Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a dance kid and this seems like the natural progression of dance moms. Little kids in scantily clothed wardrobes is nothing new and of course it would eventually go online. Let me ask the moms who are “paralyzed sick” over it: do you buy your underage daughter two-piece swimsuits? Let her wear crop tops and booty shorts? Do you let her shimmy during dance practice because “it’s just a normal dance move”? If you do please shut your mouth, you’re doing the same thing. The women in this article were just thinking ahead enough to monetize the pedophiles fawning over their daughters.
Not a dance mom, have no idea what "shimmy" is, but thinking ahead and monetizing pedophiles' interests is much worse than having your DD wear a two-piece swimsuit (what?). There is nothing natural or inevitable about making those additional steps; it's like saying pinching someone is the same as murdering him, just a few steps ahead.
I was a dance kid too and don’t mind two-piece swimsuits, but the PP is primarily right. It’s not “pinching someone vs. murdering him”, it’s “severely beating someone up vs. murdering him.” The outraged “cool moms” are just a step behind.
So wearing a two-piece to a pool is almost the same (severely beating vs. murdering) as photographing your child in suggestive poses to attract male attention, then send additional photos for money? I mean, are you insane?
What is the purpose of a 3 year old in a bra? So you believe a child wearing next to nothing in public is fine, as long as it’s not on social media?
Not in public - at the pool. You know, where it's appropriate.
And yes, that is very different from being photographed for social media, and different still from making suggestive poses there, and different still from offering subscriptions to additional photos of said child. One wonders why you feel the need to equate all these.
No, it’s not appropriate. Children have been increasingly sexualized for years, it wasn’t long ago that manufacturers didn’t even make two pieces in toddler sizes. Now the same people criticizing social media images are defending behavior that 10 years ago wasn’t defensible. *You’re* the problem feeding these monsters, it’s astonishing you don’t realize that.
What are you talking about? They always had 2 piece swimsuits for little girls. There’s pictures of me and my cousins in 2 piece swimsuits in the 80s.
The parents in this article were clearly mostly awful and doing it on purpose. but regular people should be able to make REGULAR posts of their girls at dance, swim, cheer, and certain sports without the pervert army descending just because they’re wearing tight clothing that’s typical for the activity at hand. Regular parents just want to brag a little bit about their kids activities, no matter if the kids are doing robotics club or dance team. And gross men need to keep it in their pants for once in their miserable little lives.
It sounds like not all the parents in this article even started out doing it on purpose. They started out just wanting to brag about Larla’s gymnastics show and maybe give her a chance at a modeling career and then slid into what they are doing. Which, yes, is terrible and they shouldn’t be doing and I really appreciate all the interviewees who said straight up that it was wrong and they regretted it — hopefully moms of younger kids wondering if having their kids be influencers would help pay for college will think again! But I doubt any of these moms sat down and said to themselves, “how can I use my 6yo to make money off perverts.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a dance kid and this seems like the natural progression of dance moms. Little kids in scantily clothed wardrobes is nothing new and of course it would eventually go online. Let me ask the moms who are “paralyzed sick” over it: do you buy your underage daughter two-piece swimsuits? Let her wear crop tops and booty shorts? Do you let her shimmy during dance practice because “it’s just a normal dance move”? If you do please shut your mouth, you’re doing the same thing. The women in this article were just thinking ahead enough to monetize the pedophiles fawning over their daughters.
Not a dance mom, have no idea what "shimmy" is, but thinking ahead and monetizing pedophiles' interests is much worse than having your DD wear a two-piece swimsuit (what?). There is nothing natural or inevitable about making those additional steps; it's like saying pinching someone is the same as murdering him, just a few steps ahead.
I was a dance kid too and don’t mind two-piece swimsuits, but the PP is primarily right. It’s not “pinching someone vs. murdering him”, it’s “severely beating someone up vs. murdering him.” The outraged “cool moms” are just a step behind.
So wearing a two-piece to a pool is almost the same (severely beating vs. murdering) as photographing your child in suggestive poses to attract male attention, then send additional photos for money? I mean, are you insane?
What is the purpose of a 3 year old in a bra? So you believe a child wearing next to nothing in public is fine, as long as it’s not on social media?
Not in public - at the pool. You know, where it's appropriate.
And yes, that is very different from being photographed for social media, and different still from making suggestive poses there, and different still from offering subscriptions to additional photos of said child. One wonders why you feel the need to equate all these.
No, it’s not appropriate. Children have been increasingly sexualized for years, it wasn’t long ago that manufacturers didn’t even make two pieces in toddler sizes. Now the same people criticizing social media images are defending behavior that 10 years ago wasn’t defensible. *You’re* the problem feeding these monsters, it’s astonishing you don’t realize that.
What are you talking about? They always had 2 piece swimsuits for little girls. There’s pictures of me and my cousins in 2 piece swimsuits in the 80s.
The parents in this article were clearly mostly awful and doing it on purpose. but regular people should be able to make REGULAR posts of their girls at dance, swim, cheer, and certain sports without the pervert army descending just because they’re wearing tight clothing that’s typical for the activity at hand. Regular parents just want to brag a little bit about their kids activities, no matter if the kids are doing robotics club or dance team. And gross men need to keep it in their pants for once in their miserable little lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a dance kid and this seems like the natural progression of dance moms. Little kids in scantily clothed wardrobes is nothing new and of course it would eventually go online. Let me ask the moms who are “paralyzed sick” over it: do you buy your underage daughter two-piece swimsuits? Let her wear crop tops and booty shorts? Do you let her shimmy during dance practice because “it’s just a normal dance move”? If you do please shut your mouth, you’re doing the same thing. The women in this article were just thinking ahead enough to monetize the pedophiles fawning over their daughters.
Not a dance mom, have no idea what "shimmy" is, but thinking ahead and monetizing pedophiles' interests is much worse than having your DD wear a two-piece swimsuit (what?). There is nothing natural or inevitable about making those additional steps; it's like saying pinching someone is the same as murdering him, just a few steps ahead.
I was a dance kid too and don’t mind two-piece swimsuits, but the PP is primarily right. It’s not “pinching someone vs. murdering him”, it’s “severely beating someone up vs. murdering him.” The outraged “cool moms” are just a step behind.
So wearing a two-piece to a pool is almost the same (severely beating vs. murdering) as photographing your child in suggestive poses to attract male attention, then send additional photos for money? I mean, are you insane?
What is the purpose of a 3 year old in a bra? So you believe a child wearing next to nothing in public is fine, as long as it’s not on social media?
Not in public - at the pool. You know, where it's appropriate.
And yes, that is very different from being photographed for social media, and different still from making suggestive poses there, and different still from offering subscriptions to additional photos of said child. One wonders why you feel the need to equate all these.
No, it’s not appropriate. Children have been increasingly sexualized for years, it wasn’t long ago that manufacturers didn’t even make two pieces in toddler sizes. Now the same people criticizing social media images are defending behavior that 10 years ago wasn’t defensible. *You’re* the problem feeding these monsters, it’s astonishing you don’t realize that.
Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a dance kid and this seems like the natural progression of dance moms. Little kids in scantily clothed wardrobes is nothing new and of course it would eventually go online. Let me ask the moms who are “paralyzed sick” over it: do you buy your underage daughter two-piece swimsuits? Let her wear crop tops and booty shorts? Do you let her shimmy during dance practice because “it’s just a normal dance move”? If you do please shut your mouth, you’re doing the same thing. The women in this article were just thinking ahead enough to monetize the pedophiles fawning over their daughters.
Not a dance mom, have no idea what "shimmy" is, but thinking ahead and monetizing pedophiles' interests is much worse than having your DD wear a two-piece swimsuit (what?). There is nothing natural or inevitable about making those additional steps; it's like saying pinching someone is the same as murdering him, just a few steps ahead.
I was a dance kid too and don’t mind two-piece swimsuits, but the PP is primarily right. It’s not “pinching someone vs. murdering him”, it’s “severely beating someone up vs. murdering him.” The outraged “cool moms” are just a step behind.
So wearing a two-piece to a pool is almost the same (severely beating vs. murdering) as photographing your child in suggestive poses to attract male attention, then send additional photos for money? I mean, are you insane?
What is the purpose of a 3 year old in a bra? So you believe a child wearing next to nothing in public is fine, as long as it’s not on social media?
Not in public - at the pool. You know, where it's appropriate.
And yes, that is very different from being photographed for social media, and different still from making suggestive poses there, and different still from offering subscriptions to additional photos of said child. One wonders why you feel the need to equate all these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Good point. It’s like we’ve come to expect a subset of men will behave like this. And it seems more prevalent than I had ever imagined. It sucks, but how do we lock them all away?
Also, I don’t understand the men who are so brazenly open about finding young girls sexy. Like to actually take the time to comment is just bleghhhh. But it also makes you wonder how many are “smart” enough to be covert about it and that these creeps commenting may be the tip of the iceberg. It’s terrifying that these men are just out there in our communities and we have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Good point. It’s like we’ve come to expect a subset of men will behave like this. And it seems more prevalent than I had ever imagined. It sucks, but how do we lock them all away?
Also, I don’t understand the men who are so brazenly open about finding young girls sexy. Like to actually take the time to comment is just bleghhhh. But it also makes you wonder how many are “smart” enough to be covert about it and that these creeps commenting may be the tip of the iceberg. It’s terrifying that these men are just out there in our communities and we have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Considering that one of the primary functions of parenthood is to guide your offspring safely to adulthood, and random dudes are under no such obligation however repulsive their behavior might be, I can't criticize said discourse.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Considering that one of the primary functions of parenthood is to guide your offspring safely to adulthood, and random dudes are under no such obligation however repulsive their behavior might be, I can't criticize said discourse.
Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.
Good point. It’s like we’ve come to expect a subset of men will behave like this. And it seems more prevalent than I had ever imagined. It sucks, but how do we lock them all away?
Also, I don’t understand the men who are so brazenly open about finding young girls sexy. Like to actually take the time to comment is just bleghhhh. But it also makes you wonder how many are “smart” enough to be covert about it and that these creeps commenting may be the tip of the iceberg. It’s terrifying that these men are just out there in our communities and we have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a dance kid and this seems like the natural progression of dance moms. Little kids in scantily clothed wardrobes is nothing new and of course it would eventually go online. Let me ask the moms who are “paralyzed sick” over it: do you buy your underage daughter two-piece swimsuits? Let her wear crop tops and booty shorts? Do you let her shimmy during dance practice because “it’s just a normal dance move”? If you do please shut your mouth, you’re doing the same thing. The women in this article were just thinking ahead enough to monetize the pedophiles fawning over their daughters.
Not a dance mom, have no idea what "shimmy" is, but thinking ahead and monetizing pedophiles' interests is much worse than having your DD wear a two-piece swimsuit (what?). There is nothing natural or inevitable about making those additional steps; it's like saying pinching someone is the same as murdering him, just a few steps ahead.
I was a dance kid too and don’t mind two-piece swimsuits, but the PP is primarily right. It’s not “pinching someone vs. murdering him”, it’s “severely beating someone up vs. murdering him.” The outraged “cool moms” are just a step behind.
So wearing a two-piece to a pool is almost the same (severely beating vs. murdering) as photographing your child in suggestive poses to attract male attention, then send additional photos for money? I mean, are you insane?
What is the purpose of a 3 year old in a bra? So you believe a child wearing next to nothing in public is fine, as long as it’s not on social media?
Anonymous wrote:It's interesting how just about all the discourse on this article is about policing women and girls behavior and not the pedos.