Tetrino wrote:
unnamednewbie13 wrote:
It's not dishonest marketing. You're getting a greasy cheeseburger, greasy salty fries and a toy. No amount of fluff McD puts on it can avert sensible eyes from that fact and if people choose to ignore that, chances are their diet is already far gone with all the junk food they get from the freaking grocery store.
Edit: Anyone see the EA Games unlocks on Dr. Pepper bottles?
Kids are hardly sensible. All they see is the toy and that's reason enough for them to want to get the Happy Meal. And what with parents being soft-hearted 'friends of children' nowadays, you end up with kids eating crappy food and not giving a shit because they have a fancy new toy to play with for 5 minutes.
Dietary needs are not a child's priority, therefore the parent is responsible for ensuring the child eats healthily. And when the parent fails, someone has to step in.
No, they don't have to step in. What they can do are health awareness publicity campaigns. The moment they begin to do stuff like tax or ban certain products more because they're disagreeable, they've overstepped their bounds. Perhaps the parents should grow some and not stuff McD's down their family's throats day in and day out.
Nothing wrong with Happy Meal toys. I still have the wind up Kaa the snake and Luigi on a cloud sitting on my misc stuff shelf and for so cheap, they provided me with at least 50 hours of entertainment as a kid.
ruisleipa wrote:
talk about reductio ad absurdum. your post fails hard
Wikipedia strikes again. (sorry, couldn't help it)