




| Buster's World propaganda |
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| Written by Philip Salter |
| Wednesday, 17 February 2010 07:00 |
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A couple of weeks ago it emerged that Ed Ball’s Buster’s World – an education resource children "helps you find out about the world around you" – took the same name a fetish website. As the fetish site is top of a Google search for "Buster’s World" this resulted in many irate parents and embarrassed apologies from the Department of Children, Schools and Families. Buster’s World – the government site, not the gay fetish porn website – is in fact a tool for political propaganda that any right thinking parent should keep their children well clear of. Of the games here are my top three to avoid: Footprint In ‘Footprint’ children are given the opportunity to find out much carbon they and their family are producing and how to stop it. Recommended especially for parents who want make their children feel guilty for being born. Fair Shares This is great for teaching children that without government, the whole world comes to halt through a realistic simulation of how a town works. For example, if one reduces taxes the words ‘Tax Level: Extremely Low‘ flash on screen. I managed to do awful job as in no time at all I lost with the message: “Oh no! People were very unhappy with the way you ran the DirectgovKids town. You didn’t get the balance between raising money through taxes and spending money on services. You made bad decision about the town’s finances.” the trouble is there is no private sector in Buster's World. PM for the Day Here your child will be free to choose between any of these policies: Emergency Services
Education
Health
Environment
Transport
Sport and Culture
Personally, I would keep children as far away from this nonsense as I would the fetish website |
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The Adam Smith Institute is the UK’s leading libertarian think tank. It engineers policies to increase Britain’s economic competitiveness, inject choice into public services, and create a freer, more prosperous society. For more information, click here.