Court of Appeals Overturns Indiana Video Game Ordinance 166
hayfever writes: "Catch the scoop. The Indianapolis Star is reporting here that the US 7th Circuit Court of appeals has overturned the Indianapolis ordinance banning violent video games from arcades (see previous Slashdot article here)." Findlaw has the decision, and there are some really good lines in there: "To shield children right up to the age of 18 from exposure to violent descriptions and images would not only be quixotic, but deforming; it would leave them unequipped to cope with the world as we know it."
Update: 03/24 10 AM EST by J : The contrast is striking. The same day, our new Attorney General John Ashcroft released a statement:
"Ashcroft on school shootings: Video games are part of the problem."
Gun control? He prefers thought control: "We have to exhibit responsibility in other ways, so that the culture inhibits or restrains this impulse."
Re:Wonderful! (Score:1)
I agree, this court ruling is very insightful. Consider the horrors we try to protect our poor, innocent children from: violence in video games and tv, sex, and alcohol.
Maybe other Americans simply don't know anything about the rest of the world, but low age drinking is very common if not ubiquitous in many parts of Europe. Yet, they don't have the problems some people claim would result from underage drinking. During a recent trip to England I noticed pornography (including explicit intercourse and lesbian activity) on tv late at night. This was normal tv, not a premium channel such as the Playboy channel. I wonder why, after exposure to this, we don't see epidemics of teenage pregnancy and rape in England? Topless bathing in public is also very common in Europe, particularly in warm Mediterranean areas. How can children not be scarred for life after seeing actual breasts in public? And violence? Their kids see plenty of violence on tv and in video games also, but their crime rates are lower. The situation is much more extreme in Japan: Even shows for younger audiences feature levels of violence that would never be tolerated on the major networks in the U.S, yet Japan's violent crime rate is practically negligible compared to America's.
Clearly, the "see no evil, hear no evil, do no evil" solution is a failure. Our relatively overprotected children grow up to do worse than their foreign counterparts. The judge is right, children need to learn to deal responsibly with the presence of disturbing things, rather than living in a fantasy world before being thrown into the deep end upon reaching adulthood. Our society needs to change fundamentally: We must reject the Puritan heritage of labeling things taboo and sweeping them under the rug, and instead generate realistic responses without the hypocrisy that pervades modern society.
To do this, we must change three things: the ignorance of the general public, the sensationalism of the media, and the reactionary attitude of many government officials. Government officials are voted in by the people, and they gain information from the media, so clearly if society is to improve the media must be changed.
This can be accomplished through the establishment of alternative media sources and the promotion of ideas rejected by the establishment. Call CNN's talkback live and catch the "How can we protect our poor children?" hypocrites with their pants down. Send letters to the editors of newspapers. Join groups such as the ACLU that have the power to make a real difference. Gradually, more people will come to realize what changes must be made for society to overcome the issues facing it.
As more people are freed from the brainwashing of existing society, things will change. We won't see stories about these charges against children for making a paper gun [kuro5hin.org] anymore. Instead, we will see more of the freedom of speech our nation's founders envisioned. Should we fear alcohol, which has been used responsibly by innumerable people for all of history? Should we hide violence, which is a fact of life people need to learn to deal with to survive? Should we avoid horrible sex at all costs, even though Ben Franklin was a member of the notorious Hellfire club, famed for its orgies, Thomas Jefferson had affairs, and Washington was known for his hedonism? Sex is not unconstitutional. Banning everything and sweeping problems under the rug is. Banning alcohol brought the disasters of prohibition and the rise of organized crime. Banning free speech will bring the downfall of America.
Once the necessary changes have been made, we will see a new America, one capable of leading the world morally as well as economically. In the new America, sex will be an activity enjoyed guiltlessly by everyone, even young children and lovers of animals. Public orgies will be common. Violent video games will be more popular than ever and violent tv shows will be far more explicit than those currently available, yet the crime rate will be low-because citizens will be responsible people living lives much more enjoyable than the restrained 1984-style prison existences we have now. Everyone will be able to drink themselves into a stupor whenever they feel like it. We will all own guns for our protection, there will be a chicken in every pot, every able bodied man and woman will have 40 acres and a mule, there will be a car in every garage, a house for every family, and truth and justice for all. This will be a land of both anarchy and democracy-for is not anarchy the abscence of a controlling authority, thereby giving all people equal power, and democracy rule by all the people sharing power equally? By the very definition of democracy our government is illegitimate! Fight for anarchy, morality, and the American Way! Down with the government! Take back the streets, it's time to riot!
Not violent situations, depictions thereof. (Score:2)
Re:Good start (Score:1)
Unfortunately, this idea seems to have been lost, and, instead, people under 21 can generally only drink irresponsibly, and thus have bad drinking habits when they are later allowed to drink as they want.
Score another one for the Good Guys! (Score:2)
I'm inclined not to worry about Ashcroft. It may be best that the old fool was made Attorney General, because he's no longer a lawmaker. This leaves him with perhaps the ability to influence, but utterly impotent to take a direct hand in lawmaking anymore.
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Re:Dammit! (Score:1)
no media bias here... (Score:2)
Re:Dammit! (Score:1)
We'll need millions of people with alien shooting skills once the aliens arrive and start taking over the planet.
Re:Did I miss something? (Score:1)
to hear a community leader defend violence in video games as a necessary part of the instruction of our youth
This doesn't sound like he's defending the violence in video games to me. It sounds more like he's saying that seeing violent descriptions or images is inevitable in today's society. The world is a violent place. Hell, watch the news (or better yet, read it from a semi-reliable source instead of relying on the TV people to water it down to the fourth grade level </rant>).
Beyond that, where in the hell do you see the judge say that violence in video games is a necesssary part of the instruction of our youth?!? Trying to shield people from knowledge is bad. Say it with me. When I was a kid, I learned a lot of things that adults didn't think a kid should know. Fortunately, I was never told that I shouldn't talk about such things, or think about them. I was guided to more information about those things, and learned enough to form my own opinions.
Perhaps you're one of those people who think that your children should not have an opinion unless you give it to them. If that's the case, I'm sorry, because you're going to have a hell of a time with a teenager.
Trying to shield children from everything bad in the world will have the wrong effect. The best that could happen is that you are unsuccessful, and the child gains the information, without feeling that she can talk to you about it... since she's not supposed to know this anyway, right? She's a kid. The worst is that you succeed, and your child grows up not knowing right from wrong, since he's never had to decide between the two for himself -- he's had his opinions carefully fed to him, and only the facts that he needs to know, so he doesn't have the ability to make an informed decision.
My niece will ask me questions about life, and I give her honest answers. I talk to her about the questions, and I don't try to make the world seem better than it is. I also give her all the facts that she needs to make up her own mind instead of just telling her that something is bad. Usually, she comes to the "right" decision on her own. I know already that she's not going to agree with me on everything, but if she has the information to deal with life, she's far better off.
Hmm. This article (and most of the posts replying to it) seem to have hit a nerve. Remember, don't drink and post -- you end up with rants like this.
Re:Misiterpreting it (Score:2)
Regulations of this type are very much NOT "insignificant" in the scheme of things. Oh, some person might just snap and run through a Catholic church with a broadsword if he see that! We can't allow anyone to see it. Oh, someone might go rape that young woman if she dresses like that, so we should outlaw miniskirts (a crime if I've ever thought of one. Miniskirts... GOOD! Uh, what was I saying? Oh yeah.) You might say that these are contrived examples, but some psycho did run through a church with a broadsword a year or two ago in England. OK, the second example is pretty bad.
What do you think the next step is? Tracking your location through your cell phone? Haven't read about that idea from the FBI. How about collecting all traffic through an ISP, just in case somebody is talking about their plans to shoot up another school... But it's for the children! (you don't want me to start on that rant. really.)
I don't know exactly how to say this -- I'm running on little sleep and much beer. I feel very strongly about this. Would I give up my freedom to save someone I love? Yes. Would I give up a nation's freedom? NO.
It sounds callous, even to me, but if I had to choose between my niece's life, and the first amendment, I would choose freedom. You can't allow the freedom of all to be destroyed to protect the few. If I had to choose between my freedom, and her, I have no doubt that I would sacrifice myself. But that is my choice, to give up my freedom to save another.
Maybe I'm unusual, but I'd be willing to give up my own life or freedom to protect those general freedoms, or to protect those I love. But I won't give up those general freedoms to protect them, since I don't consider that protection.
Ashcroft's closer to being right than Jamie (Score:2)
For our first example, let's look at Japan, which has strict gun controls and a low murder rate. A case for gun control? Not if you note that the murder rate by all methods in Japan is lower than the murder rate in the U.S. by non-gun methods. If every gun were to dissapear from the U.S. today, and everyone who would have killed with a gun abstains from using an alternate method, the U.S. would still have a higher murder rate than Japan.
Next, let's look at Switzerland, which has an automatic assault rifle in virtually every home. Yet it too has far fewer murders, inculding school shootings, per capita than the United States.
Now, perhaps we should note that neither low-murder-rate Japan nor Switzerland has a subculture that produces gangsta rap, justifies riots as expressions of outrage, etc. Cultural attitudes about violence are different than in the U.S. Perhaps, maybe, then, the U.S.'s problem isn't guns, but the cultural embrace of violence?
Steven E. Ehrbar
Re:Penny Arcade (Score:1)
Re:Possible BS alert. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
what a great idea (Score:2)
i believe every restriction we put on ourselves, causes something else to be replaced. look at the alcohol laws in the US against the laws in france. anyone at any age can just about buy any type alcohol in france. is it a coincidence that france has much lower levels of detrimental alcoholics? in the US, we treat alcohol like a taboo, until a certain age. the US has one of the highest detrimental alcoholic levels.
the whole idea of the internet is an open forum environment. the internet should not be controlled or filtered by anyone.
the people that try to censor because they are "protecting" children should learn to teach their children morals, instead of just letting other people take the blame.
the guy who went shooting a few weeks ago in a san diego high school was said to be "depressed and angered about other peers picking on him in school". *tear* where were the parents? where did he get the gun? the parents never took responsibility for their offspring. it always has to be someone else's problem.
Ashcroft and Dead Men and Guns (Oh My!) (Score:2)
As for Ashcroft's stance on video game control, well, what do you expect? He's a 7th Day Adventist, and doesn't even believe in dancing. But I don't think the gun control nuts whom Salon sets up as his opposition are necessarily right, either.
I really don't know what to say anymore. Maybe we do need some kind of controls on violent video games, equivalent to the "R" rating of the MPAA, so they aren't banned altogether. I think we could use a little more control over guns, of the "trigger lock" variety, but quail (or Quayle? :) at anything more harsh--in fact, I'd like to see a nationwide concealed carry law. As for the overall solution, well, I'd plug parental responsibility here, but the cynic in me points out that there's no way to legislate that.
I don't know quite what's going to happen, but something tells me it's all going to get worse before it gets any better.
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Re:Dammit! (Score:2)
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Re:The Judge Is Friendly With His Thesaurus (Score:1)
Re:superb (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
Fatal setback, pun intended? (Score:2)
Re:Good start (Score:1)
Re:Ashcroft and Dead Men and Guns (Oh My!) (Score:1)
How is this different from handgun licencing?? You keep a list somewhere of those who have taken this class. That's tantamount to having a list somewhere of those who own guns. They licenced weapons in Austrailia not too long ago. Not long after that they banned then except for hunting. And it was easy because they already had a list of who had the guns. Not too long after that they noticed an increase in the violent crime (I should say they noticed a steep increase as the standard rate of increase accelerated).
There used to be rifle ranges in High schools. You used to be able to take a riflery class in high school. Those people knew how to use guns. They were trained by their parents and teachers. They didn't shoot each other in school.
it's already there (Score:2)
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New Indpls Star article (Score:1)
The Indianapolis Star has printed a more detailed story. [starnews.com] This ordinance was created by the previous Republican administration; the current (Democratic) mayor says he will carry the case forward but I wonder how high a priority it is for him?
The article also makes reference to a bill pending in the Indiana state legislature that would require parents to be present when kids play violent games. Check out that bill here. [state.in.us]
Re:Good start (Score:2)
That's a common problem with attempting to control recreational drugs. You'd think the USA would be the one place on the planet not to fall into this kind of trap, at least you'd think that if those involved had learned anything from history.
Re:Scary Wording (Score:2)
Exactly how is this measured. It's quite possible for very rare situations to produce this kind of statistic.
Re:Scary Wording (Score:2)
The alternative is to use something other than simply a person's age. There are situations where this is done, e.g. people don't automatically gain the ability to legally operate a motor vehicle.
Re:Scary Wording (Score:2)
A nastier part of this is that "using" is judged just as bad as "abusing". Thus there is no incentive to "use" rather than "abuse"...
Re:Misiterpreting it (Score:2)
Would getting rid of video games make any difference? Maybe they'd just find another "trigger". It's not as if violent people only came in to existance when there were video games.
Re:what a great idea (Score:2)
Also you can easily get the same kind of behaviour with drugs more toxic than alcohol. Indeed a worst problem, because these other drugs are always illegal.
Add that the illegality may disuade seeking medical attention and you end up with rather more corpses than people going on mass shootings. Indeed the most common killing machine is the car, rather than the gun...
Re:Wonderful! (Score:2)
Though there then become negative consquences of abusing, rather than simply using, alcohol. Most people are probably not into waking up with their own vomit or ending up of first name terms with paramedics...
Re:Gun control doesn't work either (Score:2)
Possibly the same problem as with drug control. It's illegal to use drugs so instead binge on them. It's illegal to have a gun, so if you are already planning to do something illegal then carry the most lethal gun you can.
An armed robber is hardly going to be worried that their gun is illegal...
Re:Was there a referendum or something? (Score:2)
Re:Was there a referendum or something? (Score:2)
Re:Age of Barney (Score:1)
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Re:Don't beat up on Ashcroft (Score:1)
Coming from someone in high office, that's a strong implied threat of regulation.
Re:Did I miss something? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Ashcroft (Score:2)
Re:Ashcroft (Score:2)
All I know is that *I* did not vote for the man. I didn't vote for 'Carnahan' out of sympathy, rather an attempt to keep Ashcroft out of any position of power, as I disagree with just about every viewpoint he's had in the last several years as his opinions have shifted from something resembling those of a real person who believes in what he's doing to one who's driven by the political machine and corporate money.
Ironically, had he won he'd be in a position of less power than he is now.
Re:Ashcroft (Score:2)
I'm a product of the first generation of video game children. Been using computers since I was 7. The problem isn't video game violence, it's the inability of a person to separate fantasy from reality. That's a parenting problem. If you are unable to instill any sense of moral values into a person -- that "killing is wrong, don't do it" -- banning a videogame won't "fix" the problem.
I'm tired of people in this country trying to shift their problems onto someone with deep pockets. With the school shootings, everyone is always pointing at tv, video games, movies, parents, anything except THEMSELVES. Someone doesn't just wake up one morning and go "gee, I think I'm going to shoot a bunch of people for no reason today."
And for what it's worth, video games already have ratings on them. Q3a has an MA mark on the box. Walmart won't even sell those games to people under 18. They've had them since the mid 90's.
Re:Ashcroft and Dead Men and Guns (Oh My!) (Score:2)
Being from Missouri myself, I saw his ads so many times I wanted to puke. If he left the ads running he'd have done much worse. I actually would have voted for Ashcroft if he was the same man he was 5+ years ago. But he changed from a person with beliefs to a professional politician.
Right now there are ratings on video games. The "R" equivilent is MA.
I aree with you on the parenting solution; the only way to legislate it would be to make parents responsible for a child's action -- some laws have been passed that do that actually. I think this is absolutely the WRONG way to do things. It disgusts me that there are laws out there like that too (how the hell should another person be responsible for a 3rd parties actions? Some people are just bad).
I don't like the idea of a concealed carry law. If you're packing something like that it ought to be in a holster in plain sight. I also think that it ought to be mandatory to take some sort of training course (or proof that you're proficient in handling a weapon) before purchasing a handgun or rifle.
I don't mind the fact that guns exist in this country. I do mind that they could be in the hands of someone who doesn't know how to use one properly, or a person who can't control their impulses (you've seen 'em, driving crazily down the road, shoving people out of the way in lines, etc).
Re:Ashcroft and Dead Men and Guns (Oh My!) (Score:2)
Did I miss something? (Score:2)
When did we become Klingons? I'd like to think that life in America is peaceful enough that I don't need Mortal Combat 4 to train my kid to be violent enough to survive. Did Indiana somehow get zapped into being the evil, alternate Hill Valley from Back to the Future 2? I'm all for freedom of expression, and letting people do business without excessive regulation, but to hear a community leader defend violence in video games as a necessary part of the instruction of our youth makes me want move to Pennsylvania and become Amish.
--Brogdon
Violent crime statistics (Score:1)
Re:Good start (Score:1)
Try telling our argument to ANYONE in authority (at a town meeting, at a dorm meeting, or anywhere you find half-brained political people) and they'll instantly attack you with all kinds of psychobabble, meaningless statistics, passionate moral arguments... In short, reason means NOTHING to these people. They want to CONTROL YOUR LIFESTYLE. They hate punks like me who got away with drinking and having a good time, when I should have been kissing their asses and living how they wanted me to live instead.
So videogames are part of the problem? Well then, I am part of the problem as well! And I'm not going away, not even if they pass a law against me!
License To Play (Score:1)
Re:Wonderful! (Score:1)
I think this is wonderful! (Score:1)
If a 10 year old wants to shoot people...
...he can mow lawns for Arcade money!
If a 16 year old wants to shoot people...
...it's better off happening in the Arcade at school!
For that matter -- maybe they need to put video games in Highschools.
"Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"
Heh heh "World as we know it!" (Score:1)
"Ask not what your arcade can do for you, rather, ask how much is it gonna cost me and how many credits do I get..."
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Re:no media bias here... (Score:1)
-steve
Re:The Judge Is Friendly With His Thesaurus (Score:1)
Second, the part about "lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value" is straight from Miller, the case which defines "obscenity" as a matter of constitutional law.
And the City of Indianapolis doesn't mean "video game"; it means "violent video game".
Next time, perhaps, you could actually read the material BEFORE commenting on it?
Interesting... (Score:2)
And I went into the opinion expecting to find an economic argument. After all, it was Judge Posner writing the opinion.
All your intentional logic lapses are belong to us (Score:1)
Since when does someone saying that getting rid of A works against the goal of B, imply that someone is arguing that A is good or even related to the goal of B?
Next you'll be telling me that if I punch you in the face gracefully I will make you graceful.
Re:Misiterpreting it (Score:1)
But you haven't supported your claim. That's the problem I have. That said, I should probably be grateful you bothered to stay in the discussion. Most people are too full of themselves to respond to criticism.
Anyway back to the topic.
In fact I can find a few studies that have shown that there are significant differences between the reactions of people playing the exact same violent games for the same period of time. All became somewhat excited. For some it was the temporary adrenaline rush. For others it was more personal and lasted much longer. Guess what? Pastors become quite excited while giving a sermon. Lawyers can get excited while making arguments. People get excited at sports events. And some even get excited while jogging. Then there's the individuals who have no presence of self, no sense of reality and insufficient maturity to deal with a little excitement. Age has the least bit to do with it. I've seen 13 year olds more mature than 31 year olds.
watch "Demolition Man" (Score:2)
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Your kids get beat up a lot, don't they? (Score:2)
And if they by some miracle manage to make it to 18 in your happy little world, they'll be in for quite a shock when they leave their bubble and turn on the TV. God help them if they actually go outside! I like to think this is what the judge was talking about.
Re:Oh PLEASE! (Score:2)
People have been snapping under that pressure all along. One of the news sites carried the story of an elderly gentleman who went to school some decades ago now, who one day took a gun to school and threatened to shoot a kid who was shaking him down. Violent video games aren't at fault here. The way the school system works may be, but I don't think it's ever going to change either.
Re:ages (Score:2)
Different places has different "legally adult" ages. They're just lazy - choosing the oldest among them just to be on the safe side...
Thought control? WTF? (Score:1)
WTF? If you don't think that inhibiting the impulse to go on a shooting spree at your local school is a good thing, you are a sick fuck. Pardon my french.
Society's main purpose is to inhibit the impulses to kill other members of society.
What the hell is
Gun control doesn't work either (Score:1)
Re:The Judge Is Friendly With His Thesaurus (Score:1)
Dammit! (Score:2)
And don't get me started on the alien shooting...
Age of Barney (Score:2)
Re: Violent crime statistics (Score:1)
> I've seen several posts already saying the
> number of violent crimes committed by youth has
> dropped. Oh yay us. Let's give kids more violent
> games. Well.. yes the pure numbers show
> that. However, there is also a lot less kids
> than then there were. So while the rates go
> up.. the numbers are going down.
*BZZT* Wrong, but thanks for playing. Numbers AND rates for violent crime among youth have dropped:
http://www.urban.org/crime/module/butts/youth-crim e-drop.html [urban.org].
Pay particular attention to the section "Arrest rates":
Re:And what world is it that you live in? (Score:1)
Although this thinking is true, FAR too many parents now want to plop their kids in front of some sort of electronics and let the electronics raise the child.
The real problem here is this: People who either aren't responsible enough or aren't ready to have children and take care of them are having them anyway, and trying to pass of the job of parenting onto other objects, then getting angry when those objects teach their children things they don't want them to.
Parents need to learn that they need to be the ones educating their children against dangerous things, instead of stopping the dangerous things.
Re:Possible BS alert. (Score:1)
Correction...Ashcroft is not 7th-Day Adventist (Score:1)
Don't worry, it's not your fault. (Score:2)
My point is this: My generation, and the next, have all been trained to Blame The Other Guy.
Nothing we do is our fault at all.
Did you cheat on a test in 6th grade? Obviously you felt tremendous social pressure to do well in school. It's OK, we'll curve your grades anyway so that "you can feel good about yourself."
Did you steal a car when you were 15? That's OK, obviously you were under great peer pressure and your parents didn't love you enough.
Did you shoot someone when you were 18? That's OK, you probably had a very good reason. Maybe they used to take your lunch money when you were in grade school.
Don't get me wrong, good parenting, peer pressure, social pressure, these are all very important things to a child's personality development. But whatever happened to personal responsibility? Perhaps if we being to teach children actual values and responsibility instead of selfishness and passing the buck, they would be mature enough to decide what games to play on their own.
God forbid that, though, because then the government couldn't mold its citizens into little state funded automatons, completely reliant on Big Brother.
"A mime is a terrible thing to waste."
ThE iLlUsTrIoUs IdIoTt
'Evil Empire got you down? Use the source!'
http://www.dolinux.org/
Yes. (Score:1)
"Hey mister... would you buy Duke 4Ever for me? Please?"
Shudder
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Re:Scary Wording (Score:1)
Re:Scary Wording (Score:1)
First: You are correct that last year saw the lowest youth violence rate in recent time (aka about since 1983). However, so far this year the youth violence rate has gone up at an alarming rate. You cannot deny that this is at least in part due to the media.
Second: I'm not pulling an all out blame on video games or any other form of media. I have Quake. I play Unreal. They're a blast. I just don't think you should be allowing young kids such as those 12 or younger playing them.
Remember, in this case my gripe is not with the games themselves but the fact that the court implies that they somehow will prepare kids for adult life. To make such a statement frankly demonstrates only one thing: stupidity.
I would question anyone that would not support some sort of rating and partial regulation. All we really need to do is to protect the younger children: the ones that are not yet able to differentiate between that which is real and that which is not. For those that are mature enough to handle it, I say "Have fun!"
-James
Re:Misiterpreting it (Score:1)
I agree with you that for most of us, video games are a safe and even fun way to release tension and fuffil primal urges. But what about that
Indeed, it is a fine line to walk. I place a very high value on both the freedom of speech and human life. But when it comes down to it, I think I would rather sacrifice a little (just a little, mind you) freedom for the lives of murder victims. I dunno. What do you guys think?
-James
Re:Scary Wording (Score:1)
Ah, let's talk parents. Parents *are* the best way to prevent youth violence. But let's face it: there are a hell of a lot of parents out there that either don't care or do a crappy job. I would much rather leave it up the parents, but in today's society that just doesn't cut it. What if you lived in a neighborhood with 20 houses (we'll assume one parent & child per house for now), where there were 14 decent parents, 5 that were just bad parents, and one that is a raving alchoholic. The child of the 20th parent is enough to completely ruin or even eliminate the lives of the other 19 children. Just because you're doing your job, that doesn't mean that those around you are. It also doesn't mean that you or your children should have to pay the price for Mr. Idiot Jr.'s poor upbringing. IMHO, it's better to be a little safe that really sorry.
-James
Re:Misiterpreting it (Score:1)
4) As you stated, basic greed and jealosy.
3) The mistaken belief that murdering someone will somehow make things better.
2) Bad influence of environmental stimuli, including but of course not limited to PARENTING, peers, experiances, and yes, media (including video games). I never said video games were the only cause. I didn't even say they were the primary cause. I just said that video games and media in general DO play a major role in violent youth crimes.
1) THE PRIMARY FACTOR: The yearning for attention. Although the attention a murderer recieves after committing a murder is negative attention, it is still attention. Negative attention is better than no attention at all.
-James
PS: My second cousin was murdered when he was 19 too. They never found the murderer. Oh, the irony. Anway, you've said it. There are a lot of screwed up people out there.
Re:Scary Wording (Score:1)
I guess we just have to look at the big picture both in terms of cause and effect; it is important to take into account both what drives people to do what they do (anyone know ol' Sigmund's phone number?) and what the effects of attempting to restrict people are. In this case, the cause is not completely known. The effect, however, is. Placing the fulcrum on the great balance of saftey vs. freedom is a tricky thing. Each person will place his or her fulcrum in a slightly different place; debating the exact location is useless. What we need is some sort of compromise, if such a thing is even possible in this case.
Yeah, a sliding scale would be better than an all-or-nothing cutoff.
I think I'm going to go to bed now. Happy debating, people! I'm tired. Sleep now.
-James
Scary Wording (Score:2)
-James
Re:Ashcroft (Score:1)
There is precisely one reason why Mel Carnahan won the Senate race: SYMPATHY. It is, simply, impossible to campaign against a dead man and maintain any semblance of decency. Despite my disagreements with him, I have to acknowledge that Gov. Carnahan was a decent guy; any attempts to campaign against him would have been political suicide.
That having been said, I'm glad he got the nod for the AG post. As far as Ashcroft's actual statements, I'm not sure that violent video games are entirely responsible. I think it's foolish, though, to simply dismiss their influence out of hand.
I think the stronger point that needs to be made, though, is that the restraints against violence need to be internal and cultural, rather than enforced by an external authority, usually government. I don't think there's a /.er out there that wants more government control on anything; if people control themselves, there is no need for excessive government control.
Re:Misiterpreting it (Score:2)
Video games aren't the cause of all this, nor even the symptom. It's the fucked up people in the world out there that think a couple hundred dollars is worth taking someone's life for. This has been going on much longer than movies, tv, video games, etc ever existed.
Matt
Penny Arcade (Score:2)
www.penny-arcade.com [penny-arcade.com]
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Re:And what world is it that you live in? (Score:2)
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More important news (Score:3)
New Hampshire is considering taxing video games and movies, and using the money to help sex crime victims. Says proponents: "both forms of entertainment often feature sexual violence or portray woman as objects of sexual gratification".
Does anybody think the connection being made her is a little tenuous?
Comment removed (Score:3)
It's too bad... (Score:3)
Re:Read the paper much? (Score:2)
"Forecasts estimate a 35% probability of heavy rain at the time of the civil-rights demonstration scheduled for today in Sometown, Somestate. Wash away the commies, Lord!"
Read the paper much? (Score:2)
This is how 99.9% of the mainstream news is. Even the weather is biased. Basically, since the news is slanted in such a way, you just have to read it, disregard the majority of the crap, find out what the facts are, then go back and research to find out if they were lying or not. You'd be suprised of how much in the paper and on TV news is made up so they can have a good story, or are too lazy to get the real facts.
Re:And what world is it that you live in? (Score:2)
Me too. Now I can stomp on mushrooms better than all my coworkers, and I bash my head against bricks a lot. I did get in trouble when I went into that pet store and kicked the turtles though. It seems the majority of the people are just not aware of the mighty Koopa invasion. Let me go put on my red coveralls and matching hat now, I have a princess to save!
Re:The Judge Is Friendly With His Thesaurus (Score:2)
So what do they have against the Ibrator [ibrator.com]?
And I haven't seen any sex in video games in the arcades. I mean c'mon, Princess Toadstool's dress didn't even show her ankles! Oh, but maybe those "power balls" that Ms. Pacman eats were something else entirely...Oh my God!!! Ms. Pacman ate my balls!
Anyways, this is silly, I will stop now.
Re:Possible BS alert. (Score:2)
Chapter 60a in WV has several clauses pertaining to age of those consuming alcohol. Twice it exempts blood relatives and spouses from the penalties for providing alcohol to persons under 21, once it does not. In one section it merely states that no alcohol is to be sold to those under 21, but in another it states that it is a misdemeanor for persons under 21 to purchase or consume alcohol. If a person under 21 were to consume the alcohol in the home, it would require a violation of the 4th Amendment to the US Constitution to determine this, provided such consumption was not done in plain view from the street or another building. Frankly, I'd consult a lawyer in WV concerning this before I made a presumption either way. The law (to my non-lawyerly eyes) is self-contradictory.
MD appears to outright forbid anyone under the age of 21 from even consuming the stuff under all circumstances.
Interestingly, while it does appear that the original complaint about Indiana is correct, the IN law contains a curious exception in that "family" (i.e. homemade) beverages are not covered by the state law at all.
So, as I said, the laws vary state to state and obviously some states aren't as cool as the one I live in. {grin} Next time I hear someone around here (MN) complaining about our bassackwards liquor laws I think I'll mention this.
From what I've heard these sorts of rules don't really exist in most of Europe at all. And frankly, Prohibition in the US is the biggest failure of a policy EVER. Just imagine if it was as easy to avoid paying taxes as it was for those under 21 to get liquor. The Air Force would be holding those bake sales to buy bombers after all.
Possible BS alert. (Score:3)
Unless there is some extension specific to Indiana or Fort Wayne that I don't know about, this sounds like a dad making excuses (or perhaps there are extenuating circumstances). Alcohol laws are vary state by state. Here the MN State Law [state.mn.us] that very clearly states that persons under 21 are allowed to drink in their parents' homes.
The government has been very loathe over the years (and you can thank the Republicans and their ideological type for this) to interfere with families, for better or worse. It's Democrats with their Nanny State that won't let parents be parents, but are all too willing to sue everyone in sight, including parents, when something goes wrong with kids whose parents were basically hog-tied.
Now obviously this does not extend to giving children large and dangerous doses of alcohol. That would be reckless and dangerous. But a glass of wine or beer with a meal? I've known parents who would cringe at the thought, but I think healthy families with normal chemical use patterns would see nothing amiss here (this is not intended to be a statement about you and your family in particular, please don't take offense).
To stay on topic, this law against certain video games sounds dumb as hell to begin with. Video games are a popular target right now since they have "arrived" as a mass media. But parents have every right in this case to forbid their minor children from even entering the arcade if they have a problem with the games. If an arcade owner can make a "clean" arcade which is profitable, this is surely a niche market worth tapping-- assuming that parents whose children spend enough time in arcades to be affected by the games there give enough of a shit about their child's well-being to begin with.
Re:The Judge Is Friendly With His Thesaurus (Score:2)
In other words, eschew obfuscation.
(ripped from the fortune file)
-John
Binge drinking is only one form of alcohol abuse (Score:2)
Not binge drinking doesn't mean you don't have a problem with alcohol either. Drinking alcohol, even in relatively small amounts (3-4 beers), every day can lead into a drinking habit or into an outright addiction with the subsequent health problems. I know because that happened to me. It's humiliating to realize that you really need those three drinks every day, and it's even more difficult to admit to admit to yourself that your alcohol intake -- no matter how small it is per day -- is starting to affect your health, work and life in general.
(To those who're interested in treatment, there are good drugs [well.com] nowadays that will help you to break the habit so you really can start working on the other problems in your life. They're not the cure, but they sure helped me.)
Good start (Score:4)
And for those of you who might think "kids" aren't responsible enough to handle alcohol, maybe they aren't. However, artificially imposing that only adults are responsible enough to drink alcohol just makes kids who want to grow up faster (blame the media) more prone to drink, so they fit the adult image that they present. I could continue, but I'm really trying not to troll.
Kurdt
My favorite (Score:2)
This may seem slightly out of place in the context of video games, but it fits perfectly with some other legislation we've had recently.
John Ashcroft Doesn't Agree (Score:2)
I'm glad I voted for Gore....
What's worse (Score:2)
So guess what the drinking age is here? Yep. The Feds blackmailed us by threatening to withhold highway funds (YOO-HOO, where do you think those funds COME FROM, eh? Blackmailed with OUR OWN MONEY!!!) At first the Legislature wouldn't pass the law. It was, after all, patently unconstitutional. Then, as the deadline neared, they caved. Went to the state Supreme Court. The Supremes said, guess what d00ds, this is unconstitutional. The deadline got closer, the Lege passed it again, and this time the Supremes did a backflip and coughed and said that our Constitution does not in fact say what it very obviously says.
The period in which we refused to pass on this crap was one of the few times I've been proud of our state's elected officials. I suppose I can't blame them for finally caving in to a superior force but it was a sad day for freedom in a venue which, compared to some other things, isn't even really that important.
Oh PLEASE! (Score:3)
So, it's either-or, huh? Come on, don't be so ridiculous. Look up the word "dichotomy."
There are two options, then, according to you: we can (1) train our children to be able to cope with life with Quake, Doom, and Unreal Tournament, or we can (2) give them Barney and Mr. Rogers. No in between at all, right?
I understand the fact that we shouldn't shelter our children in a bubble, leaving them unequipped to handle the real world. But you know, I know so many people that didn't play any Mortal Kombat growing up -- and (shock, gasp, horror) they are normal, productive members of society!
I play my share of violent games (Quake 2, Unreal, Q3A) etc., and I know for a fact that I will not go out and shoot someone because of the game. You have no argument from me there. But to imply that we'd be warping our kids by not allowing them to play violent video games is probably the funniest thing I've read today.
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An Observation on media viloence and children (Score:2)
I grew up watching all the "violent" Warner Bros. cartoons, not to mention running home after school to watch the Three Stooges in the afternoon.
I am like many of my peers who were born in that postwar generation, a generation that loved watching Elmer blast Daffy Duck and Moe clobbering Curly with a great big monkey wrench.
We grew up to be called the "Peace" generation. You know. Hippies. Anti-war protestors. That lot.
But when cartoons and kids programming became, for lack of a better word, wimpified, that is, no violence at all, everybody was all lovey dovey and worked out all their problems by consensus, et al, ad nauseum, it was then we began to see a rise in juvenile violence in the 70s and 80s.
Now, I am not positing a direct correlation between these two events. Nor am I positing a correlation between the decrease in juvenile violence since the advent of "realistic" (Quake, realistic? AHEM!) video & computer games.
Still, it's an intriguing datapoint and there's probably a couple of Ph.Ds that could be earned via a study of the correlation between "violent" media influences and people born in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s.
Hmmm... (Score:2)
You might guess that this is one of my pet peeves. *grin* I maintain, although this is only my opinion, that violent video games and violence in movies has little, if anything, to do with the youth violence we're currently experiencing in the U.S. (although probably responsible for this run-on sentence). I must admit that I'm pleased that someone in authority can see this also.
Enough ranting and have a wonderful night, all!
The Judge Is Friendly With His Thesaurus (Score:5)
All I can say is wow. All that just to mean "video game." I suggest we start using the above statement in our everyday speach.
Something like:
"Hey Kevin, care to pop out the amusement machine that predominantly appeals to minors' morbid interest in violence or minors' prurient interest in sex, is patently offensive to prevailing standards in the adult community as a whole with respect to what is suitable material for persons under the age of eighteen (18) years, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value and play some Final Fantasy on it?"