The Realization

AAFES (The Army Air Force Exchange Service) is not a store for everyone, although by design it is supposed to be. It is only a store for adults who do not mind being bombarded with sexually explicit slogans and images throughout the store. Additionally, AAFES has no policy that prevents children from purchasing CDs with explicit lyrics, movies that are rated R (Restricted), and or video games that are rated M (Mature). Because of this, we are asking AAFES to incorporate policies that are very similar to what Wal-Mart has already put in place. We call this standard "the Wal-Mart Standard". In time, we hope that AAFES rises to the challenge and adopts this standard as the norm so that children and principled adults can shop for supplies in a family-friendly environment.

Our Mission

Our mission is to help AAFES make sensible changes to its current policies that result in every AAFES establishment becoming family-friendly.

A Call to AAFES

1. Incorporate a pro-family stance into the AAFES Mission Statement reflecting the values of the people AAFES serves - military families.

2. Develop, publish, and implement a family-friendly policy. The following must be included in this policy:

2a. Stop selling all pornography (e.g. Playboy) and publications that appeal to prurient interest (e.g. Maxim, FHM, Stuff, Cosmopolitan, Heavy Metal).

2b. Do not position any publications that might be interpreted as offensive in areas where the customer is a captive audience (e.g. checkout aisle, store entrance, restroom hallway).

2c. Stop selling all music labeled "Explicit Lyrics".

2d. Post a sign clearly visible at each register and enforce a policy that states no rated "M for Mature" games and "R for Restricted" movies will be sold to anyone less than 18 years of age.

Contact AAFES

Anyone can call (1-800-527-6790) or email them at commander@aafes.com. You can also fill out an online comment form if you are in the military. They always send a response, so let them know what you think about this important issue!
Showing posts with label The Wal-Mart Standard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Wal-Mart Standard. Show all posts

Friday, November 24, 2006

Wal-Mart Makes Check-Out Lanes Family-Friendly



Taken from CWFA.org (Article Date: June 11, 2003):

Places Blinders Over Racy Magazines

Wal-Mart’s latest move toward a family-friendly environment is being greeted by cheers and ringing registers. On June 6 the nation’s largest retailer announced that it will be installing U-shaped blinders over four racy women’s magazines in its check-out aisles.

“For at least a year we’d been getting some feedback … from customers
who were uncomfortable with [the covers],” Wal-Mart spokesman Jay Allen told Reuters on Friday.

Wal-Mart announced that it will be installing specially
made, U-shaped magazine racks that will conceal the story tease lines on each side of the magazine, leaving the center and the magazine’s name viewable.

The magazines involved are Cosmopolitan, Redbook, Marie Claire and
Glamour. Those magazines will continue to be displayed in the store’s magazine section without any sort of cover.

Wal-Mart has been testing various blinders and ways to satisfy the
magazine’s readers while protecting children. The new magazine rack blinders should be in all Wal-Mart stores by July.

“We are very pleased that Wal-Mart has taken this step to protect our families,” said Robert H. Knight, director of the Culture and Family Institute, an affiliate of Concerned Women for America.

“This action, along with the discontinued sale of the racy men’s
magazines, and the retailer’s refusal to sell music with adult-rated lyrics, among other things, show’s Wal-Mart’s commitment to the family,” he added.

“We encourage families to be looking for these new blinders, and when
they see them to make sure they extend a thank-you to the store manager,” Knight said.

Arthur Ally, coalition leader and president of The Timothy Plan, a collection of pro-family mutual funds and, said he hopes that appreciative families will further reward the retail giant.

“I hope that customers will take the time to link their appreciation for
this action to their patronage of the retailer. Wal-Mart’s ‘language of love’ is the ringing of its registers. That 'thank-you,' linked to this action, will go a long way in the fight for decency both at Wal-Mart and among its competitors,”
Ally told Culture & Family Report.

The Timothy Plan is also saying “thank-you” to the company by reversing its August decision to sell all of its shares of Wal-Mart stock. That move was made after repeated requests for the action went unheeded.

“As of today, Wal-Mart is off our screens,” Ally said. “Our fund managers now have a green light to buy Wal-Mart shares for our
family of mutual funds.”

Those customer complaints that led to this change were accompanied by united action from 10 pro-family groups, which sent a collection of letters to the retailer on May 30, 2003, asking for removal of the magazines from the check-out aisles. Each group stressed the action's goal was to protect families and children.

“A large percentage of your customer base does not appreciate having the kinds of sexually explicit (cover-page) headlines touted by these publications staring them (or their children or other family members) in the face as they wait to pay for their purchases,” wrote Robert Peters, president of Morality in Media, to Lee Scott, head of the Bentonville, Arkansas, retailer, which had $244.5 billion dollars in sales last year.

“We have heard from many, many people regarding how offensive they find such publications staring them and their children in the face as they make their family purchases at their local Wal-Marts,” wrote Concerned Women for America President Sandy Rios.

The letters were sent to Wal-Mart thanking them for its early May decision to stop selling three sexually suggestive men’s magazines, Maxim, FHM and Stuff.

“However, of greater concern than what magazines are available to willing customers is the question of what magazines are forced upon unwilling customers by being aggressively displayed in the check-out lanes of your stores,” wrote Family Research Council President Kenneth Connor.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Video Game Comparison: AAFES vs. Wal-Mart



What we are asking of AAFES, with regards to our "Call to AAFES", is to follow the pro-family example of Wal-Mart - especially with M-rated video games (for 17 or older). FixAAFES.org commends AAFES for not selling A-rated video games (for adults), but we stress that the lack of a plan for M-rated games is unsatisfactory.

The following information about what Wal-Mart is doing to police up the video game industry was taken from ICCR.org. Wal-Mart is currently doing the following:

1. Wal-Mart forbids the selling of A-rated games. AAFES does also.

2. Wal-Mart has cash register prompts reminding cashiers that they must verify the age of a customer purchasing M-rated games. AAFES doesn't.

3. Wal-Mart formally trains its cashiers about video game ratings. AAFES doesn't.

4. Wal-Mart has empowered its stores to take disciplinary action. AAFES hasn't.

5. Wal-Mart displays signs with ESRB Ratings and Meanings. AAFES doesn't.

6. Wal-Mart has a policy that prohibits the selling of M-rated games to those under seventeen years of age. AAFES doesn't.
Wal-Mart gets 6 thumbs up. AAFES gets only 1 thumbs up and 5 thumbs down. Our Military and their children deserve better than that.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Explicit Lyrics - Wal-Mart Doesn't Sell Them


This is Wal-Mart's policy on the selling of CDs with explicit lyrics:

Wal-Mart will not stock music with parental guidance stickers. While Wal-Mart sets high standards, it would not be possible to eliminate every image, word or topic that an individual might find objectionable. And the goal is not to eliminate the need for parents to review the merchandise their children buy. The policy simply helps eliminate the most objectionable material from Wal-Mart's shelves.
(Taken from PBS.org)

If Wal-Mart has made this decision, I don't see why AAFES can't do the same. Not only has this protected children who are Wal-Mart customers, it has forced the music industry to make less-explicit music. This makes sense to me, and I think AAFES should follow suit as stated in our "A Call to AAFES".