Holiday season fanfare has already begun, and I am reminded of my holiday motto: No more junk toys! Whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and/or the Winter Solstice, if you have children, you know what junk toys are. Junk toys are toys that will have little educational value, are usually made of plastic, are overly commercial, and end up in our landfills. Green parents often try to make these toys disappear, but it is better to prevent their buying and giving in the first place.
Four years ago, before America was awash in greenwashing, Mothering Magazine featured a great article title "No More Junk Toys: Rethinking Children’s Gifts" by Judith Rubin. Rubin writes,
Like junk food, junk toys can be fun but are devoid of nutrition. Buying them requires little forethought. They are excessively commercial, and are often linked to cross-marketing schemes. They excite children at first, but that initial flicker doesn’t endure. Also like junk food, junk toys have hidden environmental and social costs for which the consumers pay.
The environmental and social costs of junk toys are huge! Plastic toys are often made in sweatshops, sometimes by children themselves, and many of them send the wrong kind of messages to children. For example, Bratz Dolls sexualize young girls, as well as have unfair labor practices, and Barbie’s proportions are unrealistic. According to Empoweredparents.com,
If she were alive, Barbie would be a woman standing 7 feet tall with a waistline of 18 inches and a bustling of 38-40. In fact, she would need to walk on all fours just to support her peculiar proportions. Yet media advertising, television and Hollywood would reinforce her message, influencing what would become the American ideal of beauty.
Besides the materials and energy used in the production of junk toys, these plastic toys end up in landfills and oceans. Life Magazine reported that there is a swath of plastic garbage twice the size of Texas in the Pacific Ocean. Life reports, "Except for the small amount that has been incinerated — and it’s a very small amount — every bit of plastic made still exists."
The safety of toys made in China has been in question lately with the recent rave of recalls. Governor Schwarzenegger signed into law a ban on toys containing phthalates. The Governator said, "These chemicals threaten the health and safety of our children at critical stages of their development." Phthalates have been linked to cancer and reproductive problems. This follows a ban last year in San Francisco on toys containing BPA and certain levels of phthalates. Despite such legal actions, junk toys still dominate the toy shelves.
How can you tell a junk toy from a good toy? Field naturalist Alicia Daniel offers the following list of questions to ask when selecting toys:
- Will this toy eventually turn into dirt-i.e., could I compost it? Stones, snowmen, driftwood, and daisies-they will be gone, and we will be gone, and life goes on.
- Do I know who made this toy? This question leads us to search for the hidden folk artist in each of us.
- Is this toy beautiful? Have human hands bestowed an awkward grace, a uniqueness lacking in toys cranked out effortlessly by machine?
- Will this toy capture a child’s imagination?
Every year, I send my family a reminder that we do not want any plastic toys or clothes made from synthetic fibers. I wish I could say that they always followed our wishes, but somehow, the message flies out the window when they see some "adorable" plastic thing they think my children can’t live without. My husband has changed the motto to "No More Toys" this year, but the grandparents have already scoffed at the idea. Perhaps I should try sending my family Alicia Daniel’s list to help them make appropriate gift selections. If we are going to tell our children to reduce, reuse, recycle, shouldn’t our holiday gift giving and receiving reflect this practice?
This post originally appeared on Green Options.






8 comments:
How can I subtly send this to everyone I know... especially the grandparents!
Thanks for the list of questions, it's a great starting point.
I think "no more junk toys" is right on target, and that is great to want to share the message. Maybe try re-writing the message from your heart... I would say something like this...Toys and all plastic goods in America (except CA w/phthalates) have all sorts of chemicals in them that are hormone disruptors and carcinogenic. Why would I want my kids to touch that? (Much less support unfair working conditions, environmental injustice and carbon cost to get here that cause global warming). We need to wake our country up! The EU doesn't permit those nasty chemicals in the toys over there! We need better regulations so our kids have healthy toys in their living rooms too!!!!Tell the GrandParents and gift-givers to make the best gift of all. Spend some time researching phthalates etc on www.ewg.org and let's work towards making a healthier world!
I'm having this issue right now as an expecting first-time mama. How can you tell people politely you don't want junk toys? And how can you say it so they'll listen? I haven't even given birth yet and I'm already starting to resign myself to mass returns.
No More Junk Toys!
How about No More Smoking!
How about No More Alcohol!
How about No More Junk Food!
I am sure they are unsafe, life threatening.
We tell China no more junk toys and yet we sell them cigarettes, fastfoods, and alcohol. Oops!
We call it. Business is good. Money is good.
When i was a kid we only got toys on xmas and birthdays so it wasn't much and we valued what we had. We knew if it broke our folks wouldn't get us another the next time they stopped at the store.
And the few times that we went to the 5 and 10 and got to pick out a toy under $1 I spent forever standing there trying to figure out which toy would bring me the most longterm fun. And out of all the junk i always picked stuff like Bubbles, a paddleball or a good old fashioned swirly colored rubber ball
I love to shop toys and other products for my kids from ToysRUs, BabiesRUs and DisneyShopping stores at CouponAlbum..
Choosing "safe" toys for children has gotten a lot harder recently. I always encourage parents and grantparents concerned about toy safety to play it safe and buy toys made in the USA. http://www.heirloomwoodentoys.com
Have you checked out ChildTrek.com? It has a good selection of great natural wooden toys. Definitely not junk.
mamabear
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