think of the children
English
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Verb
editthink of the children (third-person singular simple present thinks of the children, present participle thinking of the children, simple past and past participle thought of the children) (usually imperative)
- (usually as an interjection) An appeal to suspend rational consideration of an issue owing to its presumptive negative effects on the young and impressionable; usually in ironic or mocking parody of another's argumentum ad passiones or moral panic.
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:think of the children.
- A sincere plea to consider the young.
- 1964, Bill Walsh et al., Mary Poppins, Walt Disney Pictures:
- Mrs Banks: Katie Nanna, I beseech you. Please reconsider. Think of the children. Think of Mr Banks. He was just beginning to get used to you.
- 1996 July 31, Deborah Pryce, “Conference Report on H.R. 3734, Personal Responsibility and Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996”, in Congressional Record[1], volume 142, United States Government Printing Office, page H9392-H9424:
- In closing, Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to have the courage to set aside the status quo, to think of the children and families of this Nation and to embrace real reform. I urge a 'yes' vote on both sides of the aisle for this rule and the conference report.
See also
edit- (example of): adhortatio, argumentum ad passiones, deesis, logical fallacy (often), special pleading
- pas devant les enfants
Further reading
edit- think of the children on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- think of the children on Wikiquote.Wikiquote