Louisiana Congressman Mike Johnson rails against the image of the devil at Disney-S- Little Devil.

In a Facebook post made on Monday, Louisiana Congressman Mike Johnson (R) accused the Walt Disney Company and its subsidiary FXX.The former was due to air a commercial for the latter's new animated series "Little Demon" in Q2 of a Louisiana State University football game.According to a Facebook post, Louisiana Congressman Mike Johnson (R) accused the Walt Disney Company and its subsidiary, FXX.

Johnson says he was put on the floor by the show's trailer, and claims:

I couldn't get remotely fast enough to protect my 11-year-old from the preview, and I wondered how many other children were exposed to it. And how many millions tune in to the new series, owned and sold by Disney- whether it's the new series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the New series, the new series, the new series, the new series, the new series, the new series,

After posting the show's official synopsis and some quotes from the show's voice actors about pagan and anti-Christian sentiments, he continued:

I can write a volume this morning and unpack a page of a Bible passage here, but instead I'm going to state something obvious: Be careful Please contact us. Our job as parents is to protect the hearts and minds of our children. This culture has become surprisingly dark and insensitive, and this is not a game. Disney and FX have decided to accept what is clearly evil and put it on the market. Stay away from it.

In a follow-up article on Tuesday, Johnson added after writing at length about how many people reacted to his original Facebook post:

Freedom of speech is an important principle, and in this country, everyone can clearly make their own decisions about the media they and their families consume. But the natural thing is that Christians have the freedom to fulfill our duty to "speak the truth in love" (Ephesians. 4:15), and even more - and sometimes most importantly - when it may not be popular.

It is worth noting that Johnson's only call for action was directed at parents to monitor what content their children are exposed to, not to call for government intervention. This is in contrast to a request earlier THIS YEAR from 5 Republican U.S. senators who asked TO adjust TV VIEWERSHIP to include trigger warnings for LGBTQIA+ characters.It also called for Netflix to remove content offensive to "Islam and social values" from a gathering of Middle East governments on Monday.

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