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It'll be interesting to see the answers.

2006-10-14 12:54:37 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

16 answers

Id buy the race that was opposite of my own child's complexion, in the hopes that as they matured they would already have a comforting and familiar association with people of different color

2006-10-14 12:58:39 · answer #1 · answered by Clarkie 6 · 2 1

Actually, my child wouldn't want a doll of any race, but that's because he's a seventeen year old boy and since I'm the doll collector in the family all the dolls are for me! But if I had a little girl I'd buy her dolls of all races.

2006-10-15 16:15:45 · answer #2 · answered by cltd 6 · 0 0

Oh no no no...my child will not be interested in dolls, I don't think. There will be lots of books and educational toys. But if she wants a doll I will buy her a black doll for the simple fact that there were hardly any when I was growing up and I would want my child to have that. I would hope that he or she would want to read as well.

2006-10-14 13:23:04 · answer #3 · answered by Miss P. Square Pinky Swear 3 · 1 1

i'm white and so is approximately a hundred% of my u . s .. each and all of the dolls available have been white and that i did no longer locate out approximately diverse races till i replaced into approximately 5. i think of it would be a solid theory to have diverse dolls once you're a newborn to incorporate all varieties of elegance. For me, the layout performs a much bigger function than epidermis shade. case in point, my ordinary childhood doll had blue hair and replaced into made completely from problematical plastic and that i could no longer stand my sister's gentle doll with small painted eyes that creeped me out. notice what form of doll your newborn prefers and attempt to locate comparable ones in diverse races if obtainable.

2016-12-26 19:25:57 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I always bought white until we were moving my sister home from n.carolina and the only dolls we could find were black my daughter was 3 and im glad it happened because she didnt stare and black people but my son embarrased me one time in the store when he was 5 he asked a black man what he had on his hands..they were different but the man said the same thing you have on yours..so keep an open mind and teach the children that color doesnt make you different people make people different.

2006-10-14 13:07:43 · answer #5 · answered by Yvonne M 1 · 1 1

Whichever doll the child wanted of course.

2006-10-14 12:58:14 · answer #6 · answered by dragonrider707 6 · 4 1

We would buy a white doll because we are white and we are proud of our illustrious white heritage. While we are not "haters," neither do we ascribe to the rampant political correctness of today. People best identify with their own kind, and for this reason we would buy a white doll.

2006-10-14 12:57:50 · answer #7 · answered by nido_tr3s 5 · 2 3

oh is this like the black and white santa claus thing????lol I don't have any girls but if I did i would buy them white dolls. My girls would be white so it would be the natural thing.

2006-10-14 12:57:18 · answer #8 · answered by Ruth Less RN 5 · 2 1

My daughter had a black doll when she was young. She picked it out for her birthday. His name was Charlie, and she loved him literally to pieces.

2006-10-14 13:15:07 · answer #9 · answered by kayboff 7 · 1 1

I could care less what the colour is, not do I thinks she cares...to her a doll is a doll.

2006-10-14 12:56:32 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

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