Technology1 min ago
Are sweets and chocolates at checkouts a danger to kids?
25 Answers
http://www.dailymail....sweets-checkouts.html
What's next sweets and chocolate wrapped in plain wrappers and hidden away behind closed cabinets?
What's next sweets and chocolate wrapped in plain wrappers and hidden away behind closed cabinets?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well shops deliberately put sweets and chocolates at that height, at checkouts to target children, encourage them to pick them up and generate 'pester power' at a point when a parent is hugely distracted by the check out process.
The packaging is carefully designed to optimise that engagement with young children.
Are sweets and chocolates good for kids?
In anything but moderation no.
So how do we feel about shops deliberately targeting those products at them?
I think most people accept it as part of life that requires some parenting skills.
But it is hardly the most attractive example of a 'free society' and commercial freedoms.
The packaging is carefully designed to optimise that engagement with young children.
Are sweets and chocolates good for kids?
In anything but moderation no.
So how do we feel about shops deliberately targeting those products at them?
I think most people accept it as part of life that requires some parenting skills.
But it is hardly the most attractive example of a 'free society' and commercial freedoms.
All this talk about frazzled and harassed parents, I think a better idea would be to provide a crèche for their kids, supervised by a responsible member of staff.
That way parents could dump their off springs in the crèche and wander around the supermarket at their leisure to do their shopping, a double bonus however is the fact that they wouldn't get under the heels of childless shoppers.
I think the first supermarket to introduce this idea would corner the market for trade.
That way parents could dump their off springs in the crèche and wander around the supermarket at their leisure to do their shopping, a double bonus however is the fact that they wouldn't get under the heels of childless shoppers.
I think the first supermarket to introduce this idea would corner the market for trade.
Surely it is the parent's responsibility to look after their child/ren AOG? It is also the parent's responsibility to say NO, should they wish to, regarding sweets, fizzy juice or anything else the parent does not wish the child to have.
It's not flaming rocket science. Why is everything everybody else's responsibilty these days?
It's not flaming rocket science. Why is everything everybody else's responsibilty these days?
When our daughter was very small we visited a large furniture store that had a big Ball Pond in the centre.
While in there, our daughter had a very serious nappy leakage incident due to an upset stomach.
We left hurriedly without saying anything.
Whenever I see a Ball Pond I always think about that day and wonder what happened to any children who went in after.
While in there, our daughter had a very serious nappy leakage incident due to an upset stomach.
We left hurriedly without saying anything.
Whenever I see a Ball Pond I always think about that day and wonder what happened to any children who went in after.
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