Del. Jeff Eldridge on March 3 introduced H.B. 2918 which would “ban the sale of Barbie dolls and other dolls that influence girls to be beautiful.” The proposal would amend a section of the state code making the sale of glamorous dolls “unlawful” which “promote or influence girls to place an undue importance on physical beauty to the detriment of their intellectual and emotional development.”
“Barbie” has long stood as an unnatural body image that few women achieve. Still, the fashion industry and show business tends to promote the slim, busty beautiful appearance. Some countries have expressed concern that models in designer shows are encouraged to be too thin. The same criticism has been expressed about stars of stage and screen. The diminished ratings of the Miss America pageant may be a backlash to an inverse form of political correctness that has placed more than one scar on the status of the women who compete for scholarships in gowns, bathing suits with high heels, and talent.
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Seems to pretty stupid. I'll agree that there is to much pressure put on women to conform to a stereotype of what beauty is, but banning a toy isn't going to solve that issue. The toy is just a expression of a largely cultural dynamic of what defines beauty. Granted, this will probably go no where, but the message of what it implies is just as bad as the message they say the Barbia doll pushes. It's saying that there is something wrong with the way someone looks or wants to look.
What's next, banning health clubs and diets? Shouldn't the real issue be that the individual needs to be healthy and happy with themselves regardless of what pop-culture says they should look and act like?