Banning Violent Arcade Games Unconstitutional 533
zTTTz writes "The US District court ruled that it was not
only unconstitutional to ban
violent video games from public arcades, but also ruled that the city of Indianapolis pay $318,000 in legal fees to the video game industry. This will probably make other cities think twice about trying to censor video game content again." Update 17:45 GMT by J : We covered the Indianapolis story previously in
July 2000,
October 2000, and
March 2001.
Check out
NCAC's open letter,
too. We haven't bothered covering the
recurring
news of
declining real-world violence
(while video games just get more gruesome and explicit), mostly because it's the same story over and over.
GTA (Score:2, Interesting)
I think games can be too violent, but I don't think it really matters that much.
What violent games was Hitler Playing?
Re:GTA (Score:3, Funny)
Risk [boardgames.com] :)
Re:GTA (Score:5, Insightful)
And I'll have to respectfully disagree with that statement.
1. We're a free society. we have certain freedoms, guaranteed by the constitution. This means we have freedom of expression. A video game is someone's expression.
2. Most of the violence today has nothing to do with video games. It's mostly because of the soft parenting that politicians have promoted in recent years. People don't dicipline their children anymore. They let their children get away with murder (figuratively speaking, but, then again
Re:GTA (Score:3, Insightful)
This law didn't interfere with the creator's write to make a video game, it prevented minors (who are not, and shouldn't be, granted full Constitutional protections) from using that game. There is a difference. While I personally disagree with the ordinance, you have to recognize that this issue, like most, is not so cut-and-dried as most people here like to think.
2. Most of the violence today has nothing to do with video games. It's mostly because of the soft parenting that politicians have promoted in recent years. People don't dicipline their children anymore. They let their children get away with murder (figuratively speaking, but, then again
How is this politicians' faults? I mean, we blame them for everything under the sun, but what "soft parenting" laws have they created? I feel that people don't discipline their children as much anymore because they're not around to do so. We've created a society where in most families both the parents have to work simply to make ends meet. Children are not monitored suffiently not because of moral failure on someone's part (except maybe the corporations that have created this situation), but because of economic necessity.
Re:GTA (Score:3, Insightful)
If you pay 45% of your income in taxes, you make enough money so that this doesn't apply to you, and can easily support your child with no need for a second income; the highest federal tax rate is 39.6%, which applies only if you make more than $288,350. If state taxes push that to 45%, you can always move to a state without income tax.
If the politicians would READ the constitution, they would find that gov't ONLY has the power to tax imported / exported goods. The unconstitutional income tax (the amendment was never ratified) is the direct cause of the situation you're concerned with.
The Constitution DOES allow for taxation beyond imported/exported goods, and always has. Section 8 states: The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the income tax levied during the Civil War was legal. Any reasonable person reading it can see that it allows the government to levy taxes. There is some uncertainty as to whether it can apply to directly taxing individuals, which is why the 16th amendment was created. The only people who claim that it wasn't ratified are people who are so incensed at having to turn over money that they construct elaborate fictions to justify not doing so. Point me to one reputable legal scholar who claims the 16th amendment wasn't ratified.
I guess we're moving offtopic though.
Furthermore, children are not "monitored" sufficiently by their parents because at some point in time, responsibility became a foreign concept in this society.
I hear this a lot, but haven't seen any proof. From time immemorial people have complained about decreasing moral standards, and if this were true by this point we'd be living in sewers. Was there suddenly spontaneous moral decay? What caused it?
If we had never tried to legislate away stupidity, outlaw recreation or mandate education, parents would necessarily be more involved in their children's lives.
These laws didn't just spring spontaneously into existence. They were created in response to specific problems. You really want to improve things? Force the television networks to cut their programming schedule down to a few educational and news shows a day. Cut the workday down to a sane amount. Offer more vacation time to parents. Stop treating education as a robot factory, and cut down class size to a fraction of what it is. Make it illegal to advertise any product to children. Create a society that isn't a constant assault on a child's psyche. I know that we can't legislate all this, but let's at least try, and if that means we have a few municipalities trying to cut down on the virtual gore little Johnny sees, well at least they're trying, and I'm not going to demonize them for doing it like everyone else on this forum.
As it is, the consequences of "failure" have been diminishing with time due to paternalistic laws and increases in welfare / bankruptcy / whatever.
So what do you propose? We resurrect the idea of debtor's prison?
Re:The role of the media (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, I would sorta agree with you. I think that news media are largely liberal. But I think that there is a large conservative element out there that champions this exact same issue. The concept of "Family Values" is a conservative one, and government censorship, be it a ban on flag burning, keeping evolution from being taught in schools, or what have you, is not an unknown idea among conservatives.
I think the violent video games issue is neither exclusively liberal or conservative. This is probably an issue that has crossover appeal.
Thank you Thomas Jefferson! (Score:3, Interesting)
Is this a great country or what? :-)
John
Actually... (Score:2)
BTW, how did the parent of this comment get modded "off-topic"?
Excellent! (Score:2, Funny)
The money will be much needed (Score:2, Funny)
Thank goodness, this ruling comes not a minute too soon. Have you seen John Romero's monthly hair care bill lately?
Correctness (Score:5, Insightful)
It just seems that people are so worried about being correct these days, that they've forgotten what correct is.
It's refreshing to see a limit placed on the kind of standards for "clean society" that can be imposed on the public.
Re:Correctness (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Correctness (Score:5, Funny)
I concur. Up here in Toronto, one of our local stations (CityTV) has a tendency to bleep out the word "mother" while leaving the word "fucker" untouched.
It's a constant source of amusement. ;)
Re:Correctness (Score:3, Interesting)
i.e.
- the story of how after a year of negotiation after NYPD Blue's debut in 1993, Steven Bochco was able to persuade ABC to use exactly 37 vulgarities per episode, as long as he did not stray from an agreed on glossary of words. He could show breasts from the side (no nipples), and dorsal but not frontal nudity. He could suggest, but never show intercourse. 57 affiliates refused to air the first episode, and ABC couldn't charge its full ad rate on the show for years.
- In 1959 on CBS's "Playhouse 90", when 'Judgment at Nuremberg' was presented by the American Gas Association, they cut the word 'gas' from the script. So millions of Jews died in "...chambers."
- Aaron Sorkin (resp. for 'The West Wing') relates how "Standards and Practices made it very clear that I will be able to say 'motherfucker' on the air before I can take the Lord's name in vain. They fear that religious groups will aggressively boycott our show." The article goes on to detail how "in one episode last year, President Bartlet exploded about being bested by a 'damn street gang.' "It didn't ring true," Sorkin said. "I originally wrote 'goddamn street gang.' In the movies, it would have been 'fucking street gang.'""
A funny article. The issue also has a decent historical overview of the roots of Islamic conflict with the West. Your local library should have a copy...
Re:Correctness (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Correctness (Score:4, Insightful)
I saw a newscaster apologize for "bad language" when the unedited amateur tape of the first plane going into the tower 9/11 (with the camera holder going "Holy fucking Christ!" or some variant thereof) was aired. 3000 dead, and the news guy is worried about bad fucking language.
If you think it's unconstitutional.... (Score:2, Interesting)
but don't take the right to choose away from everyone else.
Yeah! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Yeah! (Score:2)
heart was in the right place (Score:2)
The Place Is The Problem (Score:5, Insightful)
> about the situation, their heart was in the right place just not their minds.
No, it wasn't in the right place. The entire problem with this sort of thing is that what they tried to do cuts counter to the very principles on which the U.S. is founded, and since they're the city government they're more wrong than any private citizen initiative could ever have been. Despite the fact that these games are not appropriate for children, they are trying to force the decision for all kids, even those whose parents allow them to play. In a very real sense, they're trying to legislate morality. There are some cases where morality has external effect (legislating "thou shalt not kill" is legitimate because of the obvious repercussions outside of the individual), but since there's never been a credible study that proves that violent video games cause real-world crime, there's no external effect to legislate. This is the morality for which parents must be responsible, and for which the state must not be allowed to be responsible, because making laws to "protect people from themselves" is paramount to outlawing skydiving because it's dangerous.
Virg
Excellent (Score:2)
Re:Excellent (Score:2)
What they have in Indy is a gov't trying to raise your kids. Like it or not they are going to try.
But of course, you don't actually want to take an active role. So be ready for anything that comes home with your kids.
Wait till they want to be scientologists like the mayor or a druid like the council member sitting next to him.
The point is, not only is it your job to raise the kid, but it's your job to choose HOW to raise them.
On the other hand I do understand the difficulty in trying to raise a child without help like banning video games. But imagine how hard it is for people who would like to raise their kids as Jews or Moselms in the USA.
Sorry but we can't control 100% of the evironment we live in. But you have the opportunity to talk to your kids and help them understand things. Hell you might find out kids do listen when you tell them the REAL reasons you don't want them playing those games.
I can't believe they make sexual overtures on mid-day and late afternoon TV. I've heard so much filth it makes me sick [as i download gigs of pr0n]. But there isn't much you can do except ignore it or walk away.
Great country. But if you don't want secular go to Afghanistan.
I helped open a cyber-cafe in Indy... (Score:2)
I am glad to see it annihilated though.
Sometimes the Court System gets it (Score:4, Funny)
Hopefully, the courts will also start striking down "Hate Speech" codes at public institutions next. Once Government and our public institutions start governing what can and cannot be said, it limits the ability for the disenfranchised to respond. No one has the right not to be offended.
Re:Sometimes the Court System gets it (Score:2)
Video Game Censorship and norway.. (Score:2, Informative)
Violence is OK, but god forbid you show any sex (Score:2)
Re:Violence is OK, but god forbid you show any sex (Score:3)
Re:Violence is OK, but god forbid you show any sex (Score:3, Interesting)
When they did the movie, no more bed scene, but rather a gory scene where the baron drinks the kid's blood straight from his aorta.
Looks like the yankees have a sick, perverted mentality where it's okay so suck blood, but not to suck dick.
Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:5, Insightful)
Didn't I hear someone once say that "the function of parents is to isolate the children from the realities of the world until they're too old to learn to cope with them?"
It bothers me that the very laws of the land underscore the public's acceptance of violent behavior and rejection of sexual behavior.
Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems to me that we are reversing priorities.
Sex is a Good Thing, if it wasn't there, I wouldn't be writing this and you would not be reading it either.
Violence is a Bad Thing, it kills people. (Colombia High-Shcool anyone?)
I have seen movies of autopsies where we see a person's guts exposed but the genitals are blured, why? What's so shocking about genitals compared to guts?
I just don't get it.
It's probably ok that there is some censorship on hardcore PrOn but give me a break, naked breasts and/or butts aren't really offensive...even for a 5 y.o. kid.
[ot] Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:2)
Ok, I was fine up to there, but this next part seriously weakens your argument:
, if it wasn't there, I wouldn't be writing this and you would not be reading it either.
I think both of those points are an argument against it...
Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:2)
And sexuality has far more positive uses than violence.
Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:2)
Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:3, Interesting)
I just saw LOTR, rated PG-13, (here on imdb [imdb.com]) last week, and lots of parents brought their kids. We were sitting next to a woman and her 6 yr old daughter. I think that movie was a seriously traumatic experience for that kid. And yet sirens (here on imdb [imdb.com]) was rated R for people running around naked, and barely even any sex. I'd take my 3 yr old to that any day.
Re:Sex? NO! Violence? YES! (Score:2)
Improperly portrayed sex leads to violence. (Score:2)
Porn, therefore, is one of the largest contributers to violence behavior. Competition for scarece resources pales in compairision. Once basic needs of food and shelter are met, what's left to fight over? Why are precious metals and stones valuable? Because they sparkle in some people's eyes and are thought of as a means to buy sexual company. The whole economy is bassed on this. Porn represents this kind of thinking in it's rawest form.
Indianapolis simply took the wrong approach (Score:2, Insightful)
It was stupid for Indy to think they could take the quick and easy approach to the problem and just ban them.
Indy *DID NOT* try to "Ban" the games.... (Score:5, Insightful)
" 10-year old kids should not be able to play those games at the arcades without their parent's (or other adult's) consent, just like they cannot go to a rated-R movie by themselves."
Yup, this is exactly what they were pushing for. The games themselves were *NOT banned*, and even the restriction was intended for *Public Arcades* only.
Instead of the knee-jerk "it's censorship" and "won't somone please think of the First Admendment" reactions that pervade the comments on this story, look a bit deeper.
If you actually have children you understand a bit more about not wanting your 10 year old to glorify in ripping the heart out of a virtual opponent in some game that you'd damn sure not want them playing until they are actually old enough to "give peace a chance", and about the RESPONSIBILITY of raising *balanced* children, IMHO this involves a lot more of spending what little "free time" you have as a working parent with your kids trying to teach them how to think and why glorifying in taking the "Rambo" approach to situations is not an answer ANYTIME in life that prevades pretty much every show on network TV and video game in the U.S.
I'm perfectly in favor of having the NC17 type ratings on Video games enforced. This has *NOTHING* to do with "free speech" and everything to do with helping parents control the crap that American society tries to force on our Kids today.
To those that think that video games *don't* influance kids in any way, all I have to say is..."all your base belong to us"
--Tadghe
Re:Indianapolis simply took the wrong approach (Score:2)
When was the last time you saw an arcade that was not policed? Most have at least one person watching what the patrons are doing to the machines.
Just tell your kids that they aren't allowed to play violent games. Can't trust them to obey you when you aren't watching? Why not?
Maybe they won't be able to tell the difference between mildly violent and quite violent. Maybe you have told them 100000 things not to do, but you forgot this point. Parents are not infallible, yet you believe they are. Why?
Gameworks Solution (Score:3, Informative)
When they brought in Silent Scope (very bloody sniper game), they put it in the bar. Since no minors could go in that area anyway, problem solved.
No legal mess, no fuss.
Not much of a victory (Score:2)
Even though there is also no evidence that sexual-content has any ill affects on children. So I'm not quite sure where the video game industry's moral righteousness comes from. They seem willing to accept political based censorship, despite their claims to the contrary.
Sounds like somebody had a cruisade... (Score:2)
GOOD! (Score:2)
An example: Rental Video Stores vs. Video Games (Score:2)
What we need (and this is just for starters and as an example of my $0.02) is a system similar to what video stores have: ID check, group videos with titles, separate p0rn from none-p0rn in an isolated section, etc. After getting those basics elements in place, we can now start fine tuning things. A complete 7 is not the solution.
Nice judgment (Score:3, Insightful)
But, that isn't the place of government or another organization to judge - if I feel my child is ready to play a game, see a movie or read a book then it is my judgment to make. We all have to be responsible for our actionsand the actions we take as parents - allowing a city to take said action is allowing the parents to serve inabstentia and with minimal involvement...
Devil's Advocate (Score:2, Interesting)
Granted, I hate censorship as much as the next guy, but am I missing something here when the article talks about public arcades? I think a certain amount of restriction properly placed on public arcades is not such a bad thing as everyone seems to think it is. I mean, these are kids who are potentially as young as 6 years old, maybe they're with their parents, maybe an older sibling, maybe not. The point is, at that age there should be a lack of exposure to the level of violence common in most modern day video games (which I love btw). I'm not saying do away with excessively violent arcade games, just don't put them in public places.
at what point do we stop though? (Score:2)
There are some things that do need to be seperated from children, Granted parents should have 1/5 of a brain and do this work themselves. Where do you draw the line?
I'm waiting for the lawsuits to srart like back in the 80's of parents suing the game companies because johhnie went out and drove the family car over a group of children... just like in GTA5-Extra gory version.. (remember when Kiss and the other rock bands were sued for subliminal messages or telling kids to go kill kill kill?)
My opinion is to not regulate fantasy items but not allow morons to have children... but then that will cause a few people to whine and get outraged.
Re:at what point do we stop though? (Score:3, Interesting)
Violence is okay, but not sex? (Score:4, Insightful)
In my mind, it's not permissable to ban either, but I think it's more appropriate to filter violence than sex. A lot of people don't agree with me, but you'd think that if you can't ban one, then you shouldn't be able to ban the other.
A Look at Violence (Score:4, Insightful)
There is always some new study that comes out that tries to link violence in movies to violence in real life and immediately afterwords there is another study that debunks the first. In my opinion we only need look at history for a reasonable answer.
I think we will all agree that we are far from living in the most violent time in history. The Dark Ages weren't just dark because of lack of innovation but because of the death, violence, and disease that dominated society. And yet as far as I can tell they didn't have movies or arcade games. Someone else here has already used the Hitler example and there are countless others that I could make.
The point is - violence has NOT increased in our society since the advent of movies and games. Even with the recent acts of terrorism here and abroad and the violence in the Middle East we are still living in one of the mostly peaceful times in history. Even the violence that is occuring is based on age old wars. The Middle East has been a hotbed for war for thousands of years.
Some people might say - what about the kids killing other kids in schools. Surely that has increased. There is no doubt that that has increased but did games or movies make those kids kill? I don't think so. They may have given them ideas on HOW to kill their classmates but it didn't encourage them to kill. The problem is much more deeply seeded and blaming movies or games is an absolute cop-out by parents and teachers. In many of these cases parents, friends, teachers, or counselors had an inkling that there was something wrong with the killer children but either didn't know what to do or thought it was just a phase. This is why I believe that parents should be held criminally liable for the actions of their minor children.
I would like to close with my own life story to bore you all. I grew up like many kids playing AD&D in the early 80's. I remember so many news stories about kids killing each other with swords and how it was all AD&D's fault. And yet I never wanted to kill anybody. None of my friends did either. As a matter of fact - the vast majority of people who played AD&D NEVER had seriously contemplated killing somebody. To this day I play many games that might be considered violent by some and yet I can't watch the surgeries on the health channel.
I also remember viewing porn and having adult magazines as far back as 12-13 and yet I am not a sexual deviant. I don't have any less respect for women because of it.
In summary, don't worry about what your kids watch and play. Instead worry about teaching them right from wrong and reality from fiction. Listen to your kids. Find out what troubles them. Talk to their teachers and counselors. Meet their friends' parents. Help them with their homework. Watch their ballgames, recitals, concerts, etc. Be a part of your child's life and all the porn and violence in the world won't make them be deviant or violent.
Hoooray Government! (Score:2, Interesting)
I think there is inside interest though. I don't think the government thinks too highly of our constitutional rights, espectially the first amendment in light of the new legislation they have recently passed or are trying to push through
I think this move was motivated by two factors, the first being that they (the government) wants to protect it's image, especially in the face of the youth, who would be most outraged by an outright ban on violent games. The second motivator being the gaming industry itself. Violent games make violent people. Wrong. But people who play such games *may* develop strong hand-eye coordination and reflexes, and maybe even basic tactical strategy in the case of realistic FPS. The military would love to have a country full of soldiers just ready to tap.
I think this is a very good move, mainly because the gaming industry is responsible for the rapid technological advances we are seeing in systems today. Who needs 2.2GHz word processors? I can run vi on a 286.. It helps our economy.
Also many use violent games to release some of their tension and frustration that could potentially create statistics in the real world.
Just my $0.14. (Adjusted for inflation and tax)
-fc
.
Great judgement...but where do you draw the line? (Score:2, Interesting)
Censorship Laws... Sex Vs Violence (Score:2, Insightful)
It mazes me that the US imposes very little censorship on violence (as a rule), yet gets horrifed at the thought of sex appering on TV/video games.
Murder is very rare but is shown happily on prime-time TV. Sex is perfectly normal but is hevily censored. (Even to the extent that a woman cannot breast feed in public in the US!)
I lothe censorship, but I know that I find violence more repulsive than sex!
"not only quixotic..." (Score:2)
The following statement cuts quite deep, and should be written into the big book of good things that came out of the 7th circuit.
"attempting to shield children from exposure to violent images would be 'not only quixotic, but deforming.'"
It is estimated that US bombing in Afghanastan has killed 68 people per day (directly, not counting starvation / injury / illness / etc). The 7th Circuit has said that, basically, exposure to the uglyness of violence is a necessary part of becoming a complete human being. And as that exposure can come through the form of a harmless game, then gaming is therefore an expressive medium. Quite frankly, after having just completed MGS2, I can't think of a better medium to express the horrors of war (though Francis Ford Coppola comes very close). We're talking context here, of course. GTA hasn't done a good job showing the high points of what is possible in the medium any more than Lady Chatterly did for literature.
Of course I would support opposition to the sex portion too: I agree that it should be considered worse by this society to show someone's guts nonconsentually being sprayed out across a table (arguably the worst thing to happen in their life) than to take off their pants and pleasure them (arguably one of the better things). But I can understand why they wouldn't bother to oppose the sexuality portion when nobody has yet found a good way to use the new medium to express intimacy. I can't think of a single game this provision would apply to. AMOA is doing very badly these days (financially), and I can understand why they would choose their battles carefully. I'm just sad that I didn't see the ACLU on their side.
Christian Influences (Score:2, Informative)
Offtopic: Censorship Christians, you must remember a few things about the Good book. In it, God specifically ordered his followers to "take" virgins from conquered nations after killing everyone else (Numbers 31). He laid down guidelines about owning slaves (Leviticus), when it's OK to beat them (Leviticus), killed the firstborn of an entire nation (duh), and advised parents to beat their children like slaves (Proverbs). Were censorship truly blind and even, the Bible would be the first book out of the library. So, uh, be careful what you legislate for.
A story about an Indianapolis arcade (Score:3, Interesting)
While I was standing there playing at a (particularly violent) first person shoot-em-up, some kid (maybe 20 years old) pokes me in the back and says "You better watch where ya go when ya get outta here 'cuz I might just wanna shoot ya with my real piece." Great... I've just been threatened with death.
Yes, I know that the problem is the kid and NOT the game... but if that's the attitude of a human being on in this country... that he might just like to shoot me for the fun of it... then maybe games like this shouldn't be allowed to coexist in the same place with this person. There ARE clealy people in this world who have very little respect for human life. Who aren't intelligent enough to delineate between a video game and reality.
The experience of having a complete stranger threaten to shoot me did leave me a little shaken. It gave me pause to think about such laws and to make me reconsider my long-standing anti-censorship position. I'm honestly on the fense on this one. Just look at my
-S
Re:A story about an Indianapolis arcade (Score:3, Funny)
While I was standing there playing at a (particularly violent) first person shoot-em-up, some kid (maybe 20 years old) pokes me in the back and says "You better watch where ya go when ya get outta here 'cuz I might just wanna shoot ya with my real piece." Great... I've just been threatened with death.
See?!? He obviously knew the difference between the simulated violence in the game and the nine in his pocket. Who say's kids can't differentiate between video game and real violence?
Is this a Good Thing(tm)? (Score:4, Insightful)
1) I liken games to movies. We do NOT censor movies, rather, we rate them to aid parents who decide to censor the movie from thier child. One step further, R (and "worse") rated movies require proof of age (theoretically). This also aids the parents because no parent wants to put thier 14yr old on a leash, but they also don't want them to see some of the very disturbing content found in some R movies. Why is it, then, that a very violent game can go unrestricted where kids under 18 are playing? Is a parent to say, "Don't look or play that one game" and expect the kid to obey? Why not just put porn games (which arguably have less of an affect) in the arcade as well?
2) Disclaimer: I've been playing violent video games since I can remember (Wolf3D,Doom, etc.). I have always resolved conflicts with words not violence. This being said, violent media is still proven to have a VERY SERIOUS affect on many children and young teens. My mother is a behaviour specialist in the local school district and through her personal experiences has found most of these studies to be accurate. If I want to express violent and pornographic speech, I have every right to do so, just not in a public place with children around.
Personally, I wouldn't mind the arcade having an "18 and older section" (as silly as it may sound).
Indianapolis hasn't gone nearly far enough. (Score:3, Funny)
Despite this minor setback, hopefully Indianapolis will be able in the future to regulate what games children may play. The world of the child is stuffed with a plethora of unhealthy, evil entertainments that need to be purged so that we may produce moral, upright children ready to perform God's will.
Take for example the realm of board games, those mental cannibals of cardboard that swallow our children's time. There's Monopoly, teaching children to ruthlessly crush the dreams of prosperity possessed by others. And what of Battleship? Have we learned nothing from Pearl Harbor? Do we really need a generation of children trained in the dive-bombing arts? I can't even begin to approach Candyland, that pernicious purveyor of tooth-rottening sweets to our youngest and most pure.
Vigilance must also be a priority on the playground. For far too long have our most defenseless been savaged in the hour-long assualt & battery of a dodgeball tournament. Today the ball, tomorrow the bombs. Heed my words. And "tag", that cruelest of isolationist evils masquerading as a recess diversion. Stop the madness now, lest your child be the next to become IT.
Inform me, but don't be a parent for me... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd like to use Harry Potter as an example. When I first heard about Harry Potter, some group was trying to prevent children from being exposed to it for unsubstantiated reasons. One quote that comes to mind is "Harry Potter desensitizes children for the coming of the anti-christ", or some baloney. The reason I use the term 'unsubstantiated' is that I've read the first book and have seen the movie, and I've yet to find any religious implications at all, certainly nothing that has offended my sensibilites. Perhaps it is the later books that supposedly contain this offensive content, but frankly I don't really care. The parents groups were so overreactive that I just don't trust their judgement after I looked into it. Gathering a mob to burn books is not the sensibility I want to instill in my children.
My 8 year old sister really enjoyed the movie, and I bet it is not too long before she is picking up the novels and reading them. They are pretty advanced reading for a kid her age, but I think the interest the movie sparked may cause her to really enjoy reading. Given that I see no conflict in the novel or in the movie and our beliefs, I think it's perfectly okay for her to go off and enjoy Harry Potter in it's various forms.
If the over-reactive parents groups had their way, Harry Potter would never have been available to me or my sister to enjoy. I don't appreciate this at all. I do appreciate being informed. Something as simple as "be careful of Harry Potter because we believe some values expressed in it may be impressionable on your child." is perfectly acceptable to me. But to deny me the right to say "I think it is okay for my children to be exposed to this" is to deny me fundamental rights granted to me by the constitution.
Just because you don't want YOUR child to play a particular video game, doesn't mean that you are righteous when you deny MY child that priveledge.
Here in Indianapolis (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll bite (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just great. (Score:5, Insightful)
Learn to raise your children to understand what's real from what's not.
Back in pioneer days, the father of the family kept a loaded musket by the doors, and somehow none of the kids picked it up and shot their siblings/friends. Even when the parents were away.
How?
They taught their kids wrong from right, good from bad, imaginary from reality.
I played doom since the day it came out on my 286-12MHZ box. And somehow I still became a rational engineer with a family and no history of violence....
Parenting isn't done by just letting your kids watch TV and play videogames. You gotta make sure they understand that its for fun.
Re:Just great. (Score:2, Insightful)
How?
They taught their kids wrong from right, good from bad, imaginary from reality
I'm afraid that's BS, the difference was there was no mass-media a la CNN et al informing the pioneer's of times when the kids went postal...
Re:Just great. (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is this guy a troll? Because he didn't follow the majority, and actually decided to post as such?
Back in pioneer days, the father of the family kept a loaded musket by the doors, and somehow none of the kids picked it up and shot their siblings/friends.
Look around you. It's not the pioneer days anymore. It's not even the 1950s. Those children lucky enough to even have two parents are still waiting for them both to get home from work. Kids watch a lot more TV today than they did even 10 years ago. Media is becoming pervasive faster than parents can be expected to react. Games, movies, and telivision are much more realistic, special-effects-wise than they ever were.
They taught their kids wrong from right, good from bad, imaginary from reality.
All of which they learned from their own parents, who grew up believing that many of the things we take for granted in media were sick and depraved. Our parents saw a little more adult material growing up than their parents, and we more than our own. What takes place in GTA would have been unthinkable even to market to adults 20 years ago.
I played doom since the day it came out on my 286-12MHZ box. And somehow I still became a rational engineer with a family and no history of violence....
So did I, and I seem to be OK too. Will my kids be alright growing up with Quake III Arena or GTA4? Who knows? Not a gamble I'm looking foward to taking. I know for some kids, it didn't work out as well, given the rash of school shootings a year or so ago. Can that be bleamed on video games? Maybe not, but it's hard to believe that constant violence in the media didn't have something to do with something.
Parenting isn't done by just letting your kids watch TV and play videogames.
Of course not, but rare is the household without at least one TV and one computer. Now the family arcade has to be off-limits because of violent games.
Re:Just great. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just great. (Score:2)
Re:Just great. (Score:2)
True. And let me be the first reply that doesn't instruct you that keeping your kids away from violent materials is solely your job. It really does take a village to raise a child. As a fellow parent, I have to try pretty hard to counteract the media's seeming desire to get my kids to watch (and play with) sex and violence all day. Although parents obviously are the primary moral resource for their children, it makes it harder for us when the rest of the country seems pretty comfortable with the availibility of sex and violence in the media. Do I have to be with my kids every second in order to help them make decisions that they can't possibly be equipped to make on their own? It's impossible, so society has to step in at some point and help.
To those that support violent content in public places: would you rather there be a bouncer at the door checking IDs? That way, a 17-year-old kid couldn't play Donkey Kong in order to keep minors from playing GTA.
Re:Just great. (Score:2, Insightful)
Throw away your television. In fact, throw it away before they are born. Raise your kids without it. It may take a village (thank you, Hillary), but it STARTS at home. If your HOME is a safe environment, the big bad world of violence outside won't hurt them.
Re: Violent content in public places:
Arbitrary age restictions on ANYTHING are stupid. As I said in a previous post, tell your kids they aren't allowed to play violent games. Can't trust them if you aren't watching? Why not? If you can't trust them, why are they at the arcade alone? I hate kids. _I_ am NOT responsible for YOUR children.
Re:Just great. (Score:2)
You know what happens when you let a village raise a child?
You get the village idiot.
Re:Just great. (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh really?
That's one of the most idiotic things to come out of the Clinton years. I am NOT responsible for YOUR kid. He/she is YOURS. YOU chose to accept the responsibility. I don't recall you asking me if our little "village" could handle another kid.
And if I am somehow responsible for the care and upbringing (aside from the taxes I already pay for school, etc) of your little rugrat, then what say we talk child support?
Here's what you can expect from me with respect to your kid. If some other kid starts a fight, I'll break it up, someone tries to snatch your kid, he/she is gonna have hell to pay, your kid is lost/scared/needs help, they'll get it cuz its simply the right and proper thing to do. But its still solely your job to raise your kid.
If I run an arcade, I may choose to have an "adult content" section for older teens or adults with stuff I think is a little much for younger kids (or maybe so those people can simply avoid the hassle of dealing with little kids). But it should be my choice, just like its the parent's choice to let their kid into the place, escorted or not.
I'm sure all you parents have checked with the parents of your child's friends to see if there's a gun in the house, did you bother asking about copies of GTA, etc. I don't know about you but I believe there are far more game systems in home than there are arcades, it hard to even find an arcade these days actually, at least around my home.
You chose to raise a kid, now you have to accept the job, keep track of them and what they are doing. While your at it, keep them off my lawn.
Re:Just great. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just great. (Score:2)
Re:Just great. (Score:2)
Re:Someone should probably fill in Austrialia too. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Someone should probably fill in Austrialia too. (Score:2, Insightful)
On the topic, however, I usually find myself disagreeing with alot of what I read here, but for once I also see this as a victory. There's no good argument supporting the ban on games that, in terms of movie ratings, are PG at worst for violence.
Some here are worried that children may be influenced by these public displays of violence, but I say that any parent who feels their child is prepared to go out by him/her-self should also feel that their child knows the difference between animated and real violence, and right and wrong.
Any parent who does not feel their child understands these differences, and still allows them to go out on their own, has alot more to worry about than arcade games.
Yeah... (Score:2)
I hope the reader isn't taking me too seriously here heh. There are upsides and downsides to everything, but sometimes it's fun to play the Obnoxious American to the hilt (Like going to Innsbruck and calling the mountains there "Little Bumps" heh heh heh.)
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:5, Insightful)
I downloaded a bunch of video for linux related code, include xine, libdvdread, and libdvdcss, and, hot damn!, I can now view encrypted DVDs on my Linux box.
I intentionally, and deliberately, cracked the encryption mechanism on the DVD I had purchased as a gift for my wife, so I could play it on our computer while our new DVD player (which suffered a fit of infant mortality) was in the shop for repair. Wary of using Microsoft Windows, because of all the recent security and spyware issues, I chose to make it work under Red Hat Linux 7.2.
It is my understanding that, under current U.S. law, this makes me a terrorist. Because I am a foriegner working here on a valid work visa, I can be held without charge for up to 7 days and tried by a military tribunal for this action. While I would consider such actions against me unconstitutional, it is not for me to interpret U.S. law, but the courts. And this brings up two issues of importance.
First, if attempts are made to arrest me over this, should I resist -- forcefully, if necessary? Should I even consider killing, or trying to kill, anyone who tries to arrest me for these actions which I believe harm no one and are perfectly consitutional? In short, should I take the law into my own hands? I think, at this point, the answer is no: there may be a time for such vigilante justice when large numbers of people believe the law to be wrong, and letting mob rule dictate defacto law, but that time has not yet come: people are not (yet) being arrested by the thousands for watching DVDs under Linux. I think I would neither resit nor assist any arresting officers -- I'd let them carry me away, though.
The second point is should I discard this thin shield of public slashdot anonymity? After all, if I truely believe my actions to be correct, I should have nothing to hide, even as the short-term consequences (i.e. arrest, incarcertation) might be unpleasant. Surely the eventual exposure of the naked media industry emperor justifies public criticism and civil disobedience. If not I, then who? But, a voice has to be heard to have effect, and the attention an imminent public confession of my actions might garner would be a positive thing. I will keep them guessing for a while longer.
Finally, I have not been altogether secret about all this. While not publicly announcing it to the world, I have told plenty of individuals what I am doing, and would have no hesitation in identifying them to the authorities if I am arrested -- after all they disobeyed the law as well, by not turning me in. Their subsequent arrests, or not, would, either way, further draw attention to the lunacy that now pervades a country which was built on that most noble of ideals: liberty.
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:3, Interesting)
It doesn't matter if you think your actions are correct. You've given up a piece of your personal soverignty to live here, as we all have just to remain citizens. We are obligated by that to endure any punishments the leaders we have elected decide to bring down upon us. In other words, if you don't like it: move. (What a horrible sounding argument). My argument here is that it is not wrong to break the law, but it is wrong to try to avoid any punishments that you may receive as a consequence. In other words, the law has no moral compass.
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:3, Informative)
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:2)
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:3, Insightful)
However, I ask the rhetorical question for two reasons:
1) Liberty needs to be defended, to the extreme, if necessary, otherwise it is meaningless.
2) One can imagine the law so corrupt that killing police saves lives. What if "the law" required the slaughtering of Jews (yes, I'm striking a nerve on purpose) -- would it be wrong to kill any police "officer" who tried to put that law into practice? I think not.
Clearly, the dilema is that the law stops working, and people take it into their own hands. Often, they soothe their conscious by convincing themselves that they answer a "higher law", but that argument is rather weak, and the defense of criminals everywhere.
Should such extreme action ever be justified in the name of as abstract a concept as liberty? I think so, the question is, "When?" Clearly, I think the answer to date, in this circumstance is, "Not now."
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:2)
It strikes me that forceful vigilanteeism gains legitimacy when it is in synergy with widespread civil disobedience: Vigilantees are the only army the disenfranchied have.
Fate (Score:2)
Doh!
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:2)
Re:In unrelated news, on the off-topic topic: CSS (Score:2)
As a Canadian, I stood idle while my countrymen permitted the government to amend the consitution to give them power over the highest court in the land. My political action ineffective (Canadians are like vishysoise: cold, half-French, and hard to stir), I found the best course of action was to leave and take my tax dollars with me. The U.S. seams to like them just fine.
Video games as a new media (Score:2)
Now, the average video-gamer is twenty-eight years old - people who grow up with a medium usually keep using it (with less frequency) throughout their lives. I'm an adult, and I play computer games. A lot of adults my age do - most of us started when we were kids - and somost of us don't problematize video games as a medium across the board. No one says now "what shall we do about cinema?" (During the early part of the twentieth century, the pre-cinema generation certainly asked this question a lot.) There may be criticism of violence in one media or another, but those media that have been completely integrated into cultural practice are not subject to this sort of scrutiny.
Re:USA USA USA! (Score:2)
Well, yes - that is sort of the way it works in the real world too. Prostitution is not as bad as killing. So I'm not too sure why you think it is a beautiful irony. Perhaps you've played too many video games....
living in the "greater" Cinci area... (Score:2)
I'd hate to see them jump on the violent game bandwagon as well. I'm sure some people around here already have, it just hasn't made it to the so-called local politicians and the local media.
Re:Video Games Don't Affect Children (Score:2)
I've seen it here on
Re:Video Games Don't Affect Children (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Expect more rulings like this (Score:4, Funny)
Please cite evidence proving Ashcroft has sought to allow forcible quartering of soldiers in private households.
You do know what what Amendment Three says, don't you?
So please back up your poorly-punctuated assertion about "No. 3 on." Otherwise, I will simply dimiss you as yet another immature, Constitutionally misinformed, knee-jerk slashdot wannabe geek.
Re:Expect more rulings like this (Score:4, Interesting)
I, for one, am a broad constructionist and I abhor censorship laws of this nature because of the fact that it takes the responsibility away from the parent allowing them to rely on the government for babysitting.
I'm thinking your touting of Dubya hasn't been thought out completely, considering the fact that he hails from Texas, a state that still, to this day, censors the works of Shakespeare sold in the state. Not just the works read in school or sold to children, but the works sold in the entire state to everybody.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Re:finally ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Because the parents don't censor content. They're too busy working and behaving immorally with each other, all the time assuming that the government will do their parental jobs for them. The same government provides free inferior-education babysitting most of the year, so why wouldn't it be expected do other parenting jobs as well?
Re:Shooting Cops = Protecting Citizen's Rights? (Score:2, Insightful)
But that's just it. The whole point of your constitution is that, no matter how much people whine and complain, you CANNOT make laws to prevent stuff like this.
Without big brother intervention? You don't NEED big brother intervention. By getting together and passing a bylaw, YOU become big brother, don't you see that?
The arcade owner is fully free to not carry games he does not approve of morally, as are all the shop owners free to not carry games they don't like, etcetera.
ANd if the mall owner doesn't like the shop owner, he's free not to rent to him again when is lease is up, etcetera.
WHat? Not everyone hates these games? Then why should a vocal minority be able to ban it?