tells you about the "I Can" promise: "I can be myself, follow my dreams and always do my best. I can reach for the stars, lend a hand to others and be a good friend. I can make a difference! I promise to try."
This seems innocuous enough, but then you'll see a notice that 70 cents of every dollar raised from selling the bracelet goes to Girls Inc., described as "a national organization dedicated to inspiring all girls to be strong, smart and bold." Again, that doesn't sound so bad until you go to the Girls Inc. website.
There, we find that Girls Inc. "encourages all girls to develop positive sexual identities and to function comfortably as responsible sexual beings." OK, I thought we were talking about girls and their dolls. How did we make the jump to them as "sexual beings"? But the folks at Girls Inc. are just warming up:
Whoa. In other words, American Girl is sponsoring a group that promotes access to abortion and contraception for young girls, along with what sounds like a rather graphic sex-ed course for our daughters. And if they have lesbian tendencies, that's apparently no problem for the folks at Girls Inc. Indeed, it's to be encouraged.
The website goes on make its support for abortion on demand clear:
What a shocking and sad decision by a company that has long enjoyed the support of moms hoping for safe harbor from the more explicit and, frankly, trashy dolls that one finds at toy stores these days. Not surprisingly, American Girl's tasteless decision to help sponsor the radical feminist agenda has sparked outrage nationwide. Some groups are urging boycotts and encouraging customers to voice their displeasure to the company.
A Catholic school in Brookfield, Wisc., St. Luke School, did its part by canceling a fashion show by American Girl. The money raised would have gone toward a new playground and a refurbished library. "It's a bargain we'll just have to pass up," Frank Malloy, St. Luke's pastor, said. "The cost is too high. Our integrity isn't for sale."
Let's hope that American Girl has its own attack of conscience and reconsiders its disgraceful support of Girls Inc.
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Rebecca Hagelin is a vice president of the Heritage Foundation and the former vice president of communications for WorldNetDaily. Her 60-second radio commentaries can be heard on the Salem Communications Network.
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ping
My second granddaughter was to get an American Girl Bitty Baby this Christmas, but that's out. I'm looking at a My Twinn; does anyone have any other suggestions? I'm loath to contribute to a group so bent on their own destruction.
Quite right to be aware, concerned, suspicious, educated, and able to talk about Rights as enumerated in the Constitution of the United States of America, versus rights established by congress, and the highest court in the land.
Rights which could be better labeled as manufactured rights in direct contradiction to the rights enumerated, in the Constitution and based on natural law.
The contrast are rights unearned, rights unenumerated, and so, no rights at all, just an agenda with a goal of deceiving half of the population, the half with the ability to bear the next generation. Seems so innocent, seems so natural, seems so D A N G E R O U S, and D E C E P T I V E.
I can't say what I'm thinking.
We just got the catalog in the mail. My girls are delighted with it. Unfortunately, we won't be ordering from it this year.
Anyone know if there was a change in ownership? It's hard to believe that the people who developed this wonderful line of dolls could be behind this evil.
Go to www.visionforum.com. They have some really lovely gifts for girls. Their dolls are very nice and are currently 20 percent off. Run by good Christian people too. They also have great stuff for boys.
My daughter doesn't really play with dolls but we are considering My Twin to spark an interest in them. Vision Forum has some other options. I'll look up the link for you.
Ya bet me to it!
I hadn't seen your reply!
http://www.visionforum.com
What the hell is wrong with you people?? You either have a marketing manager who is lazy, or she is a feminist Nazi! With what Girls Inc stands for, there can be no other description of your marketing management!
I know I will never buy from or support such an organization who promotes sex and other adult matters to girls who's ages still play with dolls...What the hell is wrong with you??
Signed,
A normal person...
Yes there was a change in ownership recently. I am pretty sure American Girl was sold to Mattel in the late 1990's
bump to me to come back to!
Thanks for the article. I was unaware of this and will pass it on - far and wide.
:) Thanks for posting the real live link!
I've been a poster to these Girls Inc./American Girl threads. Since I've been posting to these threads, I've been getting mail bombed with phishing, porn and scam mails.
More than 10 of these mails a day have this header information: www.server1.girlsinc-online.org (xxxx are editing out my email and domain)
Return-Path: support@paypal.com
Received: from www.server1.girlsinc-online.org (www.server1.girlsinc-online.org [69.20.65.250])
by xxxxxxxxx.com (8.12.10/8.12.10) with ESMTP id jA70sgsR002824
for xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; Sun, 6 Nov 2005 19:54:43 -0500
Received: from User (webbfk.ts.mah.se [195.178.232.21])
(authenticated bits=0)
by www.server1.girlsinc-online.org (8.12.11/8.12.11) with ESMTP id jA70nsH9025802;
Sun, 6 Nov 2005 19:49:56 -0500
Message-Id: 200511070049.jA70nsH9025802@www.server1.girlsinc-online.org
Reply-To: no-reply@paypal.com From: "support@paypal.com" support@paypal.com Subject: PayPal - Check your account
Date: Mon, 7 Nov 2005 02:47:08 +0200
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Status: RO
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