Advertisements against 1 parent should be made illegal as they act like single fathers don't exist and that women are always in the right when it comes to child care and wellbeing, which (newsflash!), they aren't.
Why do you need adverts banned?
Advertisements against 1 parent should be made illegal as they act like single fathers don't exist and that women are always in the right when it comes to child care and wellbeing, which (newsflash!), they aren't.
No one stated that men make better leaders it is just naturally common that the man adopts a leadership role in the household/family unit and the woman more a support role. Being the "leader" doesn't make you the better (being in the forces I know that all too well). Nothing is "forcing" the natural differences, they just are. My other half is absolutely of the same belief on this, she thinks her role as a woman is to support me in everything I do. After all said and done the woman usually wears the trousers, so to speak, doesn't she?
Like they say, behind every great man...
The laws when it comes to paternity vs maternity will never be equal. Most companies don't even acknowledge fathers even exist, especially single fathers. Just look at all the adverts on TV every single day with rubbish like "mums know best" and "mums shop at asda" etc. There are tonnes of feminist adverts on TV which give the false sense that its normal and fine to think this way.
[TW]Fox;22152645 said:Why do you need adverts banned?
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Because no father has ever been a major influence on an olympian.
Simple, because our low IQ society is gullible and believes everything they see and hear on the TV...
[TW]Fox;22152738 said:Rubbish. Who cares if people advertise towards Mums? You are making an issue out of something that doesn't matter. The majority of family units contain at least a Mum. Therefore products and services are advertised at them.
[TW]Fox;22152738 said:Rubbish. Who cares if people advertise towards Mums? You are making an issue out of something that doesn't matter. The majority of family units contain at least a Mum. Therefore products and services are advertised at them.
im a single dad (well half the week) so im not worthy of being advertised to?
[TW]Fox;22152812 said:They are a business, the advertisements are designed to generate maximum awareness and from that, maximum sales. So they pick the largest group. Don't take it so personally.
[TW]Fox;22152812 said:They are a business, the advertisements are designed to generate maximum awareness and from that, maximum sales. So they pick the largest group. Don't take it so personally.
Your view seems to be the same sort of view that makes people scared to say things 'Fireman' and instead say 'Fireperson'...
so why not have it 'P&G Proud Sponsors of PARENTS!!'? or 'Parents shop at iceland'.......how is using parents instead of mums being any less interesting for mums, they are of course, still a parent?
Less targeted and when the entire point is likely to target mums, why deliberately not do it just to pander to a bunch of people your advert isn't aimed at anyway?
so Iceland only want women in their shop? is that not discrimination?
obvs I couldn't really care less as I don't think I have ever been influenced by an advert, but the point is still their, women cannot demand they get treated equally, unless they are prepared to accept that they have to give men a thought too.
No, but Iceland may feel (or have research to suggest) women (mums specifically) are more likely to respond to such targeted advertising and change their shopping habits than men would be, so choose to aim the advertising specifically at women rather than make it less focussed by using more wooly terms just to pander to people who wouldn't likely be influenced by such advertising in the first place.
but, if we took something like kwikfit or a similar car based company and the adverts all said 'dads/men take their cars to ***' it would be labelled as sexist and women would be in uproar that the company assumes women don't have cars and such. my point was, it should be a 2 way thing, and not all aimed at making womens lives better, it should be about bring both sexes to an equal standing.
What, like Yorkie did for years with their 'Not for girls' campaign? I don't honestly recall there being much outrage about that?
I honestly think you're almost looking for a problem that isn't there.
It wasn't well received and is one of the most complained about adverts made, especially in the US. He's right though, advertisement needs to be on a level peg, same as everything else as thats the basis of equality.