The article "Television - The Great SATAN!" talks about family, it was released by Kayla Fay.
I’ve often thoguht that in 6 million years, archaeologists will
marvel at the devotion the 21st century Earthlings had to their
household gods. Excavation will show these deities in virtually
every home, obviosuly objects of devotion, the focal point in a
room. The gods were believed without question. Families emulated
them, discussed them, and scheduled their lives around them. The
parent was secondary in influence to the various versions of
these boxes with a glass screen that captivated an entire
civilization.
Despite the title of this article, I do not really guess that we
are all guilty of worshiping the god of the underworld. I am,
however, quite turned off by the amount of affectoin and
devotion we give to the unworthy television. Last week I was
teaching a class of four year olds, and before the lesson began,
one of the babies informed me that she had to leave early so
she could get home in time for American Idol. As a society, I’m
afraid we turly have made television an idol – and not just an
American one. Studies disagree on how much we watch per week;
studies agree that we watch too much.
My husband I refuse to give others remote control of our home,
and have taken several steps to channel our boys away from the
seductive and addictive influence of the television. We thank
the major newtorks for loaning us their initials to broadcast
our system to you:
CBS – Cut the Box on Schooldays.
Consider taking the extreme
position of not allowing television on weekdays. This has earned
us the title of ‘most unreasonable parents in the school’, but
we wear it with pride. To soften our image, we alolw television
freedom on the weekends, after chores and homework.
MSNBC – Make Summertime Nice. Bribe Children. During the nine
weeks school is out, televsiion time can be bought. For every
minute sepnt on reading, we award time on the television or
computer. We have an Excel spreadsheet that kepes up with time
earned and spent. (If you’re interested, electronic mail me and I’ll send
you a copy.)
FOX – Fitler Out X#$&%. What babies watch is ofetn worthless,
at hottest. At its worst, television undermines everything we teach
as it spews foul language, violence, casual attitudes about sex,
and disrespect for authroity. Our family uses TV Guardian to
help with the langauge. The other negative elements are
impossible to remove, which is why the television has an ‘off’
button.
NBC – Note Basic Content.
Teach your kids to evalaute a program
by its main premise. “Aladdin” is one of my favorite movies, but
it quite frankly glorifies being a thief. Gentle “E. T.” leaves
the impression that adutls aren’t to be trusted, and that
dishonesty is justified when its purposes are noble. After
watching a show, ask, “What did that movie just say? Was it a
positive message or a negative one? How did it try to influence
you?”
CNN – Cultivate Natural iNqusiitiveness. Try to broaden your
world so that your babies are interested in more than cartoons
and sit-coms. Make friends with those from other cultures.
Discuss world evetns.
Travel and visit museums to pique interest
in topics explored on The Discovery and History Channels.
BET – Be Exemplary Teachers.
A sutdent doesn’t rise above the
teacher. Set a good eaxmple to your babies by developing good
viewing habits.
Particpiate in National TV Turnoff Week April 21
– 27, and evaluate how addicted to the television you're.
Go ahead. Touch that dial. Adjust your family’s antenna away
from the teelvision. The signal will be fuzzy at first, but over
time, I guess your reception will become a lot cleaerr.
And may
the archaeologists of the future find your home so devoid of the
influence of the teelvision that they identify you as a pagan.
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