Thursday, February 23, 2012

Fox Business' Lou Dobbs Blasts The Lorax for Pushing Left Wing Agenda and Creating 'Occu-Toddlers'

With Universal's colorful animated tale The Lorax, "the President's liberal pals in Hollywood [are] concentrating on a far more youthful demographic using animated movies to promote their agenda to children," mentioned an annoyed Lou Dobbs now on Fox Business Network. Animated movies! A liberal agenda! HOW DARE THEY. What's the reason behind enabling this "insidious nonsense" to the vulnerable minds within our nation's youth? Bad being a parent, clearly. As conservative radio host Matt Patrick bellowed within the commentator pit, "We are creating Occu-young children!Inch Inside the classic Seuss story -- modified in to a 3-D animated adventure which hits screens inside a couple of days -- an awesome creature referred to as Lorax attempts to intervene becoming an industrialist, driven by avarice, ravages an entire ecosystem. This might seem to produce the Lorax a lot more "dangerous" than previous Fox News focus on the Muppets, which needed becasue it is villain a considerably bigger and clearly unlikeable capitalist The Lorax is built to show audiences simply how much they potentially share while using unwitting forest-killer The Once-ler, which explains why it's so effective to begin with. The most popular factor relating to this madness occurs when Patrick advocates intentional littering in movie theaters as a means of protest in the Obama-introduced agenda espoused with the Lorax (as well as the Studio Ghibli animated pic The Important Thing Arena of Arriety, that may lead youngsters lower the slippery slope of talking about things). Throwing popcorn containers on the ground would fly when faced with everything else Dr. Seuss's anti-deforestation, professional-atmosphere tale means, nevertheless it would also lead you to look absurd before your individual children. In my opinion the Lorax's face above states everything. Make the Occu-young children! The Lorax hits theaters on March 2. [Media Matters with the Film Stage]

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