Nickelodeon—the Brainwashing Network
by Curt
Bolding
Curt Bolding is a 16-year police veteran with experience spanning four jurisdictions in Illinois. Still active in his chosen profession, he currently serves as both a street officer and as a police control and arrest tactics instructor.
On Father’s Day this
year, June 18, 2000, I was enjoying a quiet morning with the kids, who were
watching their favorite channel for cartoons, Nickelodeon. While I was lazing with a cup of coffee,
thinking about things like picnics and puttering in the yard, something on TV
caught my attention. During their usual
commercial programming, Nickelodeon was attempting another kind of
programming—aimed at my kids’ minds.
Several kids, ages about
seven to nine, were pictured on the screen.
All were holding cardboard signs, with either a red star or a blue
star. Then the announcer spoke up, and
said, “Do you think adults should have guns in a house if a kid lives
there? Seven out of ten kids said
no.” Seven smiling kids were holding
signs with red stars, three holding blue stars. I caught the next question, after doing the obligatory Danny
Thomas style spit take. “Should adults
own guns at all? Eight out of ten kids
said no.” Eight red stars. “Should guns be sold with safety locks on
them? Seven kids said yes.” You get the idea. To be fair, I may not have the numbers exactly right as far as
how many kids said what. It was about a
two-thirds majority in favor of the gun control agenda. If there was another question asked, I
missed it because by this point I was too busy gnawing on my ankle.
In my apoplexy, I have
crafted this article on my Father’s Day, before going out and doing my duty for
America by sending my share of the fifty million rounds downrange. I must apologize to my regular readers who
are more used to information-based articles from the standpoint of the
professional police officer. Yet it is
also my duty to point out to citizens the lower, more base, elements of society
wherever they rear up.
The anti-civil-rights
movement has clearly been channeling money to Nickelodeon to get that network
to promote their political ideas. Now,
wouldn’t you think that a network that provides kids’ programming would have some
sense of responsibility as far as what kind of stuff they filled kids’ heads
with? When the hell did pushing
political issues on children become the right thing to do? I must have missed Nickelodeon’s ads pertaining
to abortion, Kosovo, and the security lapses at Los Alamos. What’s next? Elian Gonzalez hosting a green slime game show?
This is by far the lowest
level that the anti-civil-rights movement has sunk to yet. If they’re willing to brainwash all our
children, they’ll stop at nothing. The
Less-Than-A-Million Moms have proven that they’re not interested in
discussion. The conversations that go
on in their relatively few Internet message boards show that without exception
they run and hide when presented with the facts. They are careful not to let reality intrude into their vision of
a self-contained world filled with puppies and butterflies. Not that this is surprising; they are
perfect examples of the timid, overly sensitive weaklings this society has bred
in recent years. Wealthy hypocrites
like Rosie O’Donnell and Diane Feinstein do their talking for them, so that the
sheep may remain in their pens. In the
rabid pursuit of their agenda, there are no rules. They have no honor. They
have no integrity. Not content to try
to disarm you, Ladies and Gentlemen of America, they’re now going after the
minds of your children. Using the
safety of their own children as their premise, yours are now expendable.
Watch Nickelodeon. See this travesty for yourselves, and come
to your own conclusions. Should you
have an opinion on the matter, you can express it at www.nick.com.
Feel free to drop my name and refer them this article. Tell everybody you know about it and post it
on your favorite newsgroups. Every
organization that is sympathetic to gun control, or more accurately, their
money, needs to get the same message that Smith & Wesson’s been
getting.
To paraphrase Walter Cronkite, the very idea that they’re trying to implant thoughts in your children’s minds ought to scare you to death.