Kerry Howley | April 7, 2008
Because
nothing sells like contempt for other people's consumption choices,
Pamela Paul has written a book called PARENTING, INC. How We
Are Sold on $800 Strollers, Fetal Education, Baby Sign Language,
Sleeping Coaches, Toddler Couture, and Diaper Wipe Warmers — And
What It Means for Our Children. From Kate Zernike's
New York Times
review:
As Pamela Paul chronicles in her occasionally frightening account, “Parenting, Inc.,” my generation of parents has fallen into the grips of Big Baby. Pushed by a host of factors — the guilt and exhaustion of working parents, the dispersion of family networks that once passed knowledge from generation to generation, the pressure of admissions from preschool to college, and a culture that worships all things celebrity (including its offspring) — we are intimidated or bamboozled into buying all sorts of goods and services that we not only don’t need, but that may harm our children...
“It may sound like a leap to go from baby toys to the death of democracy, but it’s a valid concern,” she approvingly quotes a child advocate saying. “A democratic populace relies on people who know how to think critically, who are willing and able to take action.”
The pictured diamond-studded, democracy-killing faux nipple can be had for a mere $17,000.
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