Clinton, Lieberman Propose CDC Investigate Games 429
Gamespot reports that Senators Clinton and Lieberman have asked the Centers for Disease control to investigate how games impact us poor deluded citizens. From the article: "Even though the legislation--called the Children and Media Research Advancement Act--does not include restrictions, it appears to be intended as a way to justify them. That's because a string of court decisions have been striking down antigaming laws because of a lack of hard evidence that minors are harmed by violence in video games. The original version of the bill earmarked $90 million for the study, but Lieberman press secretary Rob Sawicki said that the committee had approved the measure without any dollar figure and that such a figure would be added later during the appropriations process." Gamasutra has some background on the bill, which was originally proposed in 2003.
Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:5, Informative)
As mission statement [cdc.gov] says: I don't think any of those are really concentrating on developmental mental health of my child. However, after looking at the the CDC page on child development [cdc.gov] it looks like they do consider themselves watchdogs of how children should be raised to some extent: It then goes on to provide activity charts for the ranges of years for small children.
Where do we draw the line at what is considered "neglect" by a parent?
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:2, Funny)
Simple, right where the line between responsibility of protecting innocents meets the border of nanny state.
Hmm. Of course, I have no idea where that lies.
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:4, Insightful)
Your absolutely right, and your absolutely wrong. Yes it takes parents to raise a child, assuming you have parents which hundreds of thousands of orphans from the AIDS crisis and other crises around the world do not.
The point that was being made by the author was that the role of the community in its own development, and the development of its members, is important and significant. How that community is structured, is it inclusive? is it a positive environment? is it safe? does it have the resources necessary to promote growth? (economic environmental and social)
There are so many factors that are beyond the control of parents. You want to look at drug abuse, violence, exclusion, poverty, whatever, all of them are incredibly linked to the community. The individual, and certainly not the parents, do not control the context in which they live their lives. If our communities degenerate, or continue to degenerate as many authors have suggested, it won't matter what kind of parent you are - you can only teach your child so much and shield them from so much. Beyond that the responsibility lies with your child, and the environment they interact within, namely 'the community' on whatever plan you choose to identify it (municipality -> nation -> nation-state -> continent, etc)
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:3, Insightful)
As for the other things - the preference always goes to letting the parent decide. For example, who decides if the community is "structured" well enough? Define "positive" environment? A bunch of hippies prea
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:4, Insightful)
"Hillary is not a socialist." I think if you look back at the early '90s, you'll find that the health care reforms she was spearheading on behalf of her husband in essence was a de facto nationalization of the health care system in the U.S. By using high degrees of government regulation or ownership to rectify perceived unfairness in the distribution of health care by definition is a socialist policy position. Your other characterizations I agree with. Look, even my side of the political spectrum has its own whack jobs: think Pat Robertson. Nonetheless, is some key ways Pat Robertson and I do agree and I can't disavow that to make me look more correct. I have to take it for what it is and take faith that even whack jobs may get some things right; anything else is artificial and hypocrisy.
"Socialists do not love big or powerful government" First, socialist policies require extensive legislative power in order to enforce the key proposition that distinguishes it from the opposing conservative ideology: namely that wealth and power should be distributed in some sort of 'fair' arrangement. Without extensive legislative power, and the government bureaucracy to enforce it, people would not be forced to comply with the taxation, the social policy, the powersharing or anything else and largely socialist policy would be little more than banter on Slashdot. So when you say, "Socialists are concerned with balancing all the ill effects of capitalism (as it has many of them, regardless of its positive ones) with some sort of communal social conscience," I would contend you can do none of those things without big government. Whether you love it or not is up to you, but you need it to have your desire.
You go on to add from the point of the last paragraph, "(on the contrary, it seems that neo-cons do [love big government], just look at the size and deficits of that thing now!) This is just political sophistry aimed at painting the Bush administration with the dirty phrase 'neo-con' much the same way conservatives turned 'liberal' into an undesirable label (thereby causing the American Left to search for more palatable monikers such as 'progressive'). Couple things we should get straight... my understanding of neo-conservatism (speaking now as one that hold many of these ideologies) is primarily focused on the foreign policy of the country not so much the domestic agenda. Admittly I may be wrong on the formal definition (I don't get too caught up with trendy labels), but if we broaden your statement to be 'conservative' ideology your argument couldn't be more flawed. I would suggest that the Bush Administration is not conservative at all nor representative of conservative thought. I think the recent Cato Institute conference generally got it right; Bush and his administration are Christian Socialists. Congress, too, has largely been made up of RINOs (republicans in name only) since the fall of Gingrich. The ideas of small government conservativism died at about the same time as their greatest champion, Ronald Reagan, did.
But be a Socialist after Marx or be one after Christ, the two have a few things in common. The notion that they have been appointed (one by God the other by ???) to determine what is right and wrong for the rest of us is proof of their kinship. Economic inequalities between me and my fellow man? So what. Many more poor than rich? So long as the rule of law is paramount and that law establishes nothing more than a level playing field in terms of opportunity, let the poor be poor and the rich be rich. Within the nation so long as there are the minimal constraints to prevent monopoly amongst competitors be they companies or ethnic/religious groups there should be no one to make such decisions as, "you are too rich," or, "you are too powerful". Only if you can make the argument that by force (exercised throug
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you have some seriously distorted view of what socialism is. Apparently to you, any attempt at a universal medical coverage would be a socialist, or I fear, even a "communist" venture. May I point out that this idea is something that is present in all top industralized countries with the exc
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:5, Insightful)
And, in fact, throughout history children have been raised quite successfully without teachers, police officers, firefighters, neighbors, a healthy local economy, grocers, farmers (except what they grew themselves), extended family or friends...
I didn't say it didn't help, or that some things the community provides aren't beneficial, I said it doesn't take a community to raise a child, it takes parents.
And more than what you mention, what Hillary MEANT was a child should be raised by the community's standards and not the parents. Wait, scratch that... what Hillary REALLY meant was that a child shouldn't be raised by the parent's standards, they should be raised by HER standards.
not to nitpick, but. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
I've found that most people are of average intelligence. I suppose you're one of those people that thinks you're so much smarter and more special than everyone else. If you had any intelligence at all, you'd be able to look around you and analyze your surroundings objectively. When you really consider the points of view of others, you realize that every one is basically the same intelligence. Usually those who reach the conclusion that the vast majority o
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:3, Insightful)
They are going to do a conduct research to detect and investigate if this is a health problem. If there is a health problem they will do everthing el
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Where do we draw the line for the CDC? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, good luck with that one.
I can't tell you how many times I've read some /. comment that says "noone can tell me how to raise my kids!" and "keep the government out of my way as a parent!" etc. But any "line" and any "neglect" is really just your individual understanding of morality.
For instance, a hundred years back, it wasn't uncommon for a child of 10, 11 to labor in the fields of his/her parents farm for 8-12 hours a day,
Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:2)
Oh wait
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:2)
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:2, Troll)
Only $90 million? With a Federal agency involved that sort of chump change will hardly cover the ashtrays and the plastic coffee cups.
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:2)
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:2)
OT: Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:3, Informative)
What I would like to know is why firearms is with tobacco and alcohol. Weapon, drug, drug. hmmm..
Because these products are subject to special taxes and special regulations, ATF was originally formed as a branch of the Treasury Department to handle this tax collection. In the post-9/11 govenment restructuring, the law enforcement side of ATF, which had by then become their main activity, moved over to the Justice Department, and the tax collection part remained with Treasury as the Alcohol and Tobacco T
Re:Forget the CDC and games.. (Score:2)
It's now the BATFE, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives.
Sounds like everything I'd need to throw one helluva party.
Control Group (Score:3, Funny)
Then frag you all! mwahahahahaha
Aaugh! (Score:5, Insightful)
Please, disconnect yourself from that shrill harpy of an ex-First Lady, and come back to sanity.
Re:Aaugh! (Score:2)
He was the first Congressman to start this shit.
Re:Aaugh! (Score:5, Informative)
"Political positions
Censorship
Lieberman has been criticized by many computer and video game players for his stance on video games; he is a strong supporter of video game censorship. He has also been vocal in the censorship of many controversial musical artists. In the late 1990s Lieberman was vocal in lobbying for censorship against shock rocker Marilyn Manson, calling his group "one of the sickest" he had ever seen. As a senator he inspired the advent of the Entertainment Software Rating Board. The Entertainment Software Association is against governmental regulation of or restriction on video games. Therefore, the organization opposes Lieberman. He has been known many times to denounce the violence contained in video games and has made attempts to regulate sales of violent video games to minors.
On November 29, 2005, Lieberman, together with Hillary Clinton and Evan Bayh introduced the Family Entertainment Protection Act. The act is intended to protect children from inappropriate content found in video games."
Re:Aaugh! (Score:5, Insightful)
Please, disconnect yourself from that shrill harpy of an ex-First Lady, and come back to sanity.
He's not going to drop this issue or the harpy. The issue is a "hot" one that will get his name spread around the news and the harpy is (unfortunately) supposed to be the "Next Big Thing" (s/Thing/Flop ?)
So now you feel like punching all those Democrats in the throat. Welcome to the club.
Re:Aaugh! (Score:2, Insightful)
Fear and Wingnuttery (Score:4, Insightful)
You're one of the only active Democrats in power which I don't desperately want to punch in the throat
1. That's because he's actually a Republican, and he's going to be replaced this year by the fed-up netroots. Lieberman was one reason Gore failed to get enough votes to overcome the fraud in 2000. And what power? The Republicans control congress, the judiciary, and the executive branch. What power do Democrats have at all?
2. Fear is what motivates wingnuts. You also like Lieberman because, like yourself, he's a coward. He's afraid of the terrorists, and so, like the Republicans who control the Congress at the moment, he's willing to give away our civil rights to the terrorists in exchange for some perception -- any perception, however false -- of safety. This is really important to understand, everyone. The wingnuts are AFRAID. The Shrub administration runs on fear.
A successful Democratic candidate in 2008 will be one who stands up and says "we are the heirs of Patrick Henry; we will never stand down in the face of a threat to our domestic tranquility. To the terrorists, I say: we will find you and root you out; we will never submit to your tyranny-by-proxy and to your threats. We will not surrender our civil rights."
3. Why do Republicans always resort to violence as the first response to anything? If Karl Rove was a Democrat, some demented wingnut such as yourself would have long since assassinated him. Bush's approval rating is now far below Clinton's approval rating at any time during the Clinton presidency, and yet you don't see anyone firing bullets at the white house [fas.org].
If there's anyone you should want to "punch in the throat," it should be Osama bin Laden. Where's your enthusiasm for that, where's your passion for finding and killing the real enemies of the state? Why is it all aimlessly pointed at harmless centrist targets like Hillary? Why not Laura Bush, who actually did kill someone [freerepublic.com] (accidentally, mind you, according to the police record)?
4. I don't understand why Hillary sends all you wingnuts into incoherent rage. Discounting the tinfoil hat fairytales Limbaugh spews, she's a great match for the right wing: she has your sense of professional ethics and morality. Loves to pander to the rich and powerful. Loves to be right-wing. Will give away civil rights at the drop of a hat. Loves Iraq as a US colony. About the only thing you shouldn't like about her is her stand on healthcare, but she's flexible like her husband, so I don't think you have anything to worry about. She's hardly the moral beacon that this country will really need after eight years of the corrosive Shrub and his Halliburton-fellating cronies.
Re:Fear and Wingnuttery (Score:2)
Re:Fear and Wingnuttery (Score:2)
You might want to re-evaluate your mind-reading skills there, chief.
I like Lieberman for a host of reasons, none of which my post mentioned; mostly fiscal policies and lobbying reform.
I'm losing a little respect for him over this Dubai port deal thing, and I'm certainly not crazy about his riding the anti-videogame bandwagon, but there are bigger issues to consider.
Re:Fear and Wingnuttery (Score:2)
Sorry to shatter your convenient theories, but I'm not a Republican. I usually vote thrid-party.
(And before you tell me that I'm wasting my vote, let me point out that I'm from the state where Ventura won in spite of two EXTREMELY well-known and relatively popular republicrat candidates running against him.)
Re:Fear and Wingnuttery (Score:3, Insightful)
She's horrible on all the issues I care about.
She's in favor of that quagmire in Iraq [counterpunch.org]
In favor of getting us into a losing war with Iran [counterpunch.org]
Pro-Patriot Act(and probably brewing her own "improved" version in her cauldron as we speak)
anti-immigration [washingtontimes.com]
pro-banning video games...
I hate the woman. Ditto for Joe Lieberman. (Mega-Dittoes to Joe Lieberman.... heh... heh... heh...)
I don't think Lieberman (or any government official) is for fascist measures be
Re:Aaugh! (Score:3, Informative)
Really? I would have thought that someone even remotely familiar with Lieberman's record in office would not be surprised by this. He's always been of fan of this kind of big-government nanny program.
Re:Aaugh! (Score:2)
I mean, let's go down the line of possible contenders, shall we?
(D)
Hillary Clinton - Hated by more than half the country... reminds me of our current President in that regard
Edwards - HELL NO
Obama - Yeah, right. Seems like a nice guy and all, but c'mon
Kerry - As if
Gore - Is he still alive? Rea
Re:Aaugh! (Score:3, Informative)
I don't think "liberal" means what you think it means. You have been too indoctrinated to think straight. "Liberal" in much of the rest of the world means "political centre" as there are far more "socialist" parties all around, like for example the NDP here in Canada. The word "liberal" in this context refers an attempt to "not interfere" in both social (allowing abortions, gay
Is gaming a disease? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Is gaming a disease? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Help Me Feel Better About This. (Score:3, Informative)
Stupid, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
At least they are treating games on the same level as movies etc for a change instead of pretending there is some magical difference.
Re:Stupid, but... (Score:2)
Damn Republicans! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Damn Republicans! (Score:2)
How about we investigate... (Score:2)
brain research (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:brain research (Score:2)
Re:brain research (Score:2, Insightful)
Why would this surprise you? Both are involved in government. The primary activity that government performs is passing and enforcing laws. Laws, by definition, limit freedom. Democratic Laws limit freedom just as much as Republican Laws. They just limit different freedoms.
The only problem is that laws have a nasty tendency of never going away. While half of the population desires one set of laws, the other hal
It's a philosophical problem (Score:5, Interesting)
The resistance comes from the implications of your proposition with respect to what it means to be a human being.
To the extent that books, movies, and computer games actually have a deleterious effect on adolescents' brain development, they are effectively the same as executable content. It's not much of a leap from there to conclude that people, or at least children, are nothing more than sophisticated programmable devices -- machines that have no free will to choose their own influences in life. It's an argument that rests on determinism, which bothers freethinking geeks the same way evolution frightens protestant Christians.
More specifically: if it turns out to be true that children can be "programmed" by media exposure alone, then everything Hilary Clinton has ever said about child-rearing being a collective responsibility suddently gains a lot of scientific weight. Any conservative who's tempted to jump onto this particular bandwagon had better think carefully about its direction and speed of travel. The bandwagon's next stop will be in the far-flung territories mapped by Huxley.
Re:It's a philosophical problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah, the Free Will thing... yes it can come down to that I suppose. Most 'geeks' are probably libertarians (both in the philosophical and political sense, but here I
Re:brain research (Score:2, Insightful)
"Researcher" One: Now that you've played five hours of GTA, do you think stealing cars from other people can be fun in the game?
Timmy: I guess so.
Headline: Research Finds That GTA Makes Kids Want To Steal!
Oh course, I don't think it would be that far, but studies such as this will be trumpeted from every news stand if they find something damning, and buried if
Re:brain research (Score:2)
Because the conclusion is always that the activities we /.ers grew up loving will surely turn you into a disconnected, emotionless, killing robot.
Re:brain research (Score:2)
There's always been violent games. Ever play cops and robbers? Ever shoot a cop?
There might be a link between violent games and real life but establishing that as a scientific fact with real double-blind scientific data that precludes pseudo-scientific subjective interpretations by psychologists has always illuded researc
newsflash (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:brain research (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:brain research (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure why there is such resistance here on /. (other than the fact that most /.'ers are possibly adolecent gamers) to the idea that activities you engage in for a large percentage of your time can have an impact on brain development and function.
It's not that idea to which there is resistance - it's the idea that it should be legislated and regulated even if the idea is true. "Freedom" means allowing people to do basically anything so long as those things don't harm others or impinge on the freedom
Re:brain research (Score:2)
Two words: global warming. Three more: "needs more study".
Freedom of Speech? (Score:2, Insightful)
CDC should investigate scapegoat disease (Score:2, Insightful)
CAMRA (Score:2)
Bob
Free speech (Score:5, Insightful)
It shouldn't matter if there's "harm". Games are free speech.
What a bunch of BS, BTW. "Harm." People have free will and control their own actions.
If games have the power to override free will by accident, then we have a bigger problem. Someone will eventually harness this power to create an army of servants and take over the world.
Come to think of it, that would make a fun game.
Proof? (Score:2)
Your evidence for which is what, precisely? Philosophers (and, more recently, psychologists, neuroscientists etc.) have been arguing for a long time about whether there is such a thing as free will. The existence of drug addicts, alcoholics, psychopaths, Tourettes and Asperger's Syndrome suggests that for many people "free will" is severely circumscribed. I don't know whether this is an appropriate area for government in
Re:Proof? (Score:2)
Folks who don't have free will need a responsible guardian appointed for them. A doctor or a warden are two common choices.
Re:Free speech (Score:3, Insightful)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shouting_fire_in_a_cr owded_theater [wikipedia.org]
Imagine if subliminal advertising worked. Would you support coca cola having the right to brainwash you with television commercials that forced you to buy their product against your will?
Now imagine that it is proven that violent games cause physiological brain changes that predispose you to acts of violence.
Meddling! (Score:2, Redundant)
Oh, wait...
Ratings system? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is it always people that know little or nothing about video games are always the ones railing so hard against them? It's also interesting that neither Clinton nor Lieberman are saying anything about the TV & Movie industry constantly having violence in their shows/movies which may also harm children.
God forbid a naked breast showing up somewhere. That would be instantly banned and deemed harmful...strange world we live in.
Re:Ratings system? (Score:2, Informative)
Same thing with movies. There is no law saying that a ten year old can't watch an R-rated movie unattended in a theater.
Re:Ratings system? (Score:4, Insightful)
It does work. I've said this time and time again. I've witnessed young kids trying to buy violent games at EB and the EB employee would not sell them it. I've seen mothers ask the EB employees, "is this game violent?" and the EB employees would answer with honesty.
I was buying Mortal Kombat V, and a little kid and his mother were buying a WWF (WWE) game. She asked "Is this game too violent?" And the EB employee said "It has some violence, but its not very graphic. There is fighting of course but there is no death, blood or bad language" And then the EB employee looks over to me standing next to the mother and points at Mortal Kombat V and says "Now the game he is buying, is very violent"
IT HAPPENS. The EB employees do their job... ESPECIALLY when the parents do their job and ask the right questions.
This is key. The rating systems work. The parents that use it, succeed at chosing games they find appropriate, and when in doubt, if they ask an EB employee, they will tell them in more detail!
The System works!!!!
The politicans are using this angle to win votes. They're trying to erode freedoms based on a non issue. We've solved this issue years ago with the rating systems. We solved this issue years ago in the 60s with music, with movies... we've been here time and time again...
ASK before buying... Use the rating system... USE your V-chip....
People need to stop blaiming the world for their lack of parenting... AND they need to stop letting politicians throw issues infront of us like peices of meat. These are non issues that have been solved time and time again.
I'm just affraid that this time we'll go the other way and completely ruin our free country.
They'll hire top men... TOP men... (Score:2, Interesting)
Hah! (Score:2)
Studying Violence in Games? (Score:2, Interesting)
In this article, they do talk about the CDC, and that is the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. So, why this study? Is it to make sure the new Nintendo controller is ergonomically safe? I doubt it! It's to grab some of them "values-voters."
Th
Re:Studying Violence in Games? (Score:2)
Re:Studying Violence in Games? (Score:2)
I'm a conservative for the same reason.
Actually, the truth is that we're both pro-liberty, regardless of our other political leanings. Neither liberals nor conservatives "own" freedom.
Re:Studying Violence in Games? (Score:2)
http://www.filmratings.com/ [filmratings.com]
Read the questions and answers. It's a voluntary system that movie theaters have adopted to prevent the possibility of government censorship. Unrated movies can be and are filmed, distributed, and shown in movie theaters across the country.
Entertainment industry lobby (Score:2)
If Only... (Score:5, Informative)
Biligualism:
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/02/12
Staving off Dementia:
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/03/06
Bridge the gap between law enforcement and youths:
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/01/20
Good Values like trust:
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/27
Showing that actions have concequences:
http://games.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/08/26
But unfortunatly, I can't see this study being anything but biased against games. At least it just a political show, designed to make the proponents look more moderate and appear to care about your children.
can we at least acknowledge (Score:2)
Bribe? (Score:2)
Die, Cunt, Die.... Die, Adolf Lieberman, Die! (Score:2)
Politicians fucking with our freedoms.... make people violent.
Remember the wars, you cunt, you lieberdick.... 4th of july anyone?
Remember...? Does anyone fucking remember what this country is about anymore?
Its scary when our leaders are hell bent on eroding our freedoms, just to win votes.
THINK ABOUT IT.
Hillary in 2008? (Score:2)
That explains a lot... (Score:2)
Reminds me of the SSCoJD (Score:2)
Same thing every generation of kids (Score:5, Informative)
The result was that all the comic book publishers banded together and formed a voluntary rating system. [wikipedia.org] In effect, they censored themselves. The new rules said that, since comic books were for kids, no comic books were allowed to include words like "teror," "horror," or "crime" in their titles; comics could not feature werewolves, vampires, or other elements of the supernatural; if any crime was depicted in a comic book, the criminals would have to come to justice for their crimes by the end of the story; and so on. The net effect was that an entire genre of horror and crime comic books went out of business. You know some of those comic books -- for example, Tales from the Crypt. There were many others, however. In its heyday, a comic book called Crime Does Not Pay outsold not just Tales from the Crypt but the entire output of that book's publisher (E.C. Comics) combined. It too went out of business, just months after Tales from the Crypt and the other E.C. horror comics, once the Comics Code took effect.
And so the world was safe. Kids stopped being juvenile delinquents, at least the ones who were able to stay away from that awful rock 'n roll music. It was a halcyon age, a veritable paradise, for the next 30 years or so.
But then in the 1980s, rap music came along, and heavy metal, and they were even worse than rock 'n roll. This aural poison proved to be all but irresistable to kids. So a brave group of moral citizens, [wikipedia.org] led by the wife of future Democratic presidential hopeful Al Gore, banded together to slap labels on rap albums, warning parents about the horrors inside. Again we were safe.
But now the evil rears its ugly head again -- video games! We tried using a ratings system on them, but nobody went out of business (unlike the comic book publishers in the 50s). How long can we as citizens stand for this?? Clearly something must be done if this cycle of moral depravity is ever going to end!
Sweet! (Score:2)
That's just down the street. Maybe I can score a contract to "work" with the CDC "studying" the effect of games on my health. What do you folks think? 10 year study?
Constitution continues to burn, news at 11 (Score:3, Insightful)
Seems Strangely Appropriate... (Score:2)
"They'll come at you sideways. That's how they think, that's how they move. Sidle up with a smile... hit you where you're weak."
Serenity, Shepherd Book
Washingtonspeak - English Translation (Score:3, Informative)
Meaning: These clowns intend to waste MORE THAN $90,000,000 on this idiocy.
Ontopic reading material (Score:3, Interesting)
In a nutshell, it describes the anecdotal reactions of four to six year olds of various R-rated movies in movie theatres (the ones specifically mentioned are The Ring and Eurotrip). The column ends with the subject of the column (not the columnist) thinking of laws banning children (she thinks of 4-6 year olds, clearly everyone here would think 18 years and under) from watching R-rated movies, period.
A good quote from the column is this:
Also consider that, again anecdotally, children did not have nearly the same reaction to watching images of 9/11 as adults did. They didn't think it was real. Would the reaction have been the same in 1950?
Anyways, I'm not really pushing for or against any particular viewpoint at this time, other than I can't see why the CDC shouldn't at least look at the issue.
prohibition (Score:3, Insightful)
what you need to understand is that there doesn't need to be a *factual* harm to justify prohibition, there only needs to be a *perceived* harm. sorry, that's democracy.
Re:this is a good thing! (Score:2, Insightful)
So they get the warm fuzzies of saying "Hey, we're doing something smart!" while saving themselves from a
Re:prejudging the data (Score:2)
We're just a little jaded from the last fifty, "Microsoft-funded study finds Windows has lower TCO, Linux causes cancer, Excel increases penis size 50% per day," studies.
And the study will almost certainly say, "In
Re:prejudging the data (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorta like how Fredric Wertham's research "proved" comic books were evil to the Senate in the 50's? Or maybe something like the McCarthy hearings? Don't be silly, the government has obviously learned from its mistakes and would never go on such a witch hunt of a fishing expedition agai.... Or, umm, wait, who am I kidding.
But, yea, I wouldn't argue that violent games aren't bad for kids. However I will argue that research into any number of other things could be proven just as bad. Like, say, the instituti
I'll tell you what I'm afraid of (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact of the matter is, all forms of expression DO in fact influence people. That is the whole fucking point of expressing something in the first damn place! That has never been at issue with regards to freedom of expression. Banning expression because it's influential is
Re:oh well (Score:2)
Re:Clinton (Score:2)
They aren't obvious to me ?
Do you live in Iran or some ?
Will Hilary send the biys round to give you a good hiding ?
Re: Eggs fucking Zack Lee (Score:2)
Power and money have warped their minds so much, that they will do anything for a vote. That includes ripping apart the entire idea of "freedom of choice" and or freedom entirely.
Re:Jesus fucking christ (Score:4, Informative)
1) COPA http://www.epic.org/free_speech/copa/ [epic.org]
2) Pushed the theater owners organization to be aggressive on people under 18 seeing "R" movies: http://www.libertarianrock.com/topics/censorship/
3) Called for regulation of video games http://www.gamespot.com/news/2005/07/14/news_6129
4) Today's stuff
5) Past history with Tipper Gore
Re:Do this study on the Bible (Score:5, Insightful)
I think history books should also be banned. Almost all of recorded history describes how unscrupulous individuals murdered their kinsmen to obtain power. These same individuals abused their power exercising their "royal perrogative" whenever they saw fit, and history is full of warmongerers who thought nothing of killing people to obtain more material wealth.
I think this sets a bad example to children so all history should be re-written as "everyone used to go home after work and watch tv, every day, and when they got bored they went to the mall and maxxed out their credit card, since the beginning of time."
Re:Instead of Universal healthcare, we get this.. (Score:2)
Got any figures to back this one up? Cause last time I checked America has the best most efficient health system in the world. All those western nations you mentioned? Most of their citizens look for ways to come over here for their healthcare. Not to mention the difficulty of finding good doctors there. And the huge cost prob
Re:Instead of Universal healthcare, we get this.. (Score:3, Insightful)
"I am worried that one of the first questions in emergency care is "How are you going to pay?"
I've not come to praise our healthcare system, because I believe it's screwed beyond belief, but this doesn't happen. We were in a bad car accident last June, and they air evaced my wife, she got treated at an emergency room in trendy, yuppie, expensive Scottsdale, Arizona, subsequently released, and was never once asked about how she would pay.
The three illegal immigrants driving drunk in the car with the s