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View Full Version : Target gives into butch SJW demands;to remove gender based signs on chinese made junk



AndreaGail
8th August 2015, 05:50 PM
After a tweet showing a sign in a Target store that distinguished between “building sets” and “girls’ building sets” sparked a social media firestorm earlier this summer, the Minneapolis-based retailer said Friday that it will use gender-neutral signage in its toy aisles, as well as in other areas such as kids’ bedding.

The shift comes as toy manufacturers themselves have begun to move away from labeling their products as being just for girls or for boys in recent years, said Jim Silver, editor-in-chief of TTPM.com, a toy review website.

“We’ve seen girls that love Nerf and girls that love Hot Wheels,” he said. “And there are boys who like to play with E-Z Bake ovens.”

Silver, who often visits toy departments, added that he doesn’t see as many gender-specific designations of toy aisles in stores these days as in the past. Rather, the *signage more often relates to a *category such as Star Wars or educational toys.

Target’s aisles generally follow that more category-specific formula, with the exception of “girls’ building sets,” which referred to products such as Lego Friends. Those Lego toys include items such as hair salons and flower stands.

On Friday, Target also said it will remove the pink, blue, yellow and green paper on the walls of its toy shelves that indicate a gender and will replace it with more neutral wood paneling. These changes will be phased in over the next few months. The company said its teams are identifying other parts of the store where they could make similar changes, but added that gender-based language still makes sense in some departments such as apparel where sizing and fit are different.

In a blog post on its corporate website, Target said that in the past, shoppers have said signage by brand, age or gender helped them find gifts faster. But the company went on to say that shopping preferences change and it has heard loud and clear from customers that signage by gender in some departments is unnecessary.

“We heard you, and we agree,” the company said. It added, “We never want guests or their families to feel frustrated or limited by the way things are presented.”

But the change will not be reflected on Target.com, where gender is often used as a search term when people shop online, said Molly Snyder, a Target spokeswoman. So gender references will remain in those categories on its website.

Still, news that the signage in Target’s stores will change was greeted with delight by Abi Bechtel, the mother in Akron, Ohio, who tweeted the initial picture that sparked the debate in June.

“That’s fantastic,” she said in a phone interview when she was, coincidentally, heading to Target to do back-to-school shopping for her three sons. “I think it’s great they are paying attention and re-evaluating how they are doing this kind of marketing.”

In June, Bechtel had been shopping with one of her sons who had birthday money to spend when she saw the sign in the aisle that called “girls’ building sets” separate from just “building sets.”

She tweeted a picture of the signage and wrote “Don’t do this, @Target.” It was retweeted thousands of times.

Bechtel was surprised it got so much attention. “I didn’t expect it to become the center of this entire discussion about gender and the way toys are marketed,” she said. “But Caitlyn Jenner’s pictures had just come out. And the Supreme Court’s ruling on same-sex marriage came out soon after. So there was a whole lot of discussion about gender and gender roles anyway. The tweet just landed at the right time.”

Up until a few weeks ago, she had still seen the “girls’ building sets” sign in her local Target in Green, Ohio. But on Friday, when she got to the store, she happily reported that the sign was no longer there.

Snyder said the “girls’ building sets” signs were recently taken down across the chain and that the changes in the home and entertainment departments will happen in the next few weeks.

Toys ‘R’ Us in 2013 agreed to remove gender specific signage from stores in the United Kingdom amid pressure from groups there. It has a similar U.S. policy, a spokeswoman said in an e-mail Friday.

“There are no gender-specific toy sections in our stores,” Kathleen Waugh, vice president, corporate communications, said in the e-mail. “Toys are merchandised by product category, so customers can easily see the breadth of assortment.”

http://media2.newsnet5.com/photo/2015/06/08/Akron_woman_tweets_about_Target_sign_tha_303840000 0_19447031_ver1.0_640_480.jpg



http://www.startribune.com/target-to-remove-gender-based-labeling-in-toy-aisles/321063071/

Shami-Amourae
8th August 2015, 05:55 PM
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Cebu_4_2
8th August 2015, 06:09 PM
http://s7.postimg.org/hnk9rxl8r/1433377753986.jpg

yum yum gimme a cake. A shame parents don't try to remediate cravings with nutrients instead of mo fat foods. If you genealogy shows obese then try to go away from that diet. Working hard here but it goes zero.

BrewTech
8th August 2015, 08:11 PM
“We’ve seen girls that love Nerf and girls that love Hot Wheels,” he said. “And there are boys who like to play with E-Z Bake ovens.”

These were popular toys in the 1970's.

Am I supposed to believe that they are still hugely relevant in the digital information age?

I'll answer my own question... they aren't.

So the question is... why are these particular items being singled out now to forward an agenda?

Norweger
9th August 2015, 01:01 AM
Why is it always a fat red haired woman?

Shami-Amourae
9th August 2015, 04:09 AM
Why is it always a fat red haired woman?


http://s2.postimg.org/t88znn97b/1438786793587.jpg

gunDriller
9th August 2015, 06:50 AM
By the time I was 3 or 4, I was lucky enough to have many of the typical "boy toys" -

Lego bricks, Lincoln Logs, Erector Set. I spent a lot of time with them, and even had an informal building code.
If one of my brothers joined the effort and built something I thought was weak, I would re-build it so it
was stronger.


So, many years later, my niece, out of the blue, builds a tree-house in their backyard, using scraps of wood,
with zero encouragement from Mom and Dad, who seem to prefer baby-sitting their children with electronic devices.

That brother is very not-hands-on.

I have a feeling that one of the reasons the children didn't get exposed to simple things like soldering irons
is that they made Mom and Dad uncomfortable.

At the same time, I also remember warning my brother about Recombinant Bovine Growth Hormone in milk.


Now, that same niece has decided she wants to be a man.

That unleashes a whole storm of feelings in me.

I wonder if she had received more enouragement as a child, that it's OK to be a girl and BUILD STUFF -
that it would have helped.