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Retailers Put All Their Grenades in One Basket
Full Metal Bonnet
by Erik Baard
March 4th, 2003 1:00 PM

"A lighthearted and fun gift," says one merchant.
(photo: Robin Holland)

While Pentagon war planners may be gunning for an attack on Iraq by mid
March, heavily armed soldiers have already quietly seized a strategic
position: your Easter basket. National retailers like Kmart and Walgreens
have stocked their shelves with baskets in which the traditional chocolate
rabbit centerpiece has been displaced by plastic military action figures
and their make-believe lethal paraphernalia. Tri-state Rite Aid, Genovese,
and Wal-Mart stores promise their martial Easter baskets will arrive soon.

At the Astor Place Kmart, the encampment is on display just inside the
main entrance. A camouflaged sandy-haired soldier with an American-flag
arm patch stands alert in a teal, pink, and yellow basket beneath a pretty
green-and-purple bow. Within a doll-arm's reach are a machine gun, rifle,
hand grenade, large knife, pistol, and round of ammunition. In the next
basket a buzz-cut blond with a snazzy dress uniform hawks over homeland
security, an American eagle shield on his arm, and a machine gun, pistol,
Bowie knife, two grenades, truncheon, and handcuffs at the ready.

One must hunt a little harder to find the Easter sniper at Walgreens, but
what lies in wait among the bunnies and chicks there is perhaps even more
surreal. The Super Wrriors (sic) Battle Set and Placekeepers (sic) Military
Men Play Set bristle with toy assault rifles and machine guns, tanks, troop
transports, bomber planes, commanded by armored men with shaved heads
and sunglasses. The assortment also includes a space-age ray gun and
other imaginary hardware for orbital combat. Packets of jellybeans are
tossed in as if an afterthought, nestled in the cellophane underbrush like
anti-personnel mines.

Not surprisingly, the merger of religious observance and jingoistic lust
sparked the ire of Christian leaders. Bishop George Packard, who oversees
spiritual care for Episcopalian members of the armed services, worries
about practical issues. He's concerned about creating a backlash against
the military, and questions the message sent to Muslims by the melding of
a Christian holiday with images of war.

The products themselves, Packard says, are "really, really bizarre. It's a
crass embrace of the far end of a range of options for parents to provide
their kids. Easter baskets have been deteriorating for a long time, but
they've really gone over the edge. I am so disturbed, I am so confounded
by this bad taste."

Other Christian groups agree. Dr. Richard Land, president of the
conservative Southern Baptist Convention commission on ethics and
religious liberty, says, "Well, of course, it certainly would be a jarring note
for the celebration of Easter. I certainly wouldn't buy one for my children,
when my children were small."

The religious leaders noted that the eggs, bunnies, and chicks so
intimately associated with the holiday are also unrelated to the narrative
of Jesus. They are instead the trappings of Ostara (also known as Eostra), a
Teutonic goddess of spring, fertility, and the dawn, who also lends her
name to estrogen and the East.

But guns would seem to be at odds with that convergent pagan and
Christian spirit of renewal. The juxtaposition is an affront to some soldiers,
too. "I call that, myself, a pretty stupid insult and a slap at a religious
observance," says Bruce Zielsdorf, who served 23 years in the air force and
is now a spokesperson for the army in New York City. "First they
commercialize one of the holiest days of the Christian calendar, and now
this? It sounds like some vendor threw some stuff up on a shelf to see what
would sell. I can assure you that we were not consulted on any decision
to make any such Easter baskets."

Retailers went on the defensive. "There was no intention on our part to
offer up a violent Easter basket. We're very conscious of what will and
what will not offend our customers. It was meant to be a lighthearted and
fun gift," says Kmart spokesperson Abigail Jacobs. "It's in my opinion a
harmless toy included in an Easter basket."

The reaction to a Voice query at Walgreens contrasted sharply, with
company representatives retreating instead of digging in. "Going forward
next year, we don't plan to have Easter baskets with toy soldiers or a
military theme. The thinking on these Easter baskets was more toy-related
and we didn't really think about it otherwise," says Walgreens
spokesperson Carol Hively. "We apologize to anybody who is offended or
felt that this was inappropriate."

That's not enough for Bishop Packard. "Well, isn't that nice? What about
this season? This is when it really counts," he says. "Kids are eavesdropping
on the talk of war and get enveloped in its trauma."

The armored baskets are only the latest combat-themed toy to hit the
shelves. Hasbro's G.I. Joe is a perennial favorite that's surged 46 percent
amid the war fever, and new ones like Tora Bora "Ted" are still being rolled
out by other companies. In the current climate, the plastic soldiers allow
children to "role-play out their feelings about war," says toy industry
analyst Reyne Rice of the NPD Group.

Easter provides a way for makers of generic troops to capitalize on the
trend. Unlike superhero dolls, war toys don't come with costly trademarks
attached. That lowers the bar to entry for small manufacturers, today
typically Chinese. That industry has followed confectioners to transform
Easter into the second-largest selling season, Rice says. "Maybe they are
trying to promote products in another way, to draw attention to them.
Obviously this isn't the kind of attention they intended," she says. Kmart's
basket supplier, Megatoys, didn't return calls.

Most toy-filled baskets contain items like sandbox goodies and cuddly dolls,
and this isn't the first time the toy soldiers have made an appearance. This
year, though, the action figures seem to have more prominent shelf
positions at the two downtown Kmart and Walgreens stores. Hively says
they were particularly strong sellers. Walgreens' supplier, Wondertreats,
justifies its product as the result of careful market analysis. "We don't
determine the mix [of toys]. It's determined by what the consumers want.
We talk to kids and watch kids in stores," explains Greg Hall, owner of
Wondertreats. "They're exposed to the violence and blood that sells
newspapers. We don't create that, we're just responding to what
customers want."

Such toys are, however, a frequent focus of children's advocacy groups
like the Lion & Lamb Project, which during the Christmas season
highlighted another toy, the Military Forward Command Post, made by Ever
Sparkle Industrial, that seemed to cross culture lines in an unsettling way.
The Web site for Kay-Bee Toy Stores describes it as "a lifelike replica of a
real battlefield headquarter. . . . Two-tiered and loaded with realistic
weapons, accessories, furniture and equipment, this set is ready for
action." This "battle-worn playset," also carried for the holiday season by
Kmart, Toys "R" Us and Amazon.com, looks like a dollhouse but has been
gutted, torched, and bullet-pocked. A similar toy offered by
Hobbylinc.com features a bombed-out farmhouse.

"Parents say, 'Oh, kids know it's fantasy,' and then they want to tell their
kids to believe in Santa and the Easter Bunny," observes Lion & Lamb
director Daphne White. "You can't have it both ways. To market war as
something fun and to play around with is sending them a very dangerous
message."




As U.S. troops gear up for possible warfare in Iraq, the Voice keeps track
of what the president really wants in the Middle East, and why.


 Letter to the Editor  |  E-Mail Story  |  Voice Newsletter

Recent stories by Erik Baard

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