1up is reporting (via MCV) that Rockstar has decided to appeal the BBFC ruling on their uber-violent Manhunt 2 title. The 'next step' is to get a hearing scheduled, which will allow the game to be demo'd and arguments given. "Rockstar Games had been given six weeks to appeal the decision, and with that opportunity about to expire, the company lodged its formal appeal yesterday ... The appeal was filed with the Video Appeals Committee, which can overturn the BBFC decision. As noted in our first article about the ban, the VAC overturned the BBFC's ban of Carmageddon back in 1997, giving Rockstar a glimmer of hope in its current situation."
Do they even have laws protecting free speech in England? As bad as the U.S. seems to be getting, at least Manhunt 2 is legal here. I just wish various nice European cars were legal here as well.
Yes. Britain, as well as the rest of the EU, follows the EU Convention of Human Rights [coe.int]. Article 10 of that states:
1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. This article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.
I believe this is exactly what SCi did with Carmageddon. Basically it requires that the BBFC prove that Manhunt 2 will cause one of those things listed in item 2. Which seems pretty much impossible to do seeing as there's no conclusive evidence linking playing computer games with real life criminal activity.
Wow... #2 pretty much eliminates any garantee of freedom of speech at all!
So they can ban speech "in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary."... Talk about catch-all.
So basicly the poster is right. There is no garantee of freedom of speech in England. Virtually anything can be argued to fall under one of those categories.
Well the whole document describes fundamental rights that can be accepted and applied to over 30 countries, so it had to be pretty general. It's important to remember that the onus is on the accuser/censor/banning body/whatever to show that the offending material falls into one of those categories. So if the person whose freedom of speech is being impeded challenges it (as Rockstar now are) it's should actually be pretty damn difficult for the BBFC to prove that it does cross one of those lines.
Well the whole document describes fundamental rights that can be accepted and applied to over 30 countries, so it had to be pretty general.
Which is one of the chief reasons the EU is such a joke. If you have to water down a legal document guaranteeing rights so Polish politicians can pick on homosexuals with impunity and British officials can ban video games, then I think what you've got is a worthless piece of paper.
Well odds are British officials won't be able to ban video games (as Carmageddon established and hopefully Manhunt 2 will reinforce) so it does have some value.
I don't know if there's something specific you're referring to in Poland. I believe protection of homosexuals would be covered by Article 14 (Prohibition of discrimination). Whether it's correctly enforced or not is another matter, but if so that's a problem with the EU and that particular national government, not with the Convention itself.
Except the opposite is entirely true. At least the guarantee of freedom of speech presented is true and valid insofar as it is written; namely, it is legally plausible for the judiciary of the EU to follow that law, every time, without fail.
Contrast this to the First Amendment, which has never been enforced as written and which will never be enforced as written, as it provides no room for compromise of any kind, as with most of the Bill of Rights.
While you are correct in that it is a catch-all, it is not as wide a catch-all as you are suggesting it to be. Only a few of those exemptions can be widely applied, and even then, they must undergo judicial scrutiny to be applied.
With the First Amendment, the judiciary can come up with whatever exemptions it feels like- and does.
Except the opposite is entirely true. At least the guarantee of freedom of speech presented is true and valid insofar as it is written; namely, it is legally plausible for the judiciary of the EU to follow that law, every time, without fail.
"The Republic of Theoneandonlystan guarantees freedom of speech, thought, and action to all persons, except when it doesn't." Legally plausible to follow, but not a good guarantee of rights.
So you're saying a guarantee of rights that sounds perfect but is never, and can never, be enforced is any better? At least the Europeans are honest with themselves.
So you're saying a guarantee of rights that sounds perfect but is never, and can never, be enforced is any better? At least the Europeans are honest with themselves.
First of all, the First Amendment is not "enforced" per say. The First Amendment is supposed to be "respected", in that the First Amendment prohibits the government from restricting speech. The First Amendments is perfectly functional: If the government simply refuses to regulate speech and expression, it is simple as that. It isn't something like "stopping crime" that might not be possible, even if the government chooses to pursue that goal. Any violation of the First Amendment by the U.S. government is b
First of all, the First Amendment is not "enforced" per say. The First Amendment is supposed to be "respected", in that the First Amendment prohibits the government from restricting speech. The First Amendments is perfectly functional: If the government simply refuses to regulate speech and expression, it is simple as that. It isn't something like "stopping crime" that might not be possible, even if the government chooses to pursue that goal. Any violation of the First Amendment by the U.S. government is bo
However, while you might believe the government could simply refuse to restrict and regulate speech, in practice this simply isn't true. Filing false tax returns? Freedom of speech! Inciting riots? Freedom of speech! Passing classified data to the enemy? Freedom of speech! Extortion? Freedom of speech!
Actually, I think the first amendment SHOULD apply to all these things.
Filing false tax returns? The tax laws are so complicated, that anyone could accidently and innocently file a false tax return. It shouldn't be a crime. Inciting riots? There were many people who tried to ban Malcolm X, The Black Panthers, and crazily enough even Martin Luther King from speaking arguing they would incite a riot. Yet all these people had important things to say, and America is better off that they said it. Passing classi
Actually, I think the first amendment SHOULD apply to all these things.
Filing false tax returns? The tax laws are so complicated, that anyone could accidentally and innocently file a false tax return. It shouldn't be a crime. Inciting riots? There were many people who tried to ban Malcolm X, The Black Panthers, and crazily enough even Martin Luther King from speaking arguing they would incite a riot. Yet all these people had important things to say, and America is better off that they said it. Passing class
I'm saying it's better for your bill of rights to place actual restrictions on your government. If there are exceptions written into it, that's fine, but don't make them stupid exceptions like "protecting public morality" that totally compromise the freedom that's supposedly being guaranteed so that it's not guaranteed at all.
And if you had read the rest of the thread, you would realize that the US bill of rights places no more restrictions on the US government than the European declaration of rights places on its government- that is to say, it places no restrictions on that government other than those restrictions the judiciary are willing to impose.
When did you ever get the idea I was advocating for the language used in the American bill of rights? I did read the rest of the thread. It isn't that simple--a written bill of rights allows the public to keep check of whether or not the judiciary is making a good-faith attempt at upholding those rights instead of just making it up as they go along. If your written bill of rights provides no real guarantee of rights, the judiciary can get away with never violating the words on the paper while ruling away ea
Except, the same applies to the US. You have slander laws that inhibit free speech. National security laws, public safety laws, protection orders, fraud laws, perjury laws, disorderly conduct laws etc. At least with this it is defined clearly and articulately, if still somewhat open to interpretation.
But you have a constitution, which is often used to repeal bad laws. England does not, We even ripped up our innocent till proven guilty thing a few years ago.
Given what the first Manhunt was like, the debate will be pretty short. Manhunt kinda...sucked. Snuff-film violence for the sake of violence is no substitute for interesting gameplay. It was similar to Splintercell in that stealth was emphasized, and nothing like Splinter Cell in that the elements composing the gameplay were heavily dumbed down or not included. The major feature was a "grainy" filter when doing an execution, as seen from the spectating audience. Some might be fascinated by the violence at fi
However, we aren't talking about the original Manhunt, we're talking about Manhunt 2. Unless you are N'gai Croal or a contemporary of his who have actually played the game, I'm not sure your (or I) are qualified to classify this game as "art" or "not-art".
I'd agree that the original manhunt wasn't particularly artful. However, it is entirely possible (considering what I've read by journalists who have played the game) that Manhunt 2 might be artistic in a demented, horrific fashion.
I'm wondering what the arguments are going to be...
Given everything I've learned about Rockstar Games from the media, I'd assume their argument would have to be:
Unban our game or we'll fucking kill you and rape your daughter then kill your wife with your daughter's bloodied still breathing body and then steal your car and drive it into a station full of police-puppies and make them all explode you fucking coffee-fucking assholes.
I am waiting for "The hackers put the blood and gore in the game" Our original game was about raising puppies, cute little harmless puppies, those evil hackers made it about violence and murder...
For the uninitiated, they decided to ban the original Carmageddon because one of your goals was to run down pixelated pedestrians in a uniform-but-still-gorey shower of blood. So, to appease those who would protect our values by not letting us run over people in a video game, they changed it so all the pedestrians became zombies, and their blood splatter was now green.
Because, as we all know, it's much less damaging to our youth to imagine that the entire world is infested with the walking undead.
nope, i happened to play the german version back in the day....robots and black 'blood'... however, there was an easy way to change that in one of the config / ini files (or a command line switch, etc) oh the memories....i wish they'd make an updated version of carmageddon (or something like it).
As noted in our first article about the ban, the VAC overturned the BBFC's ban of Carmageddon back in 1997, giving Rockstar a glimmer of hope in its current situation."
Carmageddon was staged as a cartoon.
The pedestrian targets and obstacles never allowed to become too real.
Manhunt 2 is unmistakably derived from the sadistic and malign torture porn flicks - exploitation films - like Saw and Hostel.
If you can't see that distinction - if you can't make that distinction - then the critics of video game violence have won their point.
"Manhunt 2 is unmistakably derived from the sadistic and malign torture porn flicks - exploitation films - like Saw and Hostel"
Really? Well both of those movies, Saw and Hostel, received "R" ratings in the U.S., considered restricted for 17 and up.
So why shouldn't Manhunt 2 receive the comparative rating (for games) of "M" for Mature, which is also identically restricted to 17 and up?
And whether or not you personally feel those movies were "maligned", they were actually quite popular with the intended audience that CHOSE to watch them. Why should your personal judgement override Manhunt 2's intended audience's CHOICE to play it?
>Why should your personal judgement override Manhunt 2's intended audience's CHOICE to play it?
Do you think we should allow young sexual predators to view pornography?
The intended audience has violent proclivities. Games with this level of realistic depictions of ultra-violence feeds those neuroses. An AO rating is perfectly appropriate.
"The intended audience has violent proclivities. Games with this level of realistic depictions of ultra-violence feeds those neuroses. An AO rating is perfectly appropriate."
"violent proclivities"? welcome to the human race. Watch a football game lately? How about boxing? Those are actual really-real people beating each other to a bloody pulp, resulting occasionally in actually-actual death.
Yet those spectacles are approved for all ages.
Elevating FICTIONAL violence as more harmful or indecent than ACTUAL violence is nonsensical. Unlike you, I can't speak for every single person who views or plays violent media. But I can speak for myself. I'm a well-educated, well-adjusted, non-violent adult, who often enjoys viewing or playing fictionalized media with dark and/or violent content. So far, my "neuroses" have gone hungry. My "violent proclivities" remain buried, and mostly likely fictional.
I can't stand football or boxing, though. Too violent. And actually realistic. In a really-real way.
If you don't like it, don't play it or watch it, and be a parent to your children and take responsibility for what they play and watch. But leave MY responsibility to ME.
[PS: "AO" rating effectively does not exist, since retail chains won't carry an AO game, in the same way that movie theatres won't show an "X" rated movie. Since it's thus financially impossible to release an AO rated game, that rating effectively blocks a game from being released. Which may be fine for your nanny-world, but in my really-real world, I'd rather make that choice for myself.]
Watch a football game lately? How about boxing? Those are actual really-real people beating each other to a bloody pulp, resulting occasionally in actually-actual death.
I can't remember any instance of a football player dying from physical contact on the field. It may have happened once or twice, but it would be a freak accident, not a result of regular contact. Oh, and btw, have YOU watched a football game lately? Because "beating each other to a bloody pulp" is kind of against the rules.
I can't remember any instance of a football player dying from physical contact on the field. It may have happened once or twice, but it would be a freak accident, not a result of regular contact. Oh, and btw, have YOU watched a football game lately? Because "beating each other to a bloody pulp" is kind of against the rules.
The violence of the college game came within a hair of destroying American football in 1905 - 23 deaths - and 1909:
In a match between Harvard and West Point, the Army captain, Eugene Byrne, exhausted by continual plays to his side of the line, was fatally injured. Earl Wilson of the Naval Academy was paralyzed and later died as a result of a flying tackle. And the University of Virginia's halfback Archer Christian died after a game against Georgetown, probably from a cerebral hemorrhage suffered in a plunge through the line. "Does the public need any more proof," wrote the Washington Post, "that football is a brutal, savage, murderous sport? Is it necessary to kill many more promising young men before the game is revised or stopped altogether?" At both Georgetown and Virginia, football was suspended for the remainder of the season, and the District of Columbia school system banned it altogether. Even Col. John Mosby, the old Confederate raider, used Christian's death to rail against football as "murder." Inventing Modern Football [americanheritage.com]
Good point. But the sport has been 'refined' somewhat since then. If you'll take a look at football's history you'll find that safety is a primary concern. It's always been just as intense, with many players sacrificing their bodies for a tackle, but safety equipment is constantly revised. Also rules are strictly enforced to keep players safer. Injuries are commonplace in any contact sport. The GP poster's point was most likely that recently there have been no deaths. The last football related death
As for boxing, yeah, it's a barbaric "sport" that really has no place in a civilized society. It's the modern-day equivalent of the Roman gladiators.
Except it's performed by consenting adults instead of conscripted prisoners and is specifically set up to avoid fatalities or permanent injuries instead of a fight to the death, you're exactly correct. Of course, being performed by consenting adults and not being set up specifically to have a death at the end are the defining features. By your logic, soccer should be illegal because it resembles ancient Aztec soccer, in which the losing team was sacrificed to the gods at the end.
You've already been rightly mocked for confusing emphatic speech with violent aggression, and for comparing boxing to the Circus Maximus. The rest of your post isn't much better.
People are a product of their culture, but their behaviour is mostly shaped by the real parts of their culture - family, school, church, day to day activities, not by the make-believe parts, the things they see on television or in games. You use the example of America's high crime rate, but you also mention Japan, which has a trem
Argument is aggression. Forcefully creating and defending an idea or opinion is sort of the foundation of most societies and governments. Politeness is often a hindrance to direct discourse, obfuscating truth behind veils of false niceties. Equating the written word with the violence and barbarism of movies, games, and real life, is hilarious. And yet, interestingly to my point. With the written word, it seems anything goes. Why do none of these issues come up with the novel, or the non-fiction? Imagery many
The intended audience has violent proclivities. Games with this level of realistic depictions of ultra-violence feeds those neuroses. An AO rating is perfectly appropriate.
So instead of having to be 17 in order to purchase the M-rated game, we should get really tough on this type of senseless garbage and make it AO-rated so that only those who are 18 can purchase it. </irony>
And whether or not you personally feel those movies were "maligned", they were actually quite popular with the intended audience that CHOSE to watch them
1 a : evil in nature, influence, or effect. malignant.
2 : having or showing intense often vicious ill will. sinister. [webster.com]
The audience has faded to black. The genre summer box office poison. Captivity [imdb.com] grossed $2.6 million. Rockstar tried to catch the wave and missed.
. Why should your personal judgment override Manhunt 2's intended audience's CHOIC
"both of those movies, Saw and Hostel, received "R" ratings in the U.S., considered restricted for 17 and up. So why shouldn't Manhunt 2 receive the comparative rating (for games) of "M" for Mature, which is also identically restricted to 17 and up?"
Because the UK might have a different cultural approach than the USA? Just because a USA ratings authority decides on how to rate movies and video games doesn't mean the UK has to follow the same guidelines. UK is not part of the USA...yet... (still waiting to s
So you're saying that these apparently comparably violent films recieved the same treatment as Manhunt2 in the UK? Saw and Hostel (and sequels 1,2,3 and 1,2, respectively) were outright BANNED? That's interesting, I hadn't heard that. Maybe along with your moral indignation at the cesspool that is the U.S., you could mention when that occurred? Yes the UK is so far playing much more fast and loose with civil liberties, that is true. So I guess it isn't surprising in a country with over four MILLION closed ci
Why should your personal judgement override Manhunt 2's intended audience's CHOICE to play it?
Indeed - but this argument can be used about almost anything. So, if I CHOOSE to use illegal drugs, why should I not be allowed? The fact is that your right to choose according to your whim and personal preference is not considered as important as eg. the impact it would have on society in general if certain things - like drugs, child abuse and video games that glorify extreme violence - were just set free. This ma
Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.
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Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
So they can ban speech "in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary."... Talk about catch-all.
So basicly the poster is right. There is no garantee of freedom of speech in England. Virtually anything can be argued to fall under one of those categories.
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It's important to remember that the onus is on the accuser/censor/banning body/whatever to show that the offending material falls into one of those categories. So if the person whose freedom of speech is being impeded challenges it (as Rockstar now are) it's should actually be pretty damn difficult for the BBFC to prove that it does cross one of those lines.
Again though:
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I don't know if there's something specific you're referring to in Poland. I believe protection of homosexuals would be covered by Article 14 (Prohibition of discrimination). Whether it's correctly enforced or not is another matter, but if so that's a problem with the EU and that particular national government, not with the Convention itself.
Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Contrast this to the First Amendment, which has never been enforced as written and which will never be enforced as written, as it provides no room for compromise of any kind, as with most of the Bill of Rights.
While you are correct in that it is a catch-all, it is not as wide a catch-all as you are suggesting it to be. Only a few of those exemptions can be widely applied, and even then, they must undergo judicial scrutiny to be applied.
With the First Amendment, the judiciary can come up with whatever exemptions it feels like- and does.
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"The Republic of Theoneandonlystan guarantees freedom of speech, thought, and action to all persons, except when it doesn't." Legally plausible to follow, but not a good guarantee of rights.
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So you're saying a guarantee of rights that sounds perfect but is never, and can never, be enforced is any better? At least the Europeans are honest with themselves.
First of all, the First Amendment is not "enforced" per say. The First Amendment is supposed to be "respected", in that the First Amendment prohibits the government from restricting speech. The First Amendments is perfectly functional: If the government simply refuses to regulate speech and expression, it is simple as that. It isn't something like "stopping crime" that might not be possible, even if the government chooses to pursue that goal. Any violation of the First Amendment by the U.S. government is b
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However, while you might believe the government could simply refuse to restrict and regulate speech, in practice this simply isn't true. Filing false tax returns? Freedom of speech! Inciting riots? Freedom of speech! Passing classified data to the enemy? Freedom of speech! Extortion? Freedom of speech!
Actually, I think the first amendment SHOULD apply to all these things.
Filing false tax returns? The tax laws are so complicated, that anyone could accidently and innocently file a false tax return. It shouldn't be a crime. Inciting riots? There were many people who tried to ban Malcolm X, The Black Panthers, and crazily enough even Martin Luther King from speaking arguing they would incite a riot. Yet all these people had important things to say, and America is better off that they said it. Passing classi
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Some might be fascinated by the violence at fi
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I'd agree that the original manhunt wasn't particularly artful. However, it is entirely possible (considering what I've read by journalists who have played the game) that Manhunt 2 might be artistic in a demented, horrific fashion.
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Given everything I've learned about Rockstar Games from the media, I'd assume their argument would have to be:
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Ah, carmageddon... (Score:4, Funny)
For the uninitiated, they decided to ban the original Carmageddon because one of your goals was to run down pixelated pedestrians in a uniform-but-still-gorey shower of blood. So, to appease those who would protect our values by not letting us run over people in a video game, they changed it so all the pedestrians became zombies, and their blood splatter was now green.
Because, as we all know, it's much less damaging to our youth to imagine that the entire world is infested with the walking undead.
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Anyway... that saved lives... well, not really.
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however, there was an easy way to change that in one of the config / ini files (or a command line switch, etc)
oh the memories....i wish they'd make an updated version of carmageddon (or something like it).
The Coyote and The Road Runner (Score:4, Insightful)
Carmageddon was staged as a cartoon.
The pedestrian targets and obstacles never allowed to become too real.
Manhunt 2 is unmistakably derived from the sadistic and malign torture porn flicks - exploitation films - like Saw and Hostel.
If you can't see that distinction - if you can't make that distinction - then the critics of video game violence have won their point.
Re:The Coyote and The Road Runner (Score:5, Insightful)
Really? Well both of those movies, Saw and Hostel, received "R" ratings in the U.S., considered restricted for 17 and up.
So why shouldn't Manhunt 2 receive the comparative rating (for games) of "M" for Mature, which is also identically restricted to 17 and up?
And whether or not you personally feel those movies were "maligned", they were actually quite popular with the intended audience that CHOSE to watch them. Why should your personal judgement override Manhunt 2's intended audience's CHOICE to play it?
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Re:The Coyote and The Road Runner (Score:5, Insightful)
"violent proclivities"? welcome to the human race. Watch a football game lately? How about boxing? Those are actual really-real people beating each other to a bloody pulp, resulting occasionally in actually-actual death.
Yet those spectacles are approved for all ages.
Elevating FICTIONAL violence as more harmful or indecent than ACTUAL violence is nonsensical. Unlike you, I can't speak for every single person who views or plays violent media. But I can speak for myself. I'm a well-educated, well-adjusted, non-violent adult, who often enjoys viewing or playing fictionalized media with dark and/or violent content. So far, my "neuroses" have gone hungry. My "violent proclivities" remain buried, and mostly likely fictional.
I can't stand football or boxing, though. Too violent. And actually realistic. In a really-real way.
If you don't like it, don't play it or watch it, and be a parent to your children and take responsibility for what they play and watch. But leave MY responsibility to ME.
[PS: "AO" rating effectively does not exist, since retail chains won't carry an AO game, in the same way that movie theatres won't show an "X" rated movie. Since it's thus financially impossible to release an AO rated game, that rating effectively blocks a game from being released. Which may be fine for your nanny-world, but in my really-real world, I'd rather make that choice for myself.]
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I can't remember any instance of a football player dying from physical contact on the field. It may have happened once or twice, but it would be a freak accident, not a result of regular contact. Oh, and btw, have YOU watched a football game lately? Because "beating each other to a bloody pulp" is kind of against the rules.
As for boxing,
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How can you see that as aggressive? Do capital letters trigger some primal fear in you?
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The brutal, savage sport that was football (Score:4, Informative)
The violence of the college game came within a hair of destroying American football in 1905 - 23 deaths - and 1909:
In a match between Harvard and West Point, the Army captain, Eugene Byrne, exhausted by continual plays to his side of the line, was fatally injured. Earl Wilson of the Naval Academy was paralyzed and later died as a result of a flying tackle. And the University of Virginia's halfback Archer Christian died after a game against Georgetown, probably from a cerebral hemorrhage suffered in a plunge through the line. "Does the public need any more proof," wrote the Washington Post, "that football is a brutal, savage, murderous sport? Is it necessary to kill many more promising young men before the game is revised or stopped altogether?" At both Georgetown and Virginia, football was suspended for the remainder of the season, and the District of Columbia school system banned it altogether. Even Col. John Mosby, the old Confederate raider, used Christian's death to rail against football as "murder." Inventing Modern Football [americanheritage.com]
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As for boxing, yeah, it's a barbaric "sport" that really has no place in a civilized society. It's the modern-day equivalent of the Roman gladiators.
Except it's performed by consenting adults instead of conscripted prisoners and is specifically set up to avoid fatalities or permanent injuries instead of a fight to the death, you're exactly correct. Of course, being performed by consenting adults and not being set up specifically to have a death at the end are the defining features. By your logic, soccer should be illegal because it resembles ancient Aztec soccer, in which the losing team was sacrificed to the gods at the end.
And, considering that all
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People are a product of their culture, but their behaviour is mostly shaped by the real parts of their culture - family, school, church, day to day activities, not by the make-believe parts, the things they see on television or in games. You use the example of America's high crime rate, but you also mention Japan, which has a trem
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And yet, interestingly to my point. With the written word, it seems anything goes. Why do none of these issues come up with the novel, or the non-fiction? Imagery many
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Malign [webster.com]
1 a : evil in nature, influence, or effect. malignant.
2 : having or showing intense often vicious ill will. sinister. [webster.com]
The audience has faded to black. The genre summer box office poison. Captivity [imdb.com] grossed $2.6 million. Rockstar tried to catch the wave and missed.
. Why should your personal judgment override Manhunt 2's intended audience's CHOIC
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Bring it on!!!
I think I'm just about able to stop myself from murdering anyone after playing this game, I doubt I'll even have any nightmares!
Because the UK is not part of USA (yet!) (Score:2)
So why shouldn't Manhunt 2 receive the comparative rating (for games) of "M" for Mature, which is also identically restricted to 17 and up?"
Because the UK might have a different cultural approach than the USA? Just because a USA ratings authority decides on how to rate movies and video games doesn't mean the UK has to follow the same guidelines. UK is not part of the USA
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Yes the UK is so far playing much more fast and loose with civil liberties, that is true. So I guess it isn't surprising in a country with over four MILLION closed ci
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Indeed - but this argument can be used about almost anything. So, if I CHOOSE to use illegal drugs, why should I not be allowed? The fact is that your right to choose according to your whim and personal preference is not considered as important as eg. the impact it would have on society in general if certain things - like drugs, child abuse and video games that glorify extreme violence - were just set free. This ma
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