Real Gun Pulled At Counter-Strike Tournament 355
Audiovore writes "Got Frag? has a press release and interview with the president of Cyber X Gaming about an event which took place after a Counter-Strike LAN gaming qualifier in Los Angeles at the weekend. Apparently, two guys from separate teams got in a fight outside, and when staff tried to break it up one of the participants went to his car, got a gun, and pointed it at the head of a staff member (who happened to be the son of the CXG president.) His team-mates then 'encouraged the person with the gun to fire', although the situation was then calmed down and the remainder of the event was cancelled."
Oh man.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Now this is guaranteed be used as ammo (bad pun) for all kinds of 'family' and 'parent' groups all over the place.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, no. That's not possible. We're all too smart for that. Especially here on
Re:Oh man.... (Score:4, Insightful)
You know, until I read this piece, I'd have disagreed with you. I don't believe the guy who went and got the gun is evidence that FPS games encourage violence. (A pro gun society is what has led to that in his case.) What I DO think is good evidence is his teammates egging him to pull the trigger! I mean what the FUCK?! Egging someone on to commit murder...
Never thought my opinion would change on this issue, but it has.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Oh man.... (Score:2, Insightful)
I mean for christ sake, this is like pulling a gun on someone because Word crashed.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem with games is that they're life "like", but they aren't life. So you're practicing killing, but you're unable to identify with the result. So you start to see pulling the trigger as something with no real consequences, but something that's desirable to do -
Re:Oh man.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of of them sounds like you'd even encourage firearm usage, the other one sounds like you actually care about civil liberties.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:4, Insightful)
(A pro gun society is what has led to that in his case.)
So you don't believe one unprovable fallacy, but you believe another?
I find it more plausible that this person has mental problems, is immature, is uneducated, was under the influence of drugs, etc.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:4, Insightful)
If I listen to Heavy Metal, will I start to worship Satan? Hardly. But Satanists who listen to music are probably not going to be listening to Amy Grant now, are they?
Now if I am a violent person with a substantial gun collection, which video game do you think I'm going to play?
a. Pikmin
b. Yoshi's Island
c. Counter Strike
d. Bejeweled
I think it's more accurate to say that the correlation between violence and violent TV programs/violent video games/violence in movies is that violent people are going to be more attracted to those forms of entertainment than other forms. A person who plays Quake isn't a problem; a person who ONLY plays games that lets him shoot people in nasty ways may have an issue.
I would think that this is obvious.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:3, Informative)
It's also, of course, a complete work of fiction [hardylaw.net], long since discredited.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:3, Funny)
Idiots will do what idiots do. The vast majority of gamers will never hurt anyone, much less carry a gun around "just in case".
When all, most, or even a tenth of gamers start acting violently, maybe I'll consider that there's some kind of relationship between gaming and violence.
- FIV
Re:Oh man.... (Score:2)
Correlation does not mean causation.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:4, Insightful)
And the ultimate nullifier to this pointless, tired argument:
Prove it.
One incident every now and then does not prove anything. More people pull guns outside of nightclubs than video game tournaments. Maybe nightclubs are the cause of all the world's ills? Heck, while we're jumping to conclusions with absolutely no evidence, maybe DRIVING is the cause of increased violence? I've heard of lots of incidents where drivers pulled guns and other weapons on fellow motorists. A guy here at work just went to jail because he chased some guy down and stabbed him half a dozen times for honking a horn. Maybe car horns are the cause of all the world's ills?
Until credible studies appear that consumers of violent media have a statistically higher tendency to violence than the rest of society, you and all the "parent" and "family" groups are just blowing smoke and looking for convenient scapegoats for what is more easily attributed to failed parenting. All the studies so far are biased in one direction of the other, so the net result is that the entire thing is unknown. If you want to form a hypothesis based on empirical evidence and invesitgate, that's fine, but don't try to treat it like a theory until you've got proof. That's exactly what you're doing and what parent and family groups do, and that's exactly why I treat it like the wash it is. I'm willing to consider the possibility that you and the groups are right, but don't start saying you actually are until you have some evidence to back it up.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Oh man.... (Score:5, Interesting)
It's pathetically sad that your statement is true.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:2)
The TRUTH about WHAT?
Re:Oh man.... (Score:2)
Re:Sports not plagued by shootings: (Score:3, Funny)
"Family" groups (Score:5, Insightful)
The real Grade A morons here, by the way, have to be the teammates encouraging the other Grade A moron with the gun to fire...
Re:Oh man.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Obviously playing a video games does not guarantee the player will become homicidal. Just like smoking one cigarette won't give the smoker cancer.
But I think the link is there. Repeatedly acting out realistic scenes of violence against realistic people must desensitize someone to violence, and that cannot be a good thing.
In my town we've just had our another case of a bunch of teenagers beatin
Re:Oh man.... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the worst attempt at an analogy. Ever. It would've been more accurate to say that "Obviously playing a video games [sic] does not guarantee the player will become homicidal. Just like seeing someone smoke on TV won't make you become a smoker yourself."
Yes, people did get beaten on for having the wrong skin colour or for being in the wrong clique, but they didn't die as a result of the beatings.
Bullshit. It isn't the kids that have changed, rather the media reporting on those kids.
There is an order of magnitude more coverage on this kind of stuff these days. Perhaps even more. The sensationalist media of today has no qualms about letting everyone in the world know about some poor kid who got beat to death after school. Before, this sort of thing was often kept hush; who wants everyone in the world to know that your child, your sibling, your friend, a fellow community member did such a thing?
You may not have killed anyone, and you may not know anyone who died as a result of getting their asses kicked back then, but it certainly doesn't mean it's never happened. I don't know anyone who has beat someone to the point they were even on the ground- but that doesn't prove people don't get their lives beat out of them sometimes.
Re:Oh man.... (Score:2, Insightful)
I
The American Response (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The American Response (Score:3, Insightful)
So if he has just smashed his head in with a baseball bat, that would be better? Or perhaps the problem is that things that can be used to kill (cars, rat poison, blenders, etc.) can be bought by anyone in the US, including lunatics and...heaven forbid...gamers.
All types of political groups will try to spin this story to shift blame to whatever it is they're trying to ban. Video games, guns, violent movies,
Re:The American Response (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The American Response (Score:2)
Re:The American Response (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The American Response (Score:2)
Re:The American Response (Score:2)
Re:The American Response (Score:2)
Re:The American Response (Score:4, Insightful)
You're out of your mind. First of all, even if you get cut, as long as you're not stupid enough to expose tender areas (like... don't block stabbing motions with your stomach and slashing motions with your wrist...), you have a much better shot at survival than if someone puts a bullet between your eyes.
Second, deflecting a shot from a bat coming in at your head with your arm, though I'm sure it's exceptionally painful, isn't even likely to break a significant bone, much less cause any serious injury. Hell, the human skull is obnoxiously hard. It probably wouldn't even crack it on the first swing. I took a baseball bat to the side of the head once at full swing (by accident - guy taking practice swings). Fucking thing sent me sprawling in the dirt, made me throw up, and I couldn't see for a few minutes (but, amazingly, no concussion), but it didn't do any serious damage.
Third, I'm willing to bet I'm a pretty speedy guy if someone is looking to cut my throat or bash my skull in. I'm also willing to bet that, no matter how speedy I am, I can't outrun a bullet if someone is looking to take a headshot at me.
Note, however, I'm not arguing a personal position on guns. Just saying I'd much rather face a guy with a sharp or blunt object than a .44
Re:The American Response (Score:3, Insightful)
Add in a "tried" before "smashed" and, quite simply, yes.
A man with just a little bit of marital-arts training--I mean, someone who's EVER blocked a punch of ANY kind--can mitigate the blow from a single baseball bat enough to not die.
There's no way to block a bullet.
Re:The American Response (Score:3, Insightful)
Have some quotes to think on:
"Though defensive violenc
Re:The American Response (Score:5, Insightful)
Even if we do accept those numbers as true, the number of murders pre-gun buyback (99 in 1996) is still more than the number of murders in the most recent year shown (49 in 2001). Why isn't that shown to be a happy side effect of the buyback program?
Answer: because it's all in how you spin it. One little table and a bunch of out-of-context quotes do not an argument make.
And, at the risk of clouding all further rational discussion, do you really think that Jesus (if he wasn't fictional) had any notion of how powerful the weapons of the future would be? The difference between a sword and a gun is incredible, which makes quotes dealing with swords-and-violence not exactly comparable to the modern situation of guns-and-violence. Heck, our founding fathers couldn't even fathom the high-powered, super-accurate, full-automatic weapons of today.
Re:The American Response (Score:2)
First of all, I will grant that our founding fathers are not infallible. Just because they felt that something was a good idea doesn't mean that it actually is. They do deserve some respect, though, because their syst
Re:The American Response (Score:2, Interesting)
"Getting shot with an 1700s pistol or a modern Glock can both produce a fatal result."
JFK and Martin Luther King would probably still be alive today if they had lived at the time of the founding fa-- Er. *cough*
JFK and Martin Luther King would probably still be alive today if the weapons available in the 60s were restricted to those that the founding fathers had available at their time. This is just a guess, of course, but this whole "Voting from the Rooftops" thing is ba
Re:The American Response (Score:3, Insightful)
Just like Julius Caesar, huh?
JFK and Martin Luther King would probably still be alive today if the weapons available in the 60s were restricted to those that the founding fathers had available at their time.
You mean like Abraham Lincoln?
But your tyrant is my democratically elected president!...That's what a democracy is: discuss it, vote on it, go with the majority.
Hilter was an e
Re:The American Response (Score:3, Insightful)
This is exactly to the point. They held weapons of equal power to the government. Today private citizens with, say, shoulder launched stinger missles would be insane. (Don't like your business competition? Shoot the company plane down.) This is a far cry from a dueling pistol.
The scope of weapon power has increased to the point where armed overthrow of the government is a
Way to take out of context. (Score:3, Interesting)
Violence is cowardice. Cowardice is beating up people who are merely disagreeing. Cowardice is pulling a gun on someone because you disagree.
Re:Way to take out of context. (Score:2)
You're missing entirely the meaning. (Score:5, Informative)
And if you bother to read the history of where this statement originates, the next thing he said was, "But I believe that nonviolence is infinitely superior to violence, forgiveness is more manly than punishment. Forgiveness adorns a soldier...But abstinence is forgiveness only when there is the power to punish; it is meaningless when it pretends to proceed from a helpless creature....
But I do not believe India to be helpless....I do not believe myself to be a helpless creature....Strength does not come from physical capacity. It comes from an indomitable will.
We do want to drive out the best in the man, but we do not want on that account to emasculate him. And in the process of finding his own status, the beast in him is bound now and again to put up his ugly appearance.
The world is not entirely governed by logic. Life itself involves some kind of violence and we have to choose the path of least violence."
Go read for yourself [mkgandhi.org] his philosophy.
If you are busy trying to argue wether people cane or can't be more or less right, then you've missed why I pointed out that quote which was taken out of context.
Re:You're missing entirely the meaning. (Score:2)
Re:Way to take out of context. (Score:3, Insightful)
No. You may find cowardice distasteful, and the violence used in this story also distasteful. That does not let you equate cowardice and violence, however. The two are definitely different.
An action is considered an example cowardice when someone weights risk of loss involved the an action overly highly relative to potential gain, and acts based on that judgement
Re:The American Response (Score:2)
Surely this just equates to "If thou shalt guardeth thine shit with weapons and shit, dude, it shall verily not get ripped off"?
You've certainly looked out a few (mostly) pertinent quotes there, but the fact remains (and at the risk of sounding like Michael Moore) that the US has the highest per-capita murder rate in the world.
This does not seem to be a direct result of the number of weapons owned, so what *is* the cause, and
Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
People sit and spend days and days playing games like this where they learn to shoot at almost anything that might be a threat. Just like an athlete that practices for years to hone their reflexes so they don't have to think about actions, but just do -- or like a musician that practices for years so their skills are sharp -- gamers teach themselves to solve problems with violence and to use weapons quickly and easily.
So it's no wonder one of them decides that's the best way to solve their problem and that the others around actually egg him on to shot another human being.
People practice basketball for years to develop skills and be able to react without thinking. Musicians practice for years to learn how to use their instruments without having to think about what they do. In both cases, people are training their neurons by repeated action. And somehow we don't think practicing using a gun day after day doesn't do the same thing?
Get real. Violence leads to more violence, even if it starts with fantasy violence.
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:3, Interesting)
The Bush/Rumsfield BS has nothing to do with what the typical grunt is doing.
Furthermore, the point the guy is making is that said soldiers are in an environment where people that are indistinguishable from
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:5, Interesting)
Not much different from your typical high school students egging on a fistfight. Of course, nobody bothered to take notice of situations like this until students started to point the guns at each other instead of themselves.
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2)
In a fist fight (fought fairly) there is only a slight chance that the situation will end in death. Also, fist fights are easier to control than a gun. If a gun is placed against a persons head, it is fairly certain that the situation will result in death.
There is a considerable difference in the moral fabric of a person that would advocate the certain death of another person, and a kid egging on a fistfight.
That said i hope that the coward with the gun gets to feel the ful
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2)
And when was the last time you saw such a fight with a referee? I'm not talking about some fictional honor duel, I'm talking about situations where at least one of the participants wants to seriously hurt the other for whatever reason.
"there is only a slight chance that the situation will end in death."
If they were rational enough at the time for the possibility to even cross their minds, they're probably rational enough not to get involved in the fight to begin with.
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2)
The kids in these crowds don't think that much. They don't think "you know, somebody could really get hurt here," they want to see blood and they want to see it now. Bare hands, gun, it's all bloodsport. Bread and circuses.
"especially when it's the son of the guy fronting the cash for the event."
At that moment, he was just another representative of The Man. And everybody
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
But if I threw the same ball at a guy who played NBA Live or similar themed video games all of the time, he would be unlikely to "use his reflexes" to catch the ball. Instead, you would hear a crunch as his nose and/or glasses broke.
I can spend years of my life pointing and clicking at terrorists onscreen. However, if I got
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2)
How often do baseball players take a swing at people with their bat?
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2, Insightful)
Except, by your theory, these idiots wouldn't even know how to load a real firearm ("W
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:3, Interesting)
Seriously dude, get real. You've obviously never played any sort of FPS type of game so you don't understand that it's not about the shooting. That part gets old soon. It is about the people. It's about using teamwork to try to accomplish your goal. It's about winning. The majority of gamers are in clans because of that. Gaming is not about just about shooting people, it's much like any other team ga
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:3, Insightful)
Your logic is extremely faulty. You assert that training in sports causes your actions in that sport to become reflex, and training in a musical instrument causes you to become better, but then that training to have a twitch-reflex in moving a mouse at a target trains you to pull a gun on a human being. Irregardless of the validity of the conclusion you've reached
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2)
You could have a point. For all we know, the guy with the gun realized the staff member wasn't wearing camos and mask, didn't have an AWP, and wasn't guarding a room full of scientist hostages.
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2, Funny)
- FIV
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:3, Insightful)
No sir, I don't buy it (Score:2)
I don't buy it. By your argument:
* Playing football regula
Re:Definately NOT a Surprise (Score:2)
There's a world of difference between knowing how to skillfully and thoughtlessly use a weapon in a video game than in real life.
Most gamers I know wouldn't even know how to load a real gun.
In a fantasy virtual world I can race a motorcycle like no other and am a fighter pilot ace. Yet in the real world I wouldn't even know how to operate a motorcycle or how to taxi a plane let alone pilot it. If you're right ma
Scapel please... (Score:5, Funny)
The CS Crowd (Score:5, Interesting)
Come On.... (Score:5, Insightful)
For that matter, we tend to have some kind of riot whenever the Av's Hockey team loses.
The actions of a single individual don't define a group.
Sangloth
I'd appreciate any comment with a logical basis...it doesn't even have to agree with me.
Games DON'T Cause Violence! (Score:5, Funny)
It's the pavement!
Nothing happened untill they went OUTSIDE, to the PARKING LOT, which has PAVEMENT! Let's look at the facts. Nearly EVERY drive-by shooting ever has been within 5 feet of pavement. Most gang violence in urban areas is near pavement!
It's time to do something about this pavement industry that's causing EPIDEMICS of violence in this country. Back in revolutionary times (when there was no pavement) things like drive-by shootings and gang violence didn't happen! I defy someone to find a whole in my logic!
Won't someone PLEASE think of the children!
Re:Games DON'T Cause Violence! (Score:2)
You're close!
It's not the pavement, though, but rather the close quarters. In animal experiments, the closer in you pack mice in over an intermediate or long term environment, the more agressive they become.
Pavement, being a way to develop infrastructure to drive people closer together, therefore is an indirect cause for violence.
The moral? Stop packing them in the inner cities, and keep CS players in their own rooms and talking on the net.
Re:Games DON'T Cause Violence! (Score:2, Interesting)
Thats ironic, because neither have all the "Videogames are teh bad!" people
RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)
The police do have the names of the players and teams associated with the actions and we assume that this will reach a quick conclusion. I can tell everyone that the person that pulled the gun was not part of the BZ team, rather, friends of a certain member of that team.
I live in a country where people have riots and burn cars because their basketball team loses. Heck, sometimes when their team wins. No one ever blames the violence on basketball. Some nutcase friend of player pulls a gun and it's counter-strike's fault?
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
Some nutcase friend of player pulls a gun and it's counter-strike's fault?"
Did he know the name of this person? If not, did he know the name of their friend the player? Most importantly, has this information passed on to the police?
If the group is truly "zero tolerance" as they claim to be, complaints and sanctions wouldn't stop outside the building's walls. They clai
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
It's neat how the sentence before the one you quoted was:
The police do have the names of the players and teams associated with the actions and we assume that this will reach a quick conclusion.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:RTFA (Score:2)
Also for the record, not that it matters, ClanBZ is the ones involved. TeamBZ is just a group of friends that play together. Slight difference, but if you feel like harassing them make sure you get the right clan.
*mumbles something about irc.gamesnet.net #clanbz *
If this guy had the Presence of mind (Score:2, Insightful)
pass me a bat... (Score:4, Funny)
Wait, that wouldn't help solve the problem of gaming being related to violence, would it?
Look at the bright side... (Score:2)
Of course, it could also be that he just didn't want to lose points for shooting civilians.
Mod down parent (Score:2)
Obligatory Professor Farnsworth quote: (Score:3, Troll)
how weak, to pull a gun on someone, not to mention an unarmed someone. could he not win the arguement any other way? was his ego so easily bruised? how weak.
Causation vs. Correlation (Score:5, Insightful)
In any case, what we *can* say with certainty is that a kind of aggressive/macho/anti-social culture does develop around certain online games. You have only to play these games to notice the angry, sociopathic tendencies of many of their participants (e.g. the rampant cheating, trash talking, causing other nuisances, etc.).
Whether or not the game itself (CS) promotes this kind of behavior is certainly an unresolved question. At the very least, I think we can agree (as another poster pointed out) that certain games attract an element of player who is already disposed toward bad behavior. I do my best to avoid these games.
Re:Causation vs. Correlation (Score:2)
Except is this related to the game, or to the medium in which it is played? All of these tendencies show up on your average IRC host, and if it were the game it would be happening at paintball tournaments as well.
Re:Causation vs. Correlation (Score:3, Insightful)
Watch any game of pickup basketball by any group of 25 year olds. If there aren't a half
Re:Causation vs. Correlation (Score:2)
Age? I don't think it has much to do with age so much as the culture that reinforces those behaviours. Those people have probably acted like that since gradeschool.
Re:Causation vs. Correlation (Score:3, Insightful)
Remove the word online, and you may have a point. The same thing happens among fans and players of other 'sports'. Even among parents of school age players.
Re:Causation vs. Correlation (Score:2)
Blurb (Score:2)
Man I need to lay off the CS.
Stuff that doesn't matter (Score:4, Insightful)
Marylin Manson said, 'keep everyone afraid, and they'll consume.' Is Mr. Hill milking a bit of free advertising? Would guards and metal detectors repel the gaming masses. Hardly! I wish I could make sense of mindless acts of violence but this story does nothing to help me do so. I love the idea of guns as much as the next FPS gamer, but I could live a lifetime and not own one, let alone present it at someone. There are an estimated 2.5 million plus people that play Counterstrike worldwide - and one of them gets a gun pulled on him by another? Even if this is what happened, the only reason I care, is to chuckle at the over-reaction to it by the gaming community.
Missing the point (Score:2, Insightful)
Why do you go to a computer gaming contest (of any sort) with a gun in your car?
How does someone who is obviously not the sort that should have a firearm get a firearm? They get the firearm because the screening processes used when purchasing a firearm in the US are ineffective.
No wonder other people (Non-Gamers) get touchy about computer violence, when people can go out and purchase these things and ind
The frightening nature of CS (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:2, Funny)
I resent your comments and if I ever see you in person I'm gonna take a claw hammer and...
I mean... have a nice day!
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:2)
However to the rest of the world Americans do sort of come off looking like gun waiving maniacs. Perhaps it's just a convenient stereotype that you media constantly reinforces.
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:2)
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:3, Insightful)
My family came over to visit, and were amazed to discover that kids of various races playe
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:3, Insightful)
No this behaviour is bot common. That's why it's considered news.
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, I only know two people who own guns. One is a guard at Rikers Island, and the other is NYPD. Neither, to my knowledge, has had need to use their firearms, but would only use their firearms in the defense of themselves or innocent bystanders.
While these incidents are painfully common in the US, they're not everyday occurences. Many of us are non-violent people. Admitedly, we're very annoying people, though, which makes it a wonder you don't h
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:2)
Their women will be slaughtered and their sheep raped.
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:2)
Violent crime is down in the U.S. in the last several years. Very few people have ever even seen a gun pulled in Real Life (but for the record, a growning number of responsible people are carrying in the U.S., ready, willing and able to use their gun in self defense. As it should be.).
As for "Bolwing for Columbine" being a documentary -- it's no more a documentary than Armegeddon was a documentary about Bruce Willis sa
Re:Welcome to the American Way (Score:2)
Please, do you offer lessons? I am willing to be an unpaid apprentice to learn the wisdom of your art. My life would be complete if I could just die with your wit on my tongue and your rhetorical skills in my mind -- truly, I should be ready to do intellectual battle with the Deity himself after drinking at the fount of your wisdom.
Re:Not his son (Score:2)