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California Continues To Push For Violent Game Legislation

Back in February, the US Court of Appeals shot down a California law that banned the sale or rental of violent video games to minors. Shortly thereafter, State Senator Leland Yee petitioned the US Supreme Court to review the case. Now, along with California's Psychiatric and Psychological Associations, Yee has filed an amicus curiae brief with Court that elaborates on the reasoning behind the law. Within the brief (PDF) are some interesting quotes: "Parents can read a book, watch a movie or listen to a CD to discern if it is appropriate for their child. These violent video games, on the other hand, can contain up to 800 hours of footage with the most atrocious content often reserved for the highest levels and can be accessed only by advanced players after hours upon hours of progressive mastery. ... Notably, extended play has been observed to depress activity in the frontal cortex of the brain which controls executive thought and function, produces intentionality and the ability to plan sequences of action, and is the seat of self-reflection, discipline and self-control." The video game industry has filed its own amicus brief to dispute Yee's claims.

7 of 167 comments (clear)

  1. California does not have the cash for a case that by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    California does not have the cash for a case that will likely end being shot down by the 1st amendment.

  2. I fucking hate mushrooms by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 5, Funny

    I hate those little fungus motherfuckers. They make my skin crawl.

    Every time I see one of those pieces of shit, I jump on it until it's fucking smashed and dead.

    I also hate fucking ducks with shells. Those fucking freaks of nature just piss me the hell off. I love to stomp on them and then grab the shells and just wipe mushrooms the fuck out with them.

    Goddamn pipes also freak me out.

  3. Heh... by travdaddy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    can be accessed only by advanced players after hours upon hours of progressive mastery

    If a kid is smarter than his parents, maybe he should be put in charge of restricting his parent's media content (maybe reality TV, Deal or No Deal, 20/20 are all off limits).

    --
    Adidas To Bring Back Sneakernet
  4. Re:Oh, that's super by Drakkenmensch · · Score: 5, Funny

    Oh right, I forgot the contemporary approach to politics. If you have real problems you don't solve them, you distract your people by making up problems where there are none.

    Where's a state-wide brushfire when you need one?

  5. ZOMG teh BRAIN DAMAG3!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Notably, extended play has been observed to depress activity in the frontal cortex of the brain which controls executive thought and function, produces intentionality and the ability to plan sequences of action, and is the seat of self-reflection, discipline and self-control.

    Yeah, that's actually true and what this guy is conveniently leaving out is that it's not permanent. I was reading about this phenomenon on Dr. Daniel Amen's website years ago (and it's NOT just violent video games).

    Essentially, too much intense video gaming for too long makes your brain concentrate too much and you use up all the neurotransmitters that let you concentrate. The result is ADD-like symptoms. Cut back on the video games to reasonable levels and the neuotransmitter levels return to normal because they aren't being depleted.

    So the real message is: too much of anything is bad for you.

    But this Yee dude doesn't bother to say that part.

  6. Re:You don't need every child affected by sckeener · · Score: 5, Informative
    Argh...every time someone mentions violent video games, columbine comes up. It should be declared a subset of Godwin's Law.

    Violent games are not affecting our kids in negative ways. Canada plays our violent video games and has a passion for guns and they have no where near the US gun fatalities. Japan plays extremely violent video games and has the lowest gun fatalities.

    Parents need to stop blaming the media and start being parents.

    --
    "Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
  7. Re:You don't need every child affected by shinmai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If we start to make rules for the many based on the actions of a select few, we're destined for failure.

    The fact that a couple of disturbed and mentally unhealthy kids got their adrenaline running by psyching themself with violent video games doesn't mean we should ban these games from all kids. Just like if I use a baseball bat to beat someone to death we shouldn't shut down every single litte-league in the country to stop the children from doing the same.

    I think that some age control with games is good. In Finland we use PEGI age recommendations, and some games are also reviewed by the Board of Film Classification. The important classifications are 16+ and 18+. A retailer can refuse to sell a 16+ game to a person younger than 16 without a parents consent. 18+ games are prohibited by law to be sold to minors. If parents choose to buy a game and give it to their child, it's their choice, but a retailer, with no way of knowing the personality or mental maturity of a child, will not be permitted to sell an 18+ game to the child.

    This system is by no means perfect, but it stops little impressionable kids from getting their hands on adults-only games, but permits parents to expose their children to such material, if they feel they're mature enough to handle it.