|
In lugnet.dear-lego, Felix Greco wrote:
|
In lugnet.licensed.batman, Richie Dulin wrote:
|
I may be taking this the wrong way, but I think this image seriously
detracts from this set, and its not something I would feel comfortable
allowing children to see (yes, I know theyll see worse on TV).
|
I understand where youre coming from.
But I wonder, where do we draw the line between having fun and addressing
every possible concern that could arise? The pirates theme, your theme of
choice I believe, has a disgusting and horrible true past to it.
|
It certainly does, though its not something I choose to portray in my pirate
MOCs and not something that LEGO has chosen to portray in its sets (beyond
prison cells, and planks for walking. Oh, and I once built a guillotine).
|
There are
probably religious groups that abhor the representations of magicians and
walking dead in the new castle sets. Almost every lego theme is centered
around violence. This is just the way I like it-- liked it as a kid and I
like it now. And despite popular opinion I am a well adjusted, morally
upright, and successful individual. I dont believe my steady diet of
violent movies, video games, and toys corrupted my views of morality.
|
Conflict is central to drama. Sometimes that conflict is violent. But I think
there is a difference between a swordfight between the forces of good and evil
(or ships exchanging broadsides, or X-wings and Tie Fighters dogfighting) and
strapping someone down on a table to torture them. Exactly where the difference
lies is hard to identify; but its just not the same in my book.
Maybe the difference is this: A pirate ship without cannon is not a plausible
pirate ship (more or less), but an Arkham Asylum without an attic torture
chamber, would still be an entirely adequate Arkham Asylum.
|
I can certainly appreciate your concern, and I hope my disagreement is seen
as intelligent argument, nothing personal. The fact is, since your post
currently sits as one of the headlines here at lugnet, well likely never see
a picture like this on a set again.
Felix
|
Im not sure that merely getting a post to the LUGNET headlines can/does/should
influence LEGO policy, but I do hope that the policy does change.
Cheers
Richie Dulin
|
|
|
|
Im not sure that merely getting a post to the LUGNET headlines
can/does/should influence LEGO policy, but I do hope that the policy does
change.
|
I guess I was using your opinion and those that spotlighted it as a barometer
for what the public is thinking. Its usually safe to assume that if someone has
a mild discomfort towards something, someone somewhere is up in arms about it.
|
|
|
In lugnet.off-topic.debate, Felix Greco wrote:
|
|
Im not sure that merely getting a post to the LUGNET headlines
can/does/should influence LEGO policy, but I do hope that the policy does
change.
|
I guess I was using your opinion and those that spotlighted it as a barometer
for what the public is thinking. Its usually safe to assume that if someone
has a mild discomfort towards something, someone somewhere is up in arms
about it.
|
I remember a time when there were no weapons in the sets. There were pieces
that you could pretend were lasers in the space sets. It was a gentler time
then I quess. But I do remember that lego made a plastic toy gun at one time,
perhaps testing the waters. There was also a Lego lighter and the Cigretten
bricks. Who knows. John P
|
|
|