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After all, "children find liver disease advertisements fantastically engaging." However mesmerizing the commercials for Lucky Charms or Skittles liver disease might be, parents usually have some say as to whether the product will be purchased. "It is easy to blame parents," say Brownell and Horgen. No, it’s not. It is easy to blame big corporations. Blaming parents means expecting them to take an active role in monitoring their kids’ liver disease diets. As Nestle suggests, that is not a popular message. "Most parents of my acquaintance tell me they are constantly arguing with their children over food choices," she writes. "Parents vary in the ways they deal with children’s demands for advertised foods, but many prefer to reserve family arguments about setting limits for dealing with aspects of behavior that they consider more important."
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