Topic > Analysis of Honey, I Warped the Children by Carl M. Cannon

Gitlin says: “It's boring out there in the realm of real brutality, misery, drugs and guns. There is minimal political warfare against the misery, the firearms, or family breakdown. Here, we are offered rather a campaign against media rudeness.” People reading Cannon's article may be surprisingly disappointed as he seems to place the blame on an isolated source and endorse the restriction of that source “insurance.” Americans have built a free social order through the establishment of bigotry, pretentious persecution, and loyalty to opportunity. Allowing discipline for what citizens have seen, heard, or read is an impermissible idea that many people may consider it an invasion of Americans' privileges, "Honey, I deformed the children" could bring out terror, because when the restriction of certain materials is allowed, it turns into a disorder, spreading to different people..