Community | August 11, 2009 | 18 comments

White House Objects to Poster that Invokes Obama Children

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J_Jammer
The posters went up last week, 14 in Union Station. On each of the large displays, a thought bubble rises up from a picture of a beautiful 8-year-old: "President Obama's daughters get healthy school lunches. Why don't I?"

A Washington nonprofit that advocates nutrition-policy reform paid $20,000 to get its message across and carefully maneuvered Metro's tangle of regulations to display its posters. Metro gave it a go -- but the White House did not, according to the group. Within 24 hours of the signs' appearance, the White House asked the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine to take down the ads, which feature Jasmine Messiah, a vegetarian who attends a Miami-Dade County public school that, she says, offers no vegetarian or vegan lunch options.

The Physicians Committee has declined to take down the posters.

PCRM President Neal Barnard, a nutrition researcher, says he received a phone call regarding the posters Aug. 4 (a day after they went up) from Associate Counsel Karen Dunn and Deputy Associate Counsel Ian Bassin.

"They're very nice people. I like them a lot," Barnard says. "But they called and said: Please take those down, you can't mention the kids and so forth. . . . They felt that mentioning the president's children was off-limits. They said [they're] not going to allow the use of their daughters as leverage."

The fact that the poster mentions the president's children has been the main point of contention, though neither the children's names nor their images appear. That reaction doesn't come as a complete surprise; when Ty Inc. marketed dolls in January named Sweet Sasha and Marvelous Malia, the first lady made her objections clear, and the toy company stopped using the girls' names. The First Lady's Office declined to comment for this story.

To Frank Luntz, a Republican political consultant, the White House's response to the posters is hardly shocking.

"The children of the president are always off-limits. Always. No exceptions," Luntz says. "No ifs, ands or buts. And while it may draw short-term attention to the issue, the White House will hate the organization for it. And I assure you they will be punished. You don't mess with the president's children. It's an unwritten rule."

Luntz says that the added publicity from the White House's response will not benefit PCRM's agenda. "What matters is not whether people are aware of your campaign," he says. "What matters is your success. And if the White House hates you, then it's not successful."

"I do not think you can use the president's daughters for some cause -- good or otherwise -- that they don't play a role in," says Bonnie Angelo, a former White House correspondent for Time magazine and author of "First Families: The Impact of the White House on Their Lives."

"It's very hard for the presidential family to keep their daughters balanced in terms of getting too much exposure, and I think the Obamas have done a remarkable job of achieving that balance," Angelo says. "I think this goes beyond what's allowable."

Barnard is still in communication with the Office of the White House Counsel, which asked Barnard to remain "open" to further discussion. He says he is.
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More at link.....

I agree that the children are off limits and should be off limits. But the add is not targeting the children of the White House but the Parents of said Children being fed appropriately why can't all children be fed like that?

I believe it to be fair question to ask. They are not unfairly targeted because they are not the target.
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18 comments // White House Objects to Poster that Invokes Obama Children

  • good_stuff
    • 0
      good_stuff  
    • I can see some of the disgust here. If the poster were to remove the "obama", then it isn't referencing any children directly (provided it doesn't have a date on it) and still makes its point.

      On the other side, I agree that this is a stupid argument. If your 10 yr old is a vegan (probably a choice you made for them), then you should pack them a lunch for their diet. Are we going to mandate that all schools have different lunches available for vegaterians, vegans, jewish, islamic, etc?

      Perhaps I should make a poster that says, "President Obama has security guards and access to several private jumbo jets, shouldn't I?

    • 2 years ago
  • J_Jammer
  • pakazak
    • 0
      pakazak  
    • good_stuff:

      very good point J_J.
      better watch it though. could that be construed as socialism?

      more and more americans have 'food sensitivities', related to a myriad of causes.
      shouldn't a public school system provide to the public?
      good_stuff has a point - how can you control all special needs? without going broke....

    • 2 years ago
  • trafficzone
    • 0
      trafficzone  
    • The Obama girls are enroll in "private" school...Sure they are have special selection for foods..The school lunch programs are controlled by government and designed for PUBLIC schools. Before this ad was posted, research should have made...Not all children in public schools eat these lunches. Parents does have the option to prepare lunches for their children to take. In addition, all children are not qalified for these lunch programs. This ad is stupid to use children against children- This little girl's parents shouldn't have permitted this

    • 2 years ago
  • J_Jammer
    • 0
      J_Jammer [removed]  
    • trafficzone:

      None of this negates what the message is stating.

      Not all parents are good parents and therefore having better food would be better for those that don't have money nor parents that make them lunches.

      Maybe a little more thinking on what the message is asking is needed instead of seeing it on the surface only.

    • 2 years ago
  • trafficzone
    • 0
      trafficzone  
    • trafficzone:

      I didn't missed the message...Why wasn't ad posted like this when Clinton's daughter attended this school. Are you really saying that children only eat healthy at lunch times? What are they eating in between times -weekends, dinner times, breakfast times...Government is providing "food stamps" for those families. Its the parents responsiblity to make sure their children eat healthy.

      By eating healthy lunches, makes these children who attends PUBLIC schools healthy. Just in case, you're not aware of, majority of the kids choose not to EAT these lunches.

    • 2 years ago
  • DeliaTheArtist
    • 0
      DeliaTheArtist  
    • trafficzone:

      "Not all parents are good parents and therefore having better food would be better for those that don't have money nor parents that make them lunches."

      Hmm, but this seems like a slippery slope for policy. How much responsibility should the government take on because someone's parents are crappy? Also, I don't know about the kids who don't have money- I'm pretty sure you have to pay for school lunches or, in my public school, you had to apply for what basically amounts to school lunch food stamps.

    • 2 years ago
  • fighttheNWO
    • 0
      fighttheNWO  
    • its asking a valid question. it also promotes thoughts of entitlement... and yet there are millions of children that do go hungry, if not hungry then fed nutrient free lunches... i say no harm no foul...

    • 2 years ago
  • DeliaTheArtist
    • 0
      DeliaTheArtist  
    • I think school systems could do a lot in the way of sustainable farming programs. Imagine if children got to learn about planting your own food right at the school and the food they grew was used for school lunches! There are a few examples of this around the world- one school in England even made a greenhouse out recycled water bottles and grew their food in there!

      In regards to this ad, it doesn't seem like it's really targeted at Obama's daughters per se, but if I saw that as a young pres's daughter I might feel confused or guilty by the message.

    • 2 years ago
  • J_Jammer
  • xiola
    • 0
      xiola  
    • DeliaTheArtist:

      At my high school, long after I'd graduated, one of the science teachers had his class design and grow a garden full of produce. The kids loved it--they had a real sense of accomplishment! Of course, they couldn't feed the whole school out of it, but it was a valiant effort and got the kids to understand it's possible, and not that hard, to grow your own food.
      As you said "...if I saw that as a young pres's daughter I might feel confused or guilty by the message." That's how I feel about it, too. I like how you think, girlie. :)

    • 2 years ago
  • mojojuju
  • singrrr
    • 0
      singrrr  
    • They may not be the target, but [putting them in the ad makes it seem as though they are, the girls images and likeness should be off limits period.

    • 2 years ago
  • J_Jammer
    • 0
      J_Jammer [removed]  
    • singrrr:

      Should be, but there is no law against it.

      And their likeness was not used for this ad. The presumption of them is being used....people reading it are assuming they hear their names or anything about them.

      It's just asking why does the President get what he does not offer the rest of America.

    • 2 years ago
  • DeliaTheArtist
    • 0
      DeliaTheArtist  
    • singrrr:

      "It's just asking why does the President get what he does not offer the rest of America."

      It's exclusively the President's fault that his kids eat well while others don't? Should we really make people feel guilty for that?

    • 2 years ago
  • xiola
    • 0
      xiola  
    • singrrr:

      Damn, Delia! Couldn't have said it better myself! Excellent.
      Also, I always feel kids are off limits. I just can't help it. Those little girls don't need to be sitting at home feeling guilty for having food. They have their whole lives to feel guilty about stuff! :)

    • 2 years ago
  • trafficzone
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