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Whiplash Causes UK Controversy On Animal Testing
Posted by
simoniker
on Tue Feb 17, '04 04:36 PM
from the lawks-a-lordy dept.
from the lawks-a-lordy dept.
Thanks to Video-Fenky for pointing out a UK Telegraph article discussing controversy over the content of Eidos-produced platform game Whiplash, which is "being criticized as 'irresponsible' by police and MPs" in England, because it "depicts animals being abused in a laboratory, including one experiment in which a hamster is fired from a cannon." Labor MP Ian Gibson said he "feared that children would gain a distorted view of animal experimentation", and a spokesperson against animal cruelty "claimed that the game made light of animal suffering, which was offensive." Whiplash is not yet out in the UK, and was released before Christmas in the States to little fanfare, though it garnered some critical adulation.
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Whiplash Causes UK Controversy On Animal Testing
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Let's all say it together....
(Score:5, Insightful)"Get a sense of humor!"
This is parodical, do they really think it's serious?
Why didn't they go off the handle with all those flash-games that have been round for many years?
You know the ones, the hamster in the microwave yelling obscenities at you, the frog in the blender, the gerbil gun (target is a hole in a wall), etc.
This IS a serious matter
(Score:5, Funny)(http://www.chriscanfield.net/)
um.
(Score:2, Insightful)seriously
(Score:1)(Last Journal: Wednesday December 29, @02:08AM)
Distorted view
(Score:5, Insightful)I'm not a PETA follower or anything like that, but brutality takes on various forms in the real world and these people seem to be more concerned about a game than reality. Get concerned about what's really happening people, come on..
Reality
(Score:5, Informative)There is currently a battle for the hearts and minds of the British public over animal testing. Unfortunately the non-animal-testing bunch are louder and have a ready stock of pictures of fluffy kittens with wires coming out of their heads. All those whose lives or reatives lives have been saved due to treatments that are the result of animal testing do not have the same kind of arresting image to get behind, and most do probably not even know that they would likely not be alive if not for animal testing.
Yes, the realits of animal testing is not always pleasant, but neither is a world in which your loved ones die of ailments that should be curable.
Re:Reality
(Score:5, Interesting)(http://sydb.dyndns.org/ | Last Journal: Friday October 19, @01:10PM)
(At this point I'd like to remind everyone that humans are animals).
But the belief that the suffering of non-humans in medical experimentation is justifiable by the possible benefits to mankind is equally ridiculous. What moral foundations is this attitude based upon?
Fundamentally, the foundation must be that the suffering of humans (by way of disease) is more significant than the suffering of non-humans.
We can further divide the anti-animal group into two camps:
* Those who refute the existence of non-human suffering
* Those who accept the existence of non-human suffering but claim it to be inferior to human suffering.
Both camps exhibit one fundamental deviation from reason. The only real evidence that anyone has for the existence of suffering is their own personal experience. These two camps take this sample size of one and extrapolate their findings to the benefit of their entire species and to the exclusion of all others. This is clearly a bigotted, unscientific and illogical position.
Those who simply refuse to accept that non-humans can suffer display simple blinkered ignorance. They can have no justification for their stance.
Those who hold that animal suffering exists generally, but that human suffering is a superior form, exhibit more subtle flaws in their reasoning.
* They admit suffering exists, hence they admit sentience of animal life.
* Without any rational possibility of understanding sentience other that which they possess, they immediately cast all beings similar in appearance in the same mental mould, and damn all others to an inferior mould.
The argument most frequently trotted out, and to which you subscribe, is that the suffering of innocent animals is 'nasty' but given that your loved one's may get some life extension out of the deal, you are happy to accept it.
Perhaps I'm from a different planet, but this reads to me thus:
"Its my feelings that count above all others. I'd be upset if people I loved were hurt, so they come next. Other people I haven't met but who share some DNA with me come after that - 'cos they're a bit like me. Don't want to know about the rest"
Given our understanding of the selfish gene, its not surprising this attitude exists. But given humans consider themselves above the limitations of their genes - "above the animals" - it stinks of the utmost hypocrisy.
Surely an animal "above all animals" can elevate its thinking above the selfish dictates of its DNA.
Let me just say that my mother and father have both had cancer. They were cured by chemotherapy; however I would not use their longevity as an excuse for non-human testing. I lost my best friend to an unexplained death. His absence is a continual ache to me, but I would not have him back if it meant innocent suffering.
The animals upon which we experiment in labs are innocent slaves being extorted for the highest price - their lives and freedom - to a clumsy, cruel, stupid and conceited master, The master hides his actions from his own miserable compassion behind a veil of self-deceit.
Re:Distorted view
(Score:4, Insightful)(Last Journal: Sunday April 16, @10:03PM)
Because without medical students training by "live dissection" (vivisection) of animals, they'd be opening up humans without any experience -- resulting in more dead humans.
Believe me, I take no pleasure in the suffering of animals in laboratory testing, and I'm sympathetic to proposals, like Richard Dawkins, to more strictly limit testing of Primates -- both for reasons of consanguinity and to ensure that test results are not distorted by the animals' living conditions.
But as someone with a spiral of metal in my right coronary artery -- a stent which by holding the artery open, keeps my alive -- I'm not about to ask medical student to limit their surgical training to oranges or manikins or thought experiments.
As to distortion in the game, I think few if any medical students ever shoot hamsters out of cannon. But if they did, I'd be inclined to give the scientist or doctor -- someone with several years of training -- the benefit of the doubt.
Plenty of scientific experiments, involving animals or not, are regularly the target of derision by non-scientists: the late Senator William Proxmire made a regular joke of scientist with his "Golden Fleece" awards. The joke, however, was often on Proxmire, as would later turn out he was criticizing real and important research just because he didn't understand the methodologies involved.
The real problem here is that the game lampoons science that neither the game's authors nor the game's users understand well enough to fairly and impartially evaluate. To "bring it home" to Slashdot, it would be as if a game depicted a computer running linux as a slow and unfriendly old VAX/VMS machine with a command prompt reading
"$ Hey let's pirate some songs, write a few viruses and h4x0r a bank's network! >"
I suppose it is should be satisfyingly ironic that thanks to modern science and medicine, we all have can sit down at a PC as good as anything an entire country could have afforded in 1960, and reckon that with a life expectancy into the eighties we have the leisure time to play games that spit into the face of the scientists and doctors who got us here.
Two different arguments
(Score:5, Insightful)(Last Journal: Saturday November 18, @07:24PM)
Well, at least the MP's argument makes a little sense, unlike the other one, which shows a lack of distinction between fantasy and reality. Animal experimentation is a much maligned area of science, and much of that indignation is undeserved. Suggesting that all scientists do is torture cute, fuzzy animals certainly isn't helping us go away from these preconceived notions.
Rob
Too much is too much
(Score:4, Interesting)Let's show kids animal experiments vids instead
(Score:4, Interesting)(http://domain.broken...registrar.joker.com/)
That's how comedy (+parody) works. M.A.S.H. made light of human suffering, but got people to think about war and such.
Plus, the game is very light-hearted in a Sam & Max way. It will not be confused with reality any more than a typical Itchy & Scratchy cartoon.
Is there some U.K. law that states works of fiction may not be offensive?
Labor MP Ian Gibson said he "feared that children would gain a distorted view of animal experimentation"
Children? In the states, the game was rated 'T' for teen. U.K. has its own ratings; I believe the equivalent rating is '13' or something like that.
You know, some nights I can't sleep because I keep thinking about all those cop shows which may give children a distorted view of law enforcement. This kind of thing should be illegal.
Art should faithfully represent reality. People have no business making up stuff.
Re:Let's show kids animal experiments vids instead
(Score:4, Insightful)Everybody is all for freedom of speech as long as the speech they are protecting is their own, as soon as you make light of or take an opposite position to, well you get something like this.
*fathers, and child-free individuals as well
What's wrong with the world today????
(Score:3, Funny)(Last Journal: Monday April 28, @04:45PM)
U can't be serious
(Score:4, Funny)Consistency?
(Score:4, Funny)and yet silent over *real* experiments
(Score:5, Insightful)(http://www.milksucks.com/ | Last Journal: Monday September 15, @12:30PM)
I don't rememeber so much fuss from any Members of Parliament about *real* experiments, such as when General Motors were using live pigs in car crash tests.
And I don't hear much support for Animal Rights prisoners [angelfire.com] from our elected representatives.
No, it's "I know, I'll get fucking worked up over video games, that'll get me in the papers"
fuck them
Re:and yet silent over *real* experiments
(Score:4, Funny)(http://www.kyz.uklinux.net/)
Oh, you mean violent thugs who like to beat up scientists, set fires in laboratories, and write death threats to innocent people when they're not jacking off to kiddy porn [animalrights.net]?
"Animal Rights" thugs are sick, demented individuals who use "poor ikkle bunny wabbits" as an excuse to cause terror and mayhem. The quicker the police break up their evil, violent schemes and jail the ringleaders, the better.
I hope they all get a currently uncurable disease. That'll teach them for fucking with the progress of medical science.
Bah! "Stop! For The Children!"
(Score:3, Informative)(http://web.mac.com/wormwood/)
That's the second time today I've encountered this misconception.
So, then
(Score:4, Insightful)How about they show rabbits being shaved and having personal care products applied to their bare skin to see if they break out? Or better yet, mice being made to grow cancerous tumors so that new medicines can be evaluated?
This might at least please the gamers who a looking for "more realism".
great argument
(Score:5, Insightful)(http://levelonemag.com/ | Last Journal: Monday February 23, @07:08PM)
That sounds like a fantastic argument against religion.
Missing the point?
(Score:5, Interesting)(http://www.popularculturegaming.com/)
Re:Missing the point?
(Score:4, Funny)(http://www.popularculturegaming.com/)
It seems some people miss the point of things entirely.
I Guess
(Score:4, Funny)Ah, sound the hypocracy alarm...
(Score:5, Insightful)(Last Journal: Monday September 11, @11:30AM)
I wouldn't mind knowing these MPs' stances on the issue.
Wow, thats horrible
(Score:4, Insightful)Animal Testing
(Score:1)(Last Journal: Sunday June 25, @10:41PM)
---
http://spaceruckus.web1000.com [web1000.com]
These guys are putting together a free 3D action/adventure game.
Oh... the HORROR
(Score:1)Pavlov anyone?
(Score:2)On what planet...
(Score:2, Insightful)Did they complain before?
(Score:2)(Last Journal: Thursday October 12, @11:13PM)
"Send all complaints to Outpost.com."
Did they complain about that particular television commercial that also fired hampsters out of a cannon?
To all International Slashdotters
(Score:2, Interesting)While a quick Google search would alleviate any misunderstandings, its generally assumed in america that MP stands for Military Police.
Member of Parliment is not exactly common knowledge around here, even amoung the more educated.