Violent Video Game Law Struck Down 502
The Importance of writes "Washington State banned the sale of violent videogames depicting violence against 'law enforcement officers' to minors under age 17. When challenged, the law was blocked by a preliminary injunction. Yesterday, a federal district court decided that the law was unconstitutional because it failed the strict scrutiny test and was also void for vagueness. Read the 15-page decision [PDF]. A summary of the case's holdings with quotations here."
i love violent games. (Score:5, Interesting)
Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Insightful)
I wish more women understood this. Some of them out there actually get offended that the guy they're involved with looks at porn. "I should be enough for him!" *Shudder* Hint, ladies, there is no such thing as a woman on this planet that would 100% completely satisfactorally squelch a guy's curiosity about other women. We are not WIRED this way. We are not programmed to take one mate, settle down, and that's it. We were developed to run around and make everybody pregnant. Don't believe me? Look at other examples of the male's role in nature. We bend over backwards to have monogomous relationships, we should be granted at least a little bit of release.
I think the story is similar for the violence in video games debate. It needs to be understood that there are a LOT of people out there who aren't against video game violence because they grew up on it. Despite that, they are not violent people. They don't have violent tendencies. They don't have anything wrong with them that they would desperately want to avoid spreading to other children. For this reason, very serious proof needs to come about. Unfortunately, that proof is going to have to by the truckload. One kid shooting a car and blaming GTA3 is not compelling. 100 kids, well maybe. 10,000 Okay, we can believe it.
In both cases, a level of understanding has to be developed.
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Insightful)
Women want ONE man to fulfill her EVERY need.
Men want EVERY woman to fulfill his ONE need.
Its almost that simple, really. You want to impress a man? Show up naked, bring food, and don't block the TV. We really don't need much, but we can't stand being bitched at, or told our constant hornyness is wrong or bad. You leave us alone about dirty movies, lighten up a little, and we will do anything for you. Anything. Fortunately, my wife already knows this, which is one reason I married her.
To all the women here reading slashdot (both of you), please pass this on.
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:3)
I've had similar luck. My gf isn't bothered by porn. It's great for me because I can live without it being some sort of big secret. One thing she knows is if I'm home looking at porn, I'm not out shopping. Heh.
Part of this is I lucked out in the gf department. She's great and I wouldn't trade her for anybody. I think the other part of this, though, is that I don't think I'm abusing her patience. For example, I don't hav
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:3, Insightful)
Can you imagine a rapist not looking at porn?
I'm not convinced that porn would cause violent rape. How many rapists have been to jail, arguably a place where porn would be very hard to come by, and commited the crime again upon completion of their sentence? How many people with porn stashes out there have raped anybody?
I can't claim I'm any more correct than those studi
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:5, Informative)
I find your proposition interesting. Can you provide links to reputable, scientific studies showing a positive correlation between pornography and rape?
On the contrary, most of the reputable sources [64.233.167.104] I can find have distinct quotes such as:
and
Rapists Eat Bread *FACT* (Score:3, Insightful)
But i think the role is diffrent. Rape is generally never about sex (however stabbings are, go figure). The rapist who is looking at porn, persumably, hates women and is thinking violent thoughts towards her, while the average guy is just thinking about consentual awesomness.
Besides, there aer so many studies that say so many things, the room for sweepi
Re:Rapists Eat Bread *FACT* (Score:3, Insightful)
Violent kids watch more TV.
Ridiculous conclusion: TV causes kids to be violent
This is incorrect. There is a correlation between the two, but nothing more. Kids who were violent to begin with may be attracted to TV, among thousands of other possibilities.
I make it a point to bring this stuff up every time people make these bad conclusions, but it gets sort of scary when you realize
Re:Mod Parent Up (Score:4, Insightful)
There is also absolutely nothing that says that having sexual fantasies is actually going to make you leave your wife. I fantasize about being a baseball player sometimes but that doesn't mean I am quitting my day job. You are basically saying that fantasy is unhealthy. If that is your point than I don't think you will find a lot of converts on this site.
Re:Kinda like pr0n in that regards ... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's funny how many people buy ridiculous statements like this without asking the obvious questions: "Who measured their shot accuracy? How did they measure it?" Just a moment's consideration should tell you how implausible it is. Think about what would have to be be involved to actually be able to honestly make such a claim. Did somebody really go around and try to figure out where every shot was fired from, guess what the kid was aiming at, and calculate how close the shot came to the target? And then somehow work out an appropriate metric to compare it to police accuracy? That would be quite an accomplishment indeed! Where is this tour de force study published?
Re:i love violent games. (Score:5, Funny)
i dunno (Score:2)
Study vs. Study (Score:3, Informative)
The most telling part of the article is the tagline at the end - "Media violence is only one of many factors that contribute to societal violence," Anderson has written, "and is certainly not the most important one."
Re:i love violent games. (Score:2)
Re:i love violent games. (Score:4, Funny)
Some of them are 20 now ;)
Re:i love violent games. (Score:3, Insightful)
Wait, which one was supposed to be the causation? Or is there causation at all? Perhaps it's just correlation?
Please be a little more specific with regards to "linking". Vague comments don't help anyone.
Re:i love violent games. (Score:3, Insightful)
funded by?
I have heard of several of these "studies" but when you read about the protocals used in the study there are huge causal leaps of faith one must take to believe the data.
Re:i love violent games. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:i love violent games. (Score:5, Informative)
To steal an example from Michael Moore, why do these people playing violent games mean that is what caused their violent actions? The Columbine kids liked bowling as well, but no one is trying to say bowling causes violent actions. While it is easy to say that most people who committ acts of violence see violent video games and movies, that ignores the fact that most people who see voilent videos games and movies do not committ acts of violence.
Re:i love violent games. (Score:4, Informative)
Don't be too ashamed, its a common misunderstanding to think correlation means causation. I highly suggest reading this course on Causal Reasoning [cmu.edu] from CMU.
Re:i love violent games. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is even older than video games, though. Remember when D&D supposedly made kids violent? The amazing thing is that we live in one of the leas
Re:i love violent games. (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not perfect, nor are my children. But we spend a lot of time just talking to them about what's
Where can I get a game like that!? (Score:3, Interesting)
Seeing the extended suffering would be so much more fulfilling! It would equate to bonus frags!
Would I get more points for killing someone with a larger extended family than for killing someone that was single, with no children?
What if you killed a single parent, denying the children the support of their sole provider? That should count triple, in my book.
(Get
Re:i love violent games. (Score:5, Informative)
Around the time of the red scare and HUAC the comic book industry feared being black balled as communists so they voluntarly censored themselves for over 30 years. No shadow could be cast over a law enorcemnt officers, government was blindly trusted, and no talk of drugs (even anti-drug story's). Personally, I'm glad that's changed. I couldn't tolerate living in a fake, leave it to beaver world.
As far as cutting class and slapping women are concerned, country music has been doing that for decades, and people have been romanticizing killers and gangsters for even longer. And it's not cool to be a drug dealer, but some people have nowhere else to go and there's too much money to be made. I do recall some of the prohibition era gangsters being idolized too.
Same product, new wrapper.
Re:i love violent games. (Score:3, Interesting)
You think the hundreds of US troops now shooting civilians for not stopping at poorly identified checkpoints, not to mention throwing people on the ground and stepping on their necks, or for that matter bombing civilians from the air in "clean surgical" strikes (not to further mention Abu Ghraib) are somehow wierdo psychopaths who all chose to join the US military?
No, they're perfectly ordinary US citizen
Re:...But I don't like unfavorable depictions... (Score:4, Insightful)
If they actually DID their job of controlling the unnecessarily violent in society, they might get some respect.
Instead, they enforce "institutional morality" like anti-drug laws which are totally irrelevant to preventing coercion. Then they start acting out "us vrs. them" fantasies. They end up sodomizing people with broomsticks in back rooms.
They've been doing this for GENERATIONS now (read any description of 19th Century and early 20th Century police tactics). Until public outrage in the '60's forced a (slight) rollback in those tactics, they were doing it. (Of course, the recent beating in LA shows that nothing's really changed.) THAT's why they don't get any respect.
Christ, they've been showing police TV shows and movies now for FIFTY YEARS which show the police REGULARLY violating people's civil rights in order to apprehend "evil bad guys". If you think video games influence the respect police get, what about the thousands of police-positive movies and TV shows that are everywhere?
If they're not having an effect on generating respect for cops, there must be a reason. Same one as violent video games. People have to deal with reality on the street. Games and TV are not yet indistinguishable from reality - despite the corporat media and the state's efforts to blur that distinction so as to better control this brain-dead population.
The Situationists talked about the "Society of the Spectacle". Well, it's not seamless yet.
I spent eight years in the Federal joint seeing cops (and wannabe cops, which is what correctional officers ARE) on a daily basis. There are only three kinds of cops: morons, assholes, and both.
Get in a cop's way one of these days and see how much respect you have after he takes you down several pegs. Try complaining at an airport check-in - that'll do it.
So.. (Score:5, Interesting)
And possibly all future productions by those involved in it?
Re:So.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So.. (Score:5, Insightful)
In this country, ([stand up straight, remove hats] our Blessed and Glorious Country), you are a child, a child you hear, with no rights, no voice, no nothing, until you turn 18 and then wham, society hits you with a ton of bricks (paperwork) and all of a sudden you're supposed to conduct yourself as an adult and a productive member of society. Well, if you don't get the training and exposure, sherlock, you ain't gonna be any good at dealing with adult stuff.
I'm of the opinion that all the under 17 or under 18 laws can be brought to under 13 and society will be better off in the long run.
US, wake up, the other 5.7 billion people can't all be wrong.
Re:So.. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you do, then they are no longer subject to their parents at 13, and I'm sorry but kids that age need parents to watch over them as much or more than any time in thier life. Preferably it will more hands off, but parents need the ability to step in when the situation merits it. Doi
Amen (Score:3, Insightful)
The convenient part of this whole setup is, you still get the honor of paying taxes under 18, even without any representation in government or any rights. I started working part time jobs at 14, so
Re:Amen (Score:3, Insightful)
You're overlooking free public education, a massive government-supported public health/immunization initiatave, child protective services and a foster care system should you need them, government oversight of employed minors to ensure safe working conditions, the entire transportation infrastructure (along with its regulatory arm) that you gain access to
Re:So.. (Score:2)
Agreed the content may not always be pleasurable, but such blanket laws just impose a total clampdown, and pave way for even more restrictions
Re:So.. (Score:5, Funny)
*shrug* At least the public would no longer be tortured by Police Academy sequels
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:All that remains... (Score:2)
Re:All that remains... (Score:2)
My favorite line (Score:5, Interesting)
Shows just how laws like that could be misinterpreted...
Re:My favorite line (Score:4, Interesting)
What about a film noir story that depicts a corrupt cop? Is it ok to kill him, because he is corrupt? What defines his corruption? What if he just performs vigiliante actions, like killing robbers and then planting guns on them? Can he be killed?
Would it be okay to make a game in which I could be allowed to...oh....say.... rob a hooker after doing her? Carjack innocent people? Oh....wait
Re:My favorite line (Score:2)
LOL, good one. How many other games can you think of where you're killing cops indiscriminately? Not many.
Re:My favorite line (Score:3, Funny)
aren't they technically enforcing laws?
What kind of world are we living in where we can't pretend to shoot Nazis anymore?!
Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:drugs (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:3, Interesting)
Drugs like heroin can kill. It's a good thing that heroin is illegal. So comparing video games which don't hurt anyone, to drugs, seems to be doing an injustice to video games.
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, the several Nobel Laureates that were pot smokers were pretty stupid.
Woulda Coulda Shoulda (Score:5, Insightful)
Probably not at all smarter. I'm not a particular fan of pot (it makes me paranoid; I much prefer a nice glass of 2000 Estancia Meritage), but there is absolutey no evidence it "makes you stupid" and a great many studies that indicate it is quite innocuous, including several fairly recent studies by the US Federal government that were subsequently squashed for political reasons.
Chronic abusers of any drug are another story, however, even there we see far greater damage resulting from alcoholism and addiction to prescription drugs. Recreational use isn't terribly healthy (no alien chemicals to the body are), but there is no correlation between pot use and lack of intelligence except in the most egregious cases of chronic, ongoing, long term excessive use where the abuser is essentially stoned 24/7.
2) Wonder how many others would've been without it?
Again, probably none. Anyone who abuses marijuana enough for it to impact their intelligence probably has an addictive personality, and would have substituted alcohol or some other equally if not more harmful substance had pot not existed.
Re:Woulda Coulda Shoulda (Score:3, Funny)
Yup. An addict is an addict is an addict.
Of course all things being equal, I'd much rather hang out with a stoner than an alcoholic. Nobody ever gets stoned and tries to kick your ass.
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, I support teaching kids about the dangers of drugs. But I'm against lieing to them about it. If you want your kids to be able to deal with drugs they need to know the truth.
The problem with lieing to kids about drugs as mostly-harmless as pot is that when the kids do try it, and none of those evil things happen to them, they doubt your word on the really dangerous stuff like cocain and heroin.
Honesty is paramount when dealing with children if you want them to have the tools to survive.
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:3, Funny)
No, no... pot has three main side effects. Decreased short term memory, decreased long term memory, and... I forgot the third.
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:2)
You cannot simply equate pot to violent video games. People are harmed and killed under the influence of pot, or by someone else who is under the influence. If you want to equate pot to violent video games, you have to make the argument that after playing a violent video game, your capabilities are somehow impared while you are under the influence of the video game.
I think there is a shor
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:3, Insightful)
Please keep in mind that I am trying to make it painfully clear that I am not claiming that pot killed anyone. I am referring to the influence of pot.
The first incident happened before I went to the school, but I learned about it because the memorial to the student was being removed to build a car lot. Some students were getting stoned on the water tower at night where they wouldn't be noticed by anyone. Once well stone
Re:Useful metaphor for this kind of reactionism:dr (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the most interesting example, at least in the U.S., was the ban on the smoking of opium. Opium was still widely and legally available, but smoking, a habit favored by chinese immigrants, was criminalize
Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good (Score:5, Insightful)
What's interesting about her job is she is now a PO with the local ISD. When she worked at the school in east county where the average income is much lower, and people are more "common" for lack of a better term, a phone call to a parent resulted in an apology and an action. Now that she works at the school in the "affluent" neighborhood, a phone call to a parent results in blamestorming, "not my child" and "you people should be doing more to make sure this sort of thing doesn't happen." Those folks want the rest of the world to raise their children so they're not inconvenienced, and they're the people that think laws like this are a good idea.
Re:Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Everyone else pays? Then why am I shelling out all this money for insurance. You go to a hospital in an ambulance, you pay for the ambulance. They make insurance mandatory for a reason. And I support mandatory insurance, because it forces people to be able to pay for their own mistakes.
If people hurt themselves, so long as it's their own fault, that's life. The alternative is other people making my choices for me. I don't want the government to be able to say I can't go white water rafting or rock climbing or scuba diving because it's too dangerous. Warnings are one thing. Telling someone to get down is one thing. Fines are idiotic.
Why doesn't anyone consider the political consequences of the US government's recent conversion to the belief that people are basically mentally incompetent and need a parental government to protect them?
I can't drive along a 20 mph stretch of road with my seatbelt off, but I can drive 65 mph down some strech of highway with it on. Where do you think I'm safer? The government is doing a shitty job of protecting me from myself. If I get in an accident, I should sue them for letting me drive on that fast, dangerous highway, right? It's their responsibility, not just to warn me, but to force me to be safe.
Ah, but they figure people get more benifts driving down a fast highway. Shouldn't I be allowed to make that decision, for better or worse?
Maybe people just live in a society where they think others should force them to do the right thing, and the consequences for their actions should be other people's responsibility. It would explain a lot of the insane lawsuits flying around.
It's not the government's job to stop stupid people from hurting themselves or to decide what risks are acceptable. It's their job to stop stupid people from hurting me, or cheating me, or giving me false information. The government can give helpful information, but it isn't my parent and it shouldn't have any burden or compulsion to make my cost-benefit anlayses for me. These are the same people who wanted to invest Social Security in the stock market, remember? They suck at cost benefit analysis.
Re:Good (Score:3, Insightful)
Good to see (Score:5, Interesting)
It's a good sign that free speech and common sense has largely won out in this circumstance; it's been some time since I've seen a legal issue on here that actually followed the principles of freedom granted by the constitution, rather than blatantly ignoring it ;P
One thing that I did notice though, was:
Which suggests that as expected, the debate over violent/explicit video games is long from over, and more restrictions may well be brought in over time.
Re:Good to see (Score:2)
Re:Good to see (Score:3, Funny)
Good...and bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
While I think that this is a great win for free speech, does it seem a bit weird that the ability to blow someone's head clean off is given a higher protection than showing someone's nipple? Which one is really worse in the long run?
Note: I am not for censorship of any kind, though I think voluntary ratings and PARENTAL INVOLMENT I N CHOICES are the best solution, but it speaks volumes that violence seems to be celebrated but anything sexual must be covered up "for the children". It really goes to show the almost paradoxical prudist warrior culture that permeates America today.
You reminded me of (Score:2, Insightful)
So my point - other countries don't make a big deal out of nudity and nothing bad is happening to them. Is it?
My question what's the real difference?
Is it that we're, generally speaking, infantile or adolescent here in the U.S.? Or what?
Re: Prudist Warrior Culture? (Score:2)
Where in the world do people come up with this stuff? Ever heard of a film called "Braveheart"? You may remember some scenes of violence in that movie. And what rating did it achieve? R, for "brutal medieval warfare". That doesn't pull any punches; that doesn't say word one about the sensuality between Wallace and Murron.
>
"Depicts" versus "allows" (Score:3, Interesting)
After a while, the GTA-esque games will have such advanced simulations for every part of the gameplay experience -- better vehicle physics, better AI, better "flocking" crowd behavior, etc -- because it becomes physicall
So... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:So... (Score:2)
I get more violent watching Congress on C-SPAN (Score:5, Insightful)
BS (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll tell you what the problem is with the youth of today with all the violence.... Shitty parents. Mystery solved.
Someone help me out with this one... (Score:5, Interesting)
Why exactly is sex deemed to be worse than violence? Why are violent portrayals protected but sexual portrayals not?
Re:Someone help me out with this one... (Score:2)
So if the poor and stupid and criminals stopped having sex (can't have babies without sex) the WASPs could eventually have their nice little world where everybody is rich, smart, and law-abiding.
Twisted huh?
Why would they want that? (Score:2)
Re:Someone help me out with this one... (Score:3, Insightful)
Firstly, sex can have some pretty bad consequences, for instance teenage pregnancy which severely handicaps young people. I know. I was a father at 19 and while I've gone on to great things many do not, especially in poorer communities. That said, young people who are not violent can watch violent movies and just be entertained, then shrug it off later. Young people however are naturally all VERY horny and extremely curious. Growing up I can rem
Re:Someone help me out with this one... (Score:5, Insightful)
Because parents... (Score:5, Insightful)
Kjella
Re:Someone help me out with this one... (Score:3, Informative)
But why is a type of speech restricted simply because it isn't used to speak out against 'the Man'?
It's not. If we're referring to obscenity, it's restricted because it is believed to have "a substantial tendency to deprave or corrupt its readers by inciting lascivious thoughts or arousing lustful desires" (Commonwealth v. Isenstadt (1945), 318 Mass. 543 [62 N.E.2d 840, 844], or People v. Wepplo, 78 Cal.App.2d Supp. 959 [findlaw.com], free reg req'd).
There are other classes of speech that typified by GTA, for insta
Video Game Demographic (Score:5, Insightful)
For the younger crowd, there's a rating system in place. If mommy buys Hitman: Contracts or Vice City for little johnny (even after reading the rating for it) -- and continues to let the PS2/TV/Internet babysit the child, I believe no law can help that "family."
It's a strange society that looks to everyone else for responsibility in raising children. When all else fails, I suppose we can always blame Canada. Until then, spend time with your children. Make sure they know the difference between reality and fantasy. Give them a sense of morality. Lead by example and for fsck's sake, let them know they matter. I bet that'll work much better than any legislation could.
Download them from DC? (Score:5, Funny)
Violent, ok... sexually explicit ,no? (Score:5, Interesting)
If kids did everything they see in video games... (Score:2)
dark rooms, listen to electronic music and pop pills. Oh wait...
Doom III (Score:2, Funny)
This is ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)
GTA is much more "light" than any cops movie, yet are these censored all the time? Are all of these X-rated or something?
Second, the thing about law enforcement officials, specifically, is absurd. If that law passed, then what would come next? Shouldn't firefighters enjoy the same "protection" from violence in games? Old people? Women? They can be killed in a movie, but not in a game, because a game is different, right?
Besides, doesn't the game have an "M" or an "18" on the box? Shouldn't be sold to minors, period. No need to create a NEW law about the killing of THESE people you PARTICULARLY don't want killed, even if it's just a game. If a parent wants to buy it for his 8-year old kid, anyway, despite the obvious sticker, then it's HIS responsibility (although in America he'll blame the games industry and/or the government anyway, if something goes wrong with the kid later).
(BTW: the "kill the haitians" thing in Vice City was even more ridiculous. Drug dealers can sell drugs, kill people, but god forbid they make racist comments, because they are NICE people, good role models, after all...)
new headline (Score:4, Funny)
Reminds me of when I was a young lad... (Score:5, Insightful)
Fucking stupid Tipper Gore bullshit, and my ma bought into it like a sucker.
My point? Kids are smarter than people give them credit for, and they need to be held responsible more often. I knew what the fuck the difference between fantasy and fiction was back then (I was 8), and so do kids today. In fact, I truly believe they are smart enough to game the system for protection when it comes down to it. What really needs to be done is for children to have better education. Spend all this wasted money on effectively teaching kids and giving them a future, and shut the fuck up about violence, because we all know that it's bullshit anyway.
I could not agree more (Score:3, Interesting)
The reaction of people like your mother is a very, very visceral one -- and it's visceral because AT THE TIME, you really WERE stupid! You were a retard.
I was in exactly your shoes, and I agree totally. I got around it by (thanks to my voracious reading) being more informed than my mom, who was an asolutely amazing airhead-savant artist who painted naked chicks on a 16-foot canvas and hung it behind our huge living room window on the one hand, and on the other hand sent me to my roo
Re:Reminds me of when I was a young lad... (Score:3, Insightful)
Huh... My parents raised me on James Bond films and those cool 1970's martial arts flicks. I knew how to break a spine in three places or seduce a sexy Soviet double agent before I could tie my shoes.
My take (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course they struck it down (Score:5, Funny)
Will it never end? (Score:3, Insightful)
The important thing that everyone missed... (Score:5, Insightful)
You want it banned, pip some T&A and a BJ (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure that people will get up in arms (which would not get them upset in the least,) and parade against the game.
Doubt anyone will read this at this point, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Zelda 3 - The first dungeon of the game is nothing but killing LEOs.
Metroid 3 - You remember that corpse in a spacesuit in front of the door to Kraid? Now, that's most likely another bounty hunter like Samus, and thus could be seen as a LEO.
Final Fantasy. Any Final Fantasy - Most notable is Final Fantasy IV, where the first half of the game is spent directly fighting the most powerful nation in the world.
Super Mario Bros. - You spend the entire freakin' game flattening goombas and stomping koopas, who are trying to kill Mario by direct order from King Koopa.
The list goes on and on. This is the problem with broad laws - they can be used to cover literally anything if you look at it from the right angle.
Castlevania - The story of a proud nation ruled by the ageless Count Dracula, and it's struggle against the treasonous Simon Belmont. Hundreds - nay, thousands of Dracula's innocent followers have been mindlessly slaughtered by this heartless terrorist who is hell bent on overthrowing the great leadership.
Etc, ad infinitum, ad nauseum.
Accountability (Score:5, Insightful)
Have these people ever watched the news?
The difference between the Nightly News and a violent video game is that the games are NOT REAL. My kids are smart enough to know the difference.
Life must be lived not legislated.
This is awesome! (Score:5, Interesting)
What kind of idiot uses violent metaphors to describe their initiatives against violence?
I don't think the judge likes Grand Theft Auto III (Score:3, Insightful)
Violence Begets Violence (Score:5, Funny)
Porn and violence is tearing apart marriages and families. Anyone who can't see the moral decay and complete deterioration of society as a whole because of these two abhorations has their head up their ass.
Re:Why is that... (Score:5, Insightful)
Erm... that's been a long standing arguement here in the USA, so I hope you didn't get the feeling you'd come up with something original
When the founders of this county added the second amendment, they knew that the only way to remove an oppressive government (which they'd just been under) was with force. Protecting the right to own arms was essential to being able to use such force.
We have laws banning such substances as cocaine, marijuana, crystal meth, etc... None of these laws stop criminals from being in possession of those substances. The long standing arguement against banning guns is it means only the criminals will have them.
ontopic
The idea behind laws such as this one is that children/teens are desensitized by violence in games and on tv. I don't agree with that, but it's what these pretentious lawmakers think. These same people seem to think that, in the 1950's, the world really was like Leave it to Beaver portrayed.
The simple solution is for parents to become parents again. We (I have 3), collectively, need to quit blaming other people for our shortcomings as parents and own up to the fact that kids turn out pretty much how we raise them (and who we let them hang out with). We, not laws, should be the filters that sort out what our kids watch and do.
My 11 year old boy is a big fan of Will Smith, and we own (lease?) the Bad Boyz DVD's, and he's allowed to watch both of them. Why? Because we speak with our children all the time about how people should act and how they should treat other people. He understands that what he's watching is purely for entertainment, and stuffing people in trunks, while funny on tv, isn't funny in real life.
The idea of having more laws on the books infuriates me, wether it be banning violent games or guns. We just need to stop blaming other people when our ignored child turns out rotten.