A counterclaim for this claim could be this one: "If parents do not want their kids to watch TV commercials or to see flashy displays in a store that could entice them to ask insistently for the products that those commercials and displays advertise, consequently undermining the parents' efforts to provide a healthy diet and to teach them healthy habits, they can turn the TV off so the kids do not watch the commercials, they can avoid bringing them into the store so they cannot see the display, they can kindly refuse to buy (all) the products they ask for, or they can seat with them and explain to them that what they see on TV or in a flashy display is not always necessarily true and/or good for them."