this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2026
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Bro...
Why did you think an adult pirate was obsessed with hunting a group of unaging little boys?
That story always had a lot of weird subtext, because it's halfway back to the Grimm style fairy tales.
They might not say "stay away from pedos" but all the villains were made to give off those vibes so kids recognized those vibes as dangerous.
For the majority of human history, every story you told kids was about teaching them to be safe. It's not a coincidence a generation or two after Disneyfication we're left with kids who ignore what older generations still consider obvious warning signs. The point went from education to entertainment, so kids expect everything to work out in the end because that's how stories always end.
The use of the word molested has changed. Though I can totally understand the interpretation (maybe it is a warning to children, but it could just be down to the change in how we use language).
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/molest
Peter Pan cuts off Hook's hand and feeds it to a crocodile, this is the reason for the vendetta.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Pan_%28play_and_novel%29#Major_themes
Yeah...
Lots of words change over a century.
That doesn't change the subtext in the earlier versions like OPs screenshot being removed and tamed over the years.
Again, this isn't great literature it's children stories. Kids didn't need to understand why a pedo or wolf were actually dangerous, they just needed to know to trust their instincts around a creep.
So villains were over the top creepy, paragons of every red flag. Because that's what it takes to get kids to listen.
When subtlety is used, they don't just never mention a reason. They allude to an easy surface answer. Sometimes "real" to the story, sometimes shoehorned in as a reason.
But that's kind of a requirement for subtext...
A surface level narrative.
So you pointing out a surface level narrative, just doesn't really mean anything
The reason I've quoted another passage is to highlight language which could, to a modern reader, be interpreted very differently.
None of this detracts from your point that like Aesop's fables or Sesame Street, these stories can have life lessons.
I also included a link to the Wikipedia article and some of the major themes in the book. Again, this is down to interpretation.