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Looking at Video Games and Violence

rootrider writes "Mark Rahner of the Seattle Times has written a great article discussing the recent trend here in the US to outlaw the purchase of violent video games by minors. I'm sure articles have been written in the past that refute the idea that video games lead to violence, but this is the first mainstream article I've seen that details the issue and does it well." The trend isn't really that new. In the past, Ozzy Osbourne and Dungeons and Dragons have been favorite scapegoats, and when I was in high school it was gangsta rap music. I can't wait until we can attribute violence to the nightly news.

34 of 383 comments (clear)

  1. oh so timely by danimal · · Score: 4, Funny
    maybe they're related, maybe not. still good.

    PVP comic strip from yesterday

    1. Re:oh so timely by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 4, Funny

      Heheh, PA is pretty close to on-topic too.

      Similar things have happened to me...

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
  2. Quoting the Simpsons..... by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Won't someone PLEASE think of the children!!!!

    Behind most "well meaning" laws designed to protect children, is a facist who simply wants to limit your freedom.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    1. Re:Quoting the Simpsons..... by sg_oneill · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Someone mod this dude up. "redundant" is an unfair mod.

      Seriously tho, there is a Brisbane Australian Academic who I'm verry fond of called "John Hartley", and in his book "teleology, studies in television", he uses a word "Paedocracy"; Rule by children for children.

      Basically the idea is that in the interests of "protecting the children", adult interests are subsumed to the point where we become as children under the regulatory reigme of parenthood. The adult never gets to 'become' an adult.

      Interestingly almost EVERY study done thats found that violent tv or games causes probs in kids have tended to either come from
      (A) Right wing think tanks, which most academics I've met rate somewhere around creationism in the legitimacy stakes (ie zero) or
      (B) Have methodological holes the size of craters.

      What *HAS* come across however, is that the only tv violence that does seem to mess with kids is.... news violence! Basically the idea is that for young kids, the violence on TV is real, and de-contextualised. Kids have a surprisingly well honed ability to tell real from play, and the worse "play" violence on TV/games seems to lead to is occasionally rougher play in the schoolyard. (Ie recreating powerrangers etc), but not to fisticuffs or anything.

      Now, just the other day, a friend of mine told me in rather exasperated terms how he was freaked out that his 4 year old daughter was terrified that mister president bush was going to fly a plane and bomb her day care center. She didnt understand that the little blown up kids on the tv set (Hey nice one TV guys, showing bodies on newsflashes during 9am cartoons.. gee thanx) was part of a complex series of political events staged on the other side of the planet. The 4yo brain just dont get that iraq is not a 5 minute bus ride away, and that the Americans are 'on our side'.
      Basically , she dont get the context, but knew the killing was real.

      And thats the rub. Real violence causes real problems, while 'pretend' violence only leads to 'pretend' problems.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    2. Re:Quoting the Simpsons..... by Pharmboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right wing think tanks, which most academics I've met rate somewhere around creationism in the legitimacy stakes (ie zero)

      Now, as a conservative, I COULD take what you said wrong. But I won't because Im not a knee jerk kinda guy, and I see the validity in your statement, even if I think the target is a bit broad. There is a difference in people who are 1) conservative (me) and 2) Religious Right Dogmatist (not me).

      Your main point is right on the money. Not only do so many expect kids to grow up too fast by subjecting them to all this war violence, but then underestimate them by thinking they cant tell the difference between real and pretend.

      The problem is NOT the kids, its the adults that forget the difference. Unfortunately, many people forget how to pretend and just "play" somewhere along the way. TV and game violence is not a good mental diet if its the main thing a child (or adult for that matter) see, but we ARE preditory carnivores (PETA be damned) so the idea of certain violence is pretty normal. Cowboys and Indians (oops, native americans), soldiers, cops and robbers, etc. have been a natural part of a child's existance since time began. Its a natural part of growing up. In moderation, its perfectly normal and healthy, unless we want to raise a generation of mindless goobs. Showing REAL violence on TV, such as the newsflash during cartoons, is NOT. This also takes away a parents right to decide if their child is ready to see this or not, by simply imposing this information on them.

      And thats the rub. Real violence causes real problems, while 'pretend' violence only leads to 'pretend' problems.

      But as usual, some feelgoodnicks will worry about petty shit, like games, instead of the real problems. Its like the minority of COPS who won't chase a guy with a gun, but will jack up a pot smoker, because "pot smokers don't shoot back". They get to "feel good that I made a difference" while not actually risking anything. Its a form of social masturbation, where they are more concerned about LOOKING important, and having something to brag about at cocktail parties.

      They might as well march on DC with signs that say "Crime is Bad!". Well duh, but this cures nothing but their own desire to be self important.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  3. Diversions by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Interesting

    During times of war I tend away from video games which involve killing people. Images in the news, particularly if you've gone to the Al-Jezeera site and looked at their un-censored images (yes, this is what war is really like, unlike what you see on US news broadcasts), disturb me and I tend to shift of to strategy games and D&D (where I'm hacking monsters to bits, rather than humans.)

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  4. Face it by Tri0de · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Behind every kid who "plays too many games for their own good" is a shitty parent. I think the mediamorons and other general arsholes are confusing the symptom with the cause.

    --
    "Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts."
    1. Re:Face it by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, I'd say, and the writer of the article with me, that the parents, while being the cause, are also the ones denying their responsibility in the matter...I mean, why raise your children if you can have the government do it for you, so you have more time to make a little more money? It's not as though well-educated, properly-behaving children will impress the neighbours more than that shiny new car will...

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    2. Re:Face it by HBI · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Some of us were just difficult kids to raise. Always challenging the status quo. My parents weren't particularly bad and tried everything in their power to make me 'normal'.

      Didn't work.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  5. What does this mean for America's Army? by Travoltus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Will kids be forbidden to download it?
    What ever will happen to our Government's new military recruiting tool?
    (I suppose they'll go back to talking to real life recruiters and finding out.. oh nevermind!)

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  6. influence of the news by Submarine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, you ask an interesting question: what is the influence of news reporting when it comes to violence?

    I see two kinds of influence:

    * News reports may create copycats out of weak minds. Let's say you catch some cretins throwing rocks on cars from bridges over freeways. If you make too much publicity of the case, you'll have imbeciles doing the same thing all over.

    * More importantly, news reporting may alter the way people perceive the world and human interactions.

    Let us take international relations. If you're brought up in the idea that your country is the best in every domain and the rest of the world is just made of jealous jerks, you obviously have a different outlook on violence - specifically, you may not be reluctant to approve the use of violence by your government.

  7. Halo...? by pimpybra · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I love how the article says that the Beltway Snipers supposedly practiced with Halo. If they said that or not... I don't know, but either way, even if they DID... how the HELL is a game any good practice for a real sniper rifle. True, you get hand eye coordination, or adjusted vision for it... But you don't line a target up in sights in the game like you would with a REAL gun in your hand. If Halo had a sniper gun attachment which you played with (Like Time Crisis' pistol), then maybe.... but not with that GIANT xbox controller.

  8. OK, the truth. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Half life and counterstrike didnt make me violent. I was a sick evil fuck long before that. ALl the antisocial dangerous stuff i know and think i learned the old fashoned way, From reading dead tree paper books. Yes folks, there was dangerous thoughts around before the internet.

    What violent games have done is allwed me an amazingly simple venting system to get rid of stress. Get home from work, and go kill virtual people. Works wonders for relaxation. Exercise would probably work, but hey, im lazy. THey can have my video games over several dead bodies.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
    1. Re:OK, the truth. by SurgeonGeneral · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Again, another person appears to think that behavior is governed by rational (ie conscious) thought.

      Do you have any idea what it does to your brain to associate killing and the sounds of killing with RELAXATION?

      Wake up computer guys: there are things called attitudes and emotions. Those are what propaganda uses to get you to buy/think stuff.

      --
      -- "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." Jean Jacques Rousseau
  9. A little different than blaming heavy metal by kongjie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    One on hand I do see this as another manifestation of the "Footloose" theory of evil teen influences (i.e., dancing=Satan).

    However, I do myself play Soldier of Fortune II and so I can understand that some might be concerned that kids playing a game all day long that involves shooting your opponent might somehow be predisposed to shooting someone in real life.

    But training, as the D.C. snipers have suggested? That's crazy. Even after playing so much that my right wrist aches, I can't imagine that I'm now more capable with an AK47 than I was before SOFII.

    Furthermore, when I was a kid, trying not to get eaten by Tyrannosaurus Rex, we actually ran around outdoors with fake guns or BB guns and stalked each other. Those low-tech methods were surely more effective at grooming future killers than the sit-on-your-ass and get fat video alternatives.

  10. What about adults? by Travoltus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since the average gamer, apparently, is 28, whose at fault for that? Themselves, or their parents?

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  11. Hypocritical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As long as RC tanks, tinsoldiers and other war toys are banned as well, banning violent videogames is just hypocritical activism.

    1. Re:Hypocritical by gmack · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually in the Columbine fallout those were pretty much all banned from many schools. There was even a kindergarten aged kid suspended for posessing the inch long gun from his GI Joe.

      Lately there was even a kid suspended for having a laser pointer. Guess the teacher mistook it for a laser sight or something.

      Never underestimate the people who will use any event to ram through their agendas while everyone else is too stunned to object
      .

    2. Re:Hypocritical by Jagasian · · Score: 4, Funny

      My favorite was the kid who was suspended for pointing a chicken wing at a teacher in the cafeteria. Suposedly, the chicken wing was shaped like a gun.

  12. Find me a gun with auto targeting and mouselook by Qzukk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    and I'll believe this bullshit that somehow games teach kids to kill. People in the media (and our our own representatives) claim that these games are "murder trainers" but they can't even teach you to hold a gun properly. How to aim a gun. In the games, you don't even have to look down the sights on the gun to aim!

    Thats just the starting point. The fact is, the only person who makes you do anything is YOU. I grew up on good ol' PBS. Monty Python didn't turn me into a drag racing nun. Or a nude pianist. Red Dwarf didn't turn me into a cat. The Red Green Show didn't make me very handy (I wish it had though, I'm not all that handsome). And that was all before I became a teenager. Add in the Atari 2600 I swapped in for a Nintendo in my 6th grade year, and later for a super nintendo, and according to these idiots, I've turned out to be some kind of saint or something since I haven't shot anyone or tried to fry them with Street Fighter 2 moves.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  13. Once again I'll share a 23 year old fathers point by scoobywan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    #1, The government should have no say in what I buy
    for my children, this is just rediculous. #2, Most
    of the games I bought for my Playstation/Computer
    were bought with the mindset I want something I'll
    like just as much as my son will. So does this
    mean that me buying resident evil and such and then
    letting my son play make me a bad father?? I don't
    know how many of you have kids out there in /. land,
    but the ones who do I think will agree that kids now
    don't quite fit into the old catagories. I mean my
    son (age 6) already has better views on life, and
    understands a lot more than most people that are
    older than me. I don't think it's the fact that
    video games teach them anything, I think it's the
    fact that most parents buy kids video games to
    "keep kids out of thier hair". I mean you take
    the whole colombine shooting, these kids had all
    kinds of stuff in the basement (pipe bombs/whatever),
    so that just shows how much attention the parents
    were paying to them. I think the parents of these
    kids that go on shooting sprees just don't want to
    admit that they weren't doing thier job, or that
    maybe thier kids had some real issues. It's just
    easier to blame a game company, and not to mention
    that if you actually do win a case against a game
    company you get a pretty good payment. These
    people need to worry more about talking to thier
    kids and less time trying to take thier rights.

    Just my opinion

    Scoobywan

  14. Bowling for Columbine by Peter_Pork · · Score: 5, Informative
    I can't wait until we can attribute violence to the nightly news.
    Bowling for Columbine is certainly making that point. US citizens are constanly bombarded with news from the wars and violent conflicts in which the US is involved. The idea is that this sort of news, and in general, this type of government policy, constantly shows that violence and killing are acceptable solutions. Iraq is a great example of this. I do think this is an important point, but it is much easier to blame videogames than government policy. Furthermore, government policy has an impact in the way everybody thinks, while videogames only affect those that play violent games (if it affects them at all).
    1. Re:Bowling for Columbine by Trejus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, it's just too bad that anyone who didn't already agree with his agenda will never bother to see it.

      --
      "To save the planet, I had to go to the worst spot on Earth, and that was Philadelphia." -- Sun Ra
  15. wtf? by SlashdotMakesMeKool · · Score: 3, Funny
    Dugeons and dragons responsible for society's violence. Yeah right, because we all know how renound ganst* thugs are for smoking crack, jacking cars, and then going back home to play some D&D.

    Can you rap, Cowboyneal?

    --

  16. Re:Iraq war by Glock27 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The war in Iraq is more than enough violence for me.

    I do have an issue with the 'embedded' coverage not showing complete combat footage or dead bodies. There should be an adult news channel where the full account resides - to remind us what is being lost in those battles.

    War is sad, its just sometimes necessary. The whole truth of it should be shown regardless.

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  17. Dungeons and Dragons DOES corrupt (kinda) by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was looking through some old stuff the other day when I came across some AD&D manuals, etc.

    Whilst browsing, I came across one of my old characters, a cleric who had chronic gastric problems that would most likely be fatal. I remember having that hobbled priest when I was 15, and thinking about how damn unlucky I was to have to play a virtual cripple.

    Ten years later I was diagnosed with chronic ulcerative colitis (a bowel disease similar to Crohn's disease), exactly what that cleric had. And, similarly, my situation deteriorated over an 18-month period until the day came when I had to choose between major surgery and certain death - a seemingly obvious choice but one which was still the hardest decision I've ever had to make (believe me, if you're ever in the same boat then you'll understand why).

    Now, I'm not saying that AD&D ruined my life, or that playing it cast some wicked curse on my life. But I do think that, any day now, I'm due to find a ring of invisibility, boots of speed and a +3 vorpal sword, and when that day comes, I'm gonna kick some major ass.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  18. Shock and Awe by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, Shock and Awe, the Sony videogame, will be responsible for corrupting youth, but Shock and Awe, the GWBushCorp's real-world enterprise of death and conquest is what, exactly? A beautiful inspiration of courage and restraint, suitable for the instruction and edification of all children? Please. We need to set up a detox center for all the people with Lee Greenwood-addled brains.

  19. Boycotts everywhere... by nordicfrost · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A short introduction: My fridge kicked the bucket two weeks ago. I quickly started investigating where to buy a new and cheap fridge fast. The trip went to the Expert chain on the other side of the road and I inquired about the latest Whirpool fridges. I talked to the salesperson on the showroom floor and then went to the checkout to investigate the prices. I also started to look for a stove and a to-piece ceramic plate for later

    There I saw a familiar sight. There was a poster of GTA3 along with a printed message saying "This store does not carry the following games: GTA3, GTA: Vice City and BMX XXX. because we don't sell violent games to youngsters. We boycott these games"

    The really catered to the asshole in me and I asked exactly why they did not want to sell these games. The clerk stumbled out som answer like "We don't want young people to see graphic contents etc.". I asked her if she had actually read the covre of games like GTA:VC. The cover here is covered with a warning not to distribute to youngsters, approx 1/3 of the front in size. She had not.
    I asked her if the store prevously had a practise of selling this game to children, thus ignoring the manufacturer's warning. She said no.
    I then said that if you only sold the game to people 18 years of age, why boycott it? She could not give an answer to that.

    I then spoke to the store manager and said: "I disagree to your boycott and have decided to cease all purchases from this store and all Expert stores until you let people think a bit for themselves. This wil cost you the following in lost sales in near future."

    The owner really got something to think about then. He looked dumbfounded.

    I walked out of that store and went to a mom-and-pop electronics storer that did not carry videogames at all and they were nicer and cheaper. After completing the purchases there I went to the Expert store and showed the manager the 3000USD reciept for sales he missed. I underlined that I would NEVER purchase anything there, but walk a click to the next store.

    Again, I believe he started to think about the boycott.

  20. Re:Find me a gun with auto targeting and mouselook by sirshannon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    amen.

    I watched thousands of Tom and Jerry cartoons as a kid but have never hit anyone in the face with a frying pan.

  21. look at the statistics by morebrackeen · · Score: 5, Interesting
    look at the statistics:

    http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/glance/cv2.htm

    overall, violent crime in the US has been on the decline since 1993.

    interesting coincidence: the decline started the year DOOM was released, one of the first widespread, graphically violent games.

    and a proven statistic: the higher the unemployment, the higher the crime rate. does this mean we can make bad economic policy illegal too?

  22. Mountains of molehills by Schnapple · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Obviously just about everyone who would come here will err on the side of the videogames. And I've gone on and on about it already, so I won't regurgitate that here.

    But one of the things I rarely see mentioned is this - not terribly unlike the JFK consipracy theorists of the world, people who make the bold sweeping claim that video game violence caused things like Columbine do like to hang on to the tiny shreds of evidence that support their theory and ignore the mountains of evidence against it.

    The lawyer mentioned in the article has attempted to make a living off of suing video game makers. His Kip Kinkle and Columbine cases were thrown out, so either he's making money either way or he's getting really frustrated right now. In addition to the Beltway Sniper case, he's suing the government over the America's Army game. His mentality is that of a spammer - it doesn't matter how sleazy and slimy what he does is, so long as he gets paid.

    And the fact is that all you have to do is bring a picture of a dead kid and a waving finger to Congress and you can get any law in the world you want passed.

    But think about it - how many violent kid incidents do you ever hear about? Columbine, Kip Kinkle, those kids in Arkansas, that kid in Flint. That's what, four? And what did they all have in common? Well three of them were white kids shooting white kids (the kid in Flint was a black kid shooting a white kid - significant since the kids were six years old). But what about black kids shooting black kids? It happens all the time, but the news never centers on it. Similarly, when Elizabeth Smart went missing it was Chandra Levy Part II, but the same week a black girl from a poor neighboorhood was kidnapped and no one outside of her state cared.

    So the parents groups, mostly white people terrified of this happening to them, use this handful of incidents and blow them out of proportion. The game industry is growing while the overall crime rate is dropping. We haven't had a big school shooting since Columbine. And the biggest retailers (Wal-Mart, Target, GameStop) won't sell M-rated games to minors.

    Personally I support not selling M-rated games to minors, but not at the point of law. The movie industry hasn't needed laws to enfore R-rated movies. Do kids still see them? Sure. But they can't just walk in. And consider this - kids can't pirate cigarettes, but if you make it to where kids can't buy M-rated games by law they'll just hit up the newsgroups.

  23. More than just video games... by Kirijini · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Some people say the the problem is that parents arn't paying attention to what games the kids are playing.

    I think the problem is that the parents arn't paying attention to the kids at all.

  24. Re:Christ, I'm tired of this.... by DarkZero · · Score: 4, Funny

    we bombard them with this dreck day in and out (and I'm not just referring to MA games, but all the other pointlessly violent garbage that Hollyweird shovels down our throats by the truckload), it seem to me to be rather obvious that this will have an adverse influence on their perception of violence.

    (anyone who has spent five minutes in an Electronic Boutique knows that the average age of a video game purchaser is less than 28)

    Alas, your overwhelming anecdotal evidence trumps our woefully inadequate extensively researched statistics and scientific studies. We might as well just give up now, because we've already lost.

  25. the US and Saudi Arabia by Submarine · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not anti-American; I've got numerous American friends and colleagues, I've worked in the US for a while, I was in New York last January and will come back to the US for business purposes at least once more this year.

    Of course, my message was alluding partly to the American media. My opinion on these is that even alleged serious newspapers such as the New-York Times have degraded standards when it comes to international news. All too often, the international news articles would be more appropriately moved to a "commentary" or "opinion" section.

    One troubling fact, for instance, is that all too often these articles dwell on alleged motivations, often implying that actions by foreign people or leaders are motivated by anti-Americanism or envy. Let me given you an example: in a recent article commenting on the opposition from several judicial bodies to a proposal to change French criminal procedure to include plea bargain, the journalist commented: "In France, perceived concessions to English-American forms of law, no matter how slight, have run into strong resistance.". Now, of course, this implies this resistance is motivated by anti-Americanism, ignoring real concerns about constitutional rights such as the right to a fair trial. In short, the journalist attributes motivations to people who cannot defend themselves. Is that reporting, or partisan comment?

    I won't even mention the moral judgments routinely doled out as facts. The point is that such so-called reporting is bound to shape the impressions of the reader in a certain direction, in this case to believe that any opposition to the policies of the United States government is motivated by dubious issues.

    Now you can understand better what happens in countries such as Saudi Arabia. In those countries, the media and the education system are even more biased. People are taught from their infancy that, say, the Jews are cunning liars. They are taught about the moral superiority of their religion compared to the "immoral" West.

    The parallel is striking. Self-righteous biased reporting replacing facts and objective analysis. Of course, the situation in Saudi Arabia is far worse than in any Western countries, but still one should always pay attention to the agendas of the media outlets.

    The link to violence? Why do all these people sponsors terrorist groups through so-called "charities"? Where do they find the terrorists? Part of the explanation seems to be that prejudice ingrained from infancy breeds violence.