The award-winning Danish series sees naked adults shown to 11 to 13-year-old children to "promote body positivity and combat body-shaming", according to the New York Times.
I get why teachers would show what the average body looks like to students. As much as I wish otherwise, the average person doesn't have the body of Christina Hendricks or Huge Jacked Man. (Hell you have women walking around today who think a 7 inch dick is small despite it being above average. Then again they are also the same ones who rate 80% of men as below average looking.)
But why are these not example pictures in a textbook? Why are they parading naked adults in front of 11 year olds? It seems like this is more for the adults than it is for the children.
At least it seems they aren't showing them in a sexual manner and are showing it in a clinical manner....but yeah, this is stuff that should be restricted to pictures and diagrams within a textbook.
I get why teachers would show what the average body looks like to students. As much as I wish otherwise, the average person doesn't have the body of Christina Hendricks or Huge Jacked Man. (Hell you have women walking around today who think a 7 inch dick is small despite it being above average. Then again they are also the same ones who rate 80% of men as below average looking.)
But why are these not example pictures in a textbook? Why are they parading naked adults in front of 11 year olds? It seems like this is more for the adults than it is for the children.
At least it seems they aren't showing them in a sexual manner and are showing it in a clinical manner....but yeah, this is stuff that should be restricted to pictures and diagrams within a textbook.