Amity wrote:
A pedo might look at one of those cute little girls and think the girl was specifically motioning to him and him alone. Those glances were directed at only him. Am I making sense?
It makes sense, but we must remember we cannot control other people's thoughts and actions, just as your family could not convince your aunt that the newscaster was not communicating with her through the billboard. We can dress our daughters in potato sacks and a pedophile will still be sexually attracted to at least one of them for any number of reasons.
It's been pointed out many times that children can be preyed upon through basketball games, cheerleading, dance recitals, or by playing in their front yard. Maybe a pedophile thinks the cute eleven-year old girl sinking her foul shots is a sign that she loves him, or the girl on top of the pyramid is raising her arms because she's reaching out to
him. Perhaps the child playing with a hula hoop in her front yard is sending him a signal that she's sexually ready. It sounds crazy to us, but to the pedophiles it's real. Just as real as your aunt believed the billboard was talking to her. Should we take down billboards in case someone else thinks they're being spoken to?
Mabel wrote:
If it's necessary to have a beauty pageant for little girls, why not dress them like little girls and judge them (God, what an awful thing, judging little girls on their looks!) as they truly are?
Why do we take a shower, maybe put on makeup, and make sure we're nicely dressed before going to a wedding or other formal event? I don't know if you have a daughter, but if her class picture were being taken, would you roll her out bed, dress her in whatever happened to be around and send her off to school with her hair all matted up and a stain on her shirt?
Our society cares about appearance, if only a little bit. Watch the media include a snide remark about his appearance and people here making fun of JMK's appearance and clothes. How can someone put down pageants when we judge people day in and day out based on their looks - the " bad feelings" we get when seeing a pedophile on TV for example? Is it because pageants are boldly doing what we are all doing passive-aggressively?
We can have pageants where little girls come in from playing in the mud, or where they're wearing overalls with messy hair. But the little girl who had a customed-made outfit with her hair done and makeup on - so her features don't fade under the bad lighting and make her look like a corpse - is going to win. If she looks the most "put together" and doesn't fall down on stage, she's going to win because generally she's aesthetically pleasing based on the basic standards our society has put forward.
The thing is, pageants are not always based on appearances only. Sometimes talent, interview, and personality are scored. Young girls can develop many positive traits by doing pageants. Patsy had a positive experience so why wouldn't she want the same for her daughter? Pageants are more than looks.
txsvicki wrote:
Karr is obsessed with JonBenet and could have been able to go to some of the pageants or see newspaper photos where he became even more fixated and obsessed. [snip] Putting JonBenet into the public eye could have made her more vulnerable to kidnappers, serial killers, and pedophiles because she was so beautiful, talented, and wealthy.
Okay, let's take away the pageant element and say JonBenet had her picture in the paper because she was the Girl Scout who sold the most cookies in Boulder. Karr still would've seen her picture and become obsessed. Of course putting her in the public eye in any way would've made her more vulnerable by the fact that you have a face and a name, but that happens to kids all of the time when they achieve special accomplishments.
I don't people should put any kid's pics online, in the newspapers, let them walk anywhere alone or with a group of kids, or let them play outside in front yards and parks alone (if at all) in this day and age.
(I'm assuming you meant to write "I don't
think people...")
I agree with you as far as not putting kid's pictures online, but not letting them walk anywhere with a group of their friends or letting them play in their front yards? I don't think the answer is forbidding the children to do what children want to do. I think it's educating children to go with their gut instinct if they're uncomfortable. We have to go on the offense instead of being defensive.