NY Post Says GTA Worse Than Molesting 251
wiredbeat2000 writes "The New York Post has an inflammatory article which argues that Take Two's Grand Theft Auto is worse than child molestation and more harmful than second hand smoke. The story, which appears in the business section, calls for an outright ban of video games it claims are no better than snuff films, and concludes: 'Stay away from this [Take Two] stock - far, far away - and you'll be doing both your wallet and your fellow man a favor'." Lucky the author hasn't checked out Manhunt yet, huh?
Yet another member of the "padded earth society" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yet another member of the "padded earth society (Score:2, Funny)
Handguns? (Score:3, Funny)
.
e-mail the guy, like i did! (Score:5, Interesting)
cbyron@nypost.com [mailto]
"don't you think your article was a tad
it's offensive to you. don't play it. you think it's bad for kids. so keep your kids away from it. don't tell me how to parent. MY kids will know the difference between right and wrong, fantasy and reality. maybe if you'd tought your kids the same, you wouldn't be so worried.
the game is a simple power fantasy indulgence, just like a comic book, a sports car, or newspaper editorial. and frankly, it is an extremely well-done game. they didn't sell millions of copies simply based on gore. sure, that's what grabs the headlines, but the game is truly a tight bit of programming with fun, rewarding, and challenging play mechanics.
"This is 10,000 times worse than the worst thing anybody thinks Michael Jackson ever did to a little boy"
the most amazing thing i have ever read in my life is your suggestion that IMAGINARY VIOLENCE is worse for a child than REAL LIFE CHILD MOLESTATION. you say you would rather let your child be RAPED than play a VIDEO GAME. sir, now I am the one who is deeply offended, and frightened for your children."
Re:e-mail the guy, like i did! (Score:3, Funny)
Masturbation in public (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Masturbation in public (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Masturbation in public (Score:2)
The ACLU defended the homeless couple. The woman was called as a witness. My favorite line from her was 'no, I'm not against the homeless having sex.'
hello, yeah you are...where the frell are they going to do it.....
hey baby, lets do it on the road.
Worse than child molestation? (Score:2)
Why didn't Sega catch all this heat years ago over Michael Jackson's Moonwalker game?
ookay (Score:2, Insightful)
So now we're going to take orders from the NY Times? "Oh, dear Times.. do tell us what video games YOU claim we need to ban?".
Also, um... snuff films are more or less considered an urban legend. Aside from (possibly) the Faces of Death series, there are no substantially proven legitimate snuff films.
I would be more concerned if my child was watching the WWF/WWE, Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, Sex in the City, Judging Amy
Re:ookay (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ookay (Score:2, Interesting)
In legend Murdoch has an infallible popular touch, displayed in escalating circulations. But the legend misleads somewhat: Murdoch is not commercially invincible in areas where governments can't help. The plinth of his British empire, the rigorously prurient News of the World, was selling more than six million copies when he bought it: since, half its sales have vanished, while other papers have gained. The New York Post consistently loses money, and
Re:ookay (Score:2, Funny)
horse..soundly..beaten..while..dead.
priests (Score:5, Funny)
Twenty bucks says this opinionist is a moonlighting catholic priest.
Is anyone worried... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is anyone worried... (Score:2)
The author's email address is 'cbyron@nypost.com', tell him what you think. I am.
Use ad-blocking software. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Use ad-blocking software. (Score:2)
Re:Use ad-blocking software. (Score:2)
I wonder if he's played it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, it is violent and often that violence is directed towards innocent people, but, violence towards innocent people is not the main point of the game. I mean, you can kill police or civilians but there are consequences. And the whole thing about the Haitians has nothing to do with innocent people from Haiti. You're in the middle of a gang war between the Cuban and the Haitians.
I guess the real problem I have is that people seem to thing that by censoring the game that we'll get rid of violence between racial groups, etc. It's like saying movies that depict racially motivated violence should be censored. Our country will be in a sad state if that ever happens.
I think part of the point of showing these kind of things is that we remember that they do happen. If we pretend there is no racism it won't go away, just get worse.
I know, I'm preaching to the choir.
Re:I wonder if he's played it. (Score:2)
Are you kidding? I suspect the article was paid for by Take Two to raise buzz about the game. Nothing sells like controversy.
There's two publications that still seem to get a lot of press that even a media eclecticist (is that a word?) like myself can dismiss out of hand: The Register, and the New York Post. Seriously, they're rags.
Re:I wonder if he's played it. (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess the real problem I have is that people seem to thing that by censoring the game that we'll get rid of violence between racial groups, etc. It's like saying movies that depict racially motivated violence should be censored. Our country will be in a sad state if that ever happens.
Actually the sad thing is a major point of the game is how stupid and pointless gang and interracial violence is. In other words, it was meant to parody a real life problem and potentially could prevent such violence by waking people up to this fact. The main character is continually dragged into the middle of these conflicts but does not start them. By staying above these conflicts and befriending both sides the main character comes out on top after fighting off the myriad gangs trying to kill him.
A major component of the game as well is the fact that gangs tend to take advantage of ethnic tensions and rivalries. The game features the sicilian mafia, southern US biker gangs, haitian and cuban gangs as well as the colombian cartels. There are various other nondescript gangs which appear to be ethnically segregated as well. The offending line "kill the haitians" is uttered by the cubano gangsters on their way to avenge deaths by haitian gangsters who have sworn "I will destroy the cubans." The whole game reads as a commentary and a parody of US gang violence and the underlying societal problems behind it.
Re:I wonder if he's played it. (Score:2)
Ugh. I'm so fucking sick of this gaming is destroying society bullshit. And films. And music.
read, laugh, move on (Score:5, Interesting)
The letter I wrote him (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The letter I wrote him (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The letter I wrote him (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The letter I wrote him (Score:3, Insightful)
As much as I like GTA... (Score:5, Insightful)
Here in Canada there was a court case finding that kiddie porn art (i.e. no kids were harmed, these were drawings and paintings) were found to be illegal and so the same laws applied to these paintings.
Taking this one step further like the author suggests, I can envision some wacky japanese game where you get to play a sexual predator. The goal of the game is to prey on women and neighbourhood children. Getting extra points for doing things like luring kids with candy or the promise of toys, and performing date rapes on unsuspecting college girls.
I'm pretty sure a game like the one I described above would not be allowed to be sold in Canada. The majority of society would disapprove of this type of video game. I, myself find it very disturbing.
I guess the bigger question is why, as a society, do we allow the simulation of illegal/immoral actions video games and not others.? Where is the line (so to speak) and why do we draw it where it is? What is the nature of the video gaming that makes some of these things appropriate? Is escapism an appropriate defence for sim murder but not for sim molestation? And if so, why not?
This will become even more important with the next generation of systems that will allow for more realistic everything, including AI.
So I've played philosopher for today. Maybe not very well. But tehre are a lot of good questions out there about this sort of stuff. GTA is only getting the pain right now because it's the game that is currently pushing the envelope...
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:2, Insightful)
That's because the Canadian legal system is messed up. The point of child pornography laws, originally, was stated to prevent child from being sexual abused--over time, this point has been expanded to things which might hypothetically lead a child into becoming coerced or influenced into sexual abuse.
Re: As much as I like GTA... (Score:2)
And I'm pretty sure lots of Canadians who wanted to play it would just "pirate" it.
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:2)
--trb
The answer is... (Score:3, Insightful)
In the name of protecting women from degrading images, they have banned lesbian porn repeatedly [www.xtra.ca].
Canadian courts need to recognize that free speech means that things you don't like might be said, and that's OK.
Before anyone gets excited about a USian attacking Canada, the U.S. isn't doing any better [sacurrent.com], and that bugs me, too.
Full Disclosure: I used to work (volunteer) on a magazine who had issues banned by Canada. Thank Gloria Steinem for keeping
Re:The answer is... (Score:2)
As for what you linked to, that is hardly the Patriot Act II that was passed. Look at it sometime. And where were you when this passed through Congress anyway?
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope you're playing devil's advocate... (Score:5, Insightful)
here in america we have this thing called 'free speech' and a 'free market'. if protected free speech is found 'inappropriate' by most the 'free market' - people don't buy it and it goes away.
we don't need laws to keep a sexual predator sim off the store shelves - we leave that up to distributors and consumers. if businesses don't want it on the shelf, and consumers don't want to buy it - it quickly disappears - if it ever got published in the first place. if it only exists in someone's private space - then why should I care if no person or animal is harmed?
Canada is starting down the slippery slope of defining 'appropriate'ness of free speech. and once that truly happens then it won't be long before it all goes.
after all, if child molestation and rape depictions aren't protected, then why should murder be protected? and what about fistfighting or war? you can't have a willing recipient of an assault rifle after all. what about obscure sexual fetishes that violate current canadian law? (think scat, beastiality, probably even things such a multipartner and oral/anal if its anything like most archaic US state laws)... then you'll lose unnecessarily harsh or ill-timed criticisms (of government, citizens, religion), etc, etc...
furthermore, there is nothing in art today that hasn't be created before. human civilization hasn't fallen apart for depicting nudity, sex, murder, rape, or even child molestation in art or literature in the 4000 years of recorded history. (rape was a core concept in the original tale of Sleeping Beauty & child abduction and molestation was the prominent event in the myth of Zeus and Ganymede)
Don't get me wrong, I loathe and despise child molesters and rapists, and the people who would create content to promote or condone such acts.
But much as I hate them, I feel strongly enough about our rights to free speech that I would vote to support their rights to say, write, and draw anything they want so long as it doesn't hurt anyone. I wouldn't go into a store that sold that kind of product, and I wouldn't associate with anyone who purchased it -- but I'm smart enough to realize that the individuals in society are mature enough to decide these things for themselves.
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:2)
Taking this one step further like the author suggests, I can envision some wacky japanese game where you get to play a sexual predator.
Actually, such games exist in Japan, and while controversial, they are legal. There are Japanese superhero comics glorifying sexual predators as well.
Probably the more you try to repress sex in a society the more people will be driven to seek outlets for that sexual desire. It is better that they do it through video games and pornography IMHO than that they do somethin
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:2)
Yikes (Score:2)
You may find fewer crimes in general as a result. Especially if it's a good game, then everyone's playing it anyway and they a
No Evidence (Score:2)
If you suggest that Vice City ought to be shut down because it offends or because the content portrays criminal behaviour, or because of some out of context racial misunderstanding, then you have misse
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:3, Interesting)
Not long ago, an official from Australia called for the ban of Project Gotham Racing 2 [smh.com.au] because it "...sends the wrong message to young people. It is actually glorifying speed and power." So videogames are bad despite the fact that this game is at least advertised as being like the Fast and the Furious films.
The problem is not that videogames are
Re:As much as I like GTA... (Score:2)
Here in the US, there was a court case finding that kiddie porn art was constitutionally protected free speech, as no actual children were harmed in the making. (For the curious, check the 2000 and 2001 Supreme Court decisions. I don't have the time to look it up myself.)
Smell the irony, people. (Score:5, Interesting)
Fear Factor
Temptation Island
Freddy Got Fingered
Aliens Vs. Predator (the game)
etc.?
Come to think of it, I wonder if this is in any way, shape or form connected with the fact that this company is also responsible (certainly in license at least) for Simpsons Hit 'n' Run, a game that steals so much from GTA that its a wonder that Take Two haven't sued?
My response... (Score:5, Insightful)
I am a 28 year old adult male who happens to play video games. I'm not going to bother with an introductory, and I'm going to get right into it.
To quote the article, "People, this is insane. This is 10,000 times worse than the worst thing anybody thinks Michael Jackson ever did to a little boy"
Insane? You're calling playing a video game, something that isn't real and is meant for a mature audience 10,000 times worse than MOLESTING A YOUNG BOY *not* Insane?
Have your head checked. There almost isn't a crime worse than taking advantage of a minor in a sexual fashion. It's beneath human behaviour.
The author argues that there is a ratings system that is unenforcable and means nothing, and is irrelevant.
The ratings system in Video Games is virtually identical to movies. Movies are rating G, PG, AA, R and X/NC17. Games are rated as E(veryone), T(een), M(ature) and A(dult). There is a fifth category who's acronymn I am not aware of, but the category is for the very young, toddler aged, and educational. Adult is reserved for anything containing sexually explicit content, similar to NC17. Mature is the equivalent if AA. T equates to PG, and E is the gaming G.
If a parent buys a child who is under the age of majority, and the game is rated M for mature, how is that the gaming companies fault? The parent should be made aware of the ratings system. Every game box sold in Canada and the US has the rating printed in large black and white letters right on the front of the box, including what the ratings mean. It's as ludicrous as a person suing Take Two, Sony, Rockstar for 244.5 million dollars because their kid took a loaded gun from their house and shot at a highway, killing someone, then blaming Grand Theft Auto. The game is not responsible here. How did the child get the gun? Why was it loaded? Why wasn't it in a locked case out of the reach of children? Why weren't the kids taught by the parents that shooting at a vehicle is not a particularly good idea?
If video games had this much of an influence on the youth of today, I should be a homicidal maniac. I've played video games since the days of the Atari 2600, and have seen just about everything there is to see in a video game. I've dumped enough quarters into arcade games that I should be able to spit fireballs from my hands while screaming death phrases at the tops of my lungs, because that's what video games teach you to do.
Oh, but Vice City is "realistic," you say. Realistic huh? So if I look in one direction, see 3 cars driving down the street, then turn around 180 degrees, see 3 more cars, and then turn around again and those original 3 cars have disappeared (which is what happens in the game), that's real, is it?
I can take a car and drive at approximately 2 mph, hit a hydro pole and send it crashing to the ground, because that's real is it?
I can walk down the street and find a surface-to-air missile launcher lying in someones back yard? Great! Sign me up to live in that neighbourhood!
Oh, but Vice City "looks" realistic, you say. Why? Just because the characters portrayed in it are not cartoonish? I can tell that they are digital representations of people. They don't look like real people to me. For one thing, people have fingers. That actually separate. And bend. And can be used to pick things up.
Video games are NOT REAL. They are fictional. Imaginative. Fun to play.
Michael Jackson has been charged with child molestation. That is real. If proven, that is morally disgusting.
Shooting cars on highways is real. That is a real case currently in the US legal system.
The bottom line: It is because of drivel like this article that I have cancelled my subscription to your newspaper.
Good day.
Amusing to consider (Score:5, Interesting)
"This is 10,000 times worse than the worst thing anybody thinks Michael Jackson ever did to a little boy"
If my math works right, with sales exceeding 25,000,000 copies, he would prefer if there were 25 million fewer GTA players and 250 billion more child molestors.
Alternatively, he would find someone turning off their PS2 and molesting a neighborhood kid to be an improvement.
I think we can guess this guy's real agenda (hehe).
Re:Amusing to consider (Score:2)
You know what I find funny? A couple of kids try to blamed their bad behaviour on a game they played, and the media ran with it. When I was in first grade, my school had a chocolate sale. They sent me home with some chocolate bars to sell. I ate one of them. When I realized that somebody would notice a bar was missing, I went to my mom and
Re:Amusing to consider (Score:2)
Re:Amusing to consider (Score:2)
10,000 * worse than anything Michael Jackson did. (Score:2)
Well, if the Catholic Church thinks it's ok...
" - or than any lie the feds think Martha Stewart ever told them, "
I don't feel like Martha is exactly the worst perpetrator of this sort of crime out there. She's just famous, publicly hated, and a woman. Burn her!
"or any line in any song that Bruce Springsteen ever sang that rankled a cop in the Meadowlands."
Yeah, but that was A-OK when Bruce did it.
Whaaaaaa???? (Score:2)
Dwarf-throwing is illegal?! Did I miss a meeting?
Re:Whaaaaaa???? (Score:5, Funny)
"Dwarf-throwing is illegal?! Did I miss a meeting?"
So that's why Lord of the Rings had to be shot in New Zealand!
I think Public Enemy said it all. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nuff said.
Video Games never started a war.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps newspapers should also be banned?
Re:Video Games never started a war.... (Score:2)
But I can see it now, the Chicoms withdraw their diplomats after a glitch kill in the US Unreal 2044 Tourny costs them the win... US Sends 7th fleet to the Tiawan Straight... UK Prime minister urges rematch.... France wets pants....
Irate Michael Jackson Fan (Score:2, Funny)
He might have a point (Score:2)
While I wouldn't go as far as the article's author has, have you ever noticed the following [may be American culture specific]:
Re:He might have a point (Score:2)
Hello Pot, this is the Kettle calling (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting that they would be so concerned when individuals choose to expose themselves to a game, but they would force everyone's (well, the few people that actually read their pages) exposure to risque pictures of scantly clad models without warning. Glad to know someone else is busy trying to decide what is good for us.
I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't have an article bashing Victoria's Secret ads a few years back, but now that they are paying the advertising budget they need to find a new target. Maybe Take-Two should just put an ad on the NY Post site. Isn't this sort of thing extortion (buy an ad from us or we will give you a bad review?)
I quit listening to other people's opinions a long time ago.
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Oh btw as a person who lives in the Tri-State a (Score:2)
Re:Oh btw as a person who lives in the Tri-State a (Score:2)
Re:Oh btw as a person who lives in the Tri-State a (Score:2)
Slashdot = 4 (mostly due to double posts)
Weekly World News = 3
Re:Oh btw as a person who lives in the Tri-State a (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
If nobody was taking them seriously... (Score:2)
Re:If nobody was taking them seriously... (Score:2)
No, the NYPost is tricky. In most of the places I've seen it sold here in PA, they don't sell it up on the newstand with the National Inquirer and Weekly World News, they sell it NEAR legitimate newspapers, but not actually on the same stand. People who don't know any better (such as, apparently, the submitter, the editors, and a lot of Slashdot readers) mistake it for legitimate news because of this dirty trick. It BELONGS near WWN, they actually PLACE it on the rack near local papers.
I forget exactly w
Time for a meeting (Score:3, Funny)
Hum. (Score:3, Insightful)
He's right - you CAN do that. You know what? You can do that in real life too!
Someone should tell the cops - oh and stop investing in condom and gun companies.
Re:Hum. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This just in... (Score:2, Funny)
I can see it now... (Score:5, Interesting)
I did a little research on this guy, and he has several non-fiction books under his belt with the same hellfire-and-brimstone invective. They also didn't cause so much as a blip on the cultural radar. Yet in an interview at Salon.com [salon.com], he has the gall to say, in response to asking why he had no problem with saying in his column that Martha Stewart had a nice ass, "One of the things I try to do in these columns that I write -- I consider this as kind of a personal mission -- is to try to purge our language of political correctness. It just stultifies. Isn't that what provocative, memorable language does? It forces back the frontiers of expression."
So this guy sees his newspaper column as the beacon of a lingual crusade? I think what we're dealing with here is delusions of granduer, which goes partway towards explaining his vehemence about GTA: Vice City. (But I will not pick apart what he wrote about the game, not for a Bill O'Reilly nutball of the print world.) That, and the fact that he's no spring chicken or versed in videogames, otherwise he couldn't claim the game's visuals were almost photorealistic.
Bah. Don't grace this hack with an e-mail.
Re:I can see it now... (Score:2)
Agreed. Email his editor. Email every other @nypost.com address. Hell, email every newspaper you can think of. But not this guy. If he expects the world to slave to his opinion, then imagine his shock when the world turns on him.
Second hand smoke? (Score:3, Interesting)
--
Evan "I hate being around smokers for asthetic reasons"
Re:Second hand smoke? (Score:2)
People in general seem to on
same as it ever was... (Score:5, Interesting)
at lest this guy isn't calling for a ban on violent content in video games. oh wait... no... he essentially is by calling the rating system 'unenforceable' (no more unenforceable than the MPAAs rating system) and by suggesting the legitimacy of spurious game-blame lawsuits (suits that contend games make people killers)
the silver lining is that the medium is still gaining momentum. i just hope it sticks to its guns and lets developers make whatever they want, and lets the gamers decide what gets supported with their money.
american media industries that -have- stuck to their guns:
literature, painting, rock music, sculpture, film
american media industries that haven't stuck to their guns:
roleplaying games, comic books, cartoons
one set of these media is heralded as art, as 'legitimate'. individual works are judged on merit and the media itself carries no preconceived notions of 'allowable' or 'appropriate' content.
the other set of these media is heralded as fit only for children. why? because of self-censorship of content.
TSR took 'offensive' material out of D&D. ensuring that under no circumstances would anything other than cartoony child-safe good and evil be depicted. similarly with comic books and cartoons.
these industries willfully decided that only child-safe content should be created in their styles and media. so now their content is wholly marginalized and looked down upon based solely on its media.
consider japanese anime and their comics. sure, we make jokes about tentacle pron but they are not regarded derisively as child's materials in japan. they are individually judged on content, not with a blanket assumption based on its media.
why? because their industry -didn't- decide that tentacle pron was inappropriate for comics, or nudity and demons inappropriate for roleplaying games.
Re:same as it ever was... (Score:2)
Scorsese didn't have anything to do with Scarface. It was directed by Brian DePalma. Screenplay by Oliver Stone, et al. I agree with your point though, there ought to be a market for adult video games. I heard the other day that the average age for video game players is around 28. Wow.
Re:same as it ever was... (Score:2)
most of the industries leave it as an issue regarding the content in question. they stick by the rights of people to publish whatever consumers want to buy, and letting consumers judge for themselves.
but some industries willingly cave when public outcry complains about content.
Consider the comic code of the 60s~70s for a specific example. it was wholly self-applied by
Re:same as it ever was... (Score:2)
no one over there gets their knickers in a twist when a boob or a syringe shows up depicted in the anime 'cartoon' style.
the company man reading a manga strip with his morning coffee on the train to tokyo isn't automatically considered some creepy guy with an adolescent fixation on superheroes in tights.
Movies like Akira, Ghost in the Shell, and Spirited Away are made every year. The mainstream press reviews anime feature f
Hmm... (Score:2)
Similar Story on Fox 5 (NYC) (Score:2)
"This video game lets you tie up and shoot prostitutes and is ultra violent. Games have gone too far"
And the kicker that had me chuckling for a good 5minutes, all the footage they showed was from Duke Nukem 3D with those pixelated strippers.
People will continue to get uppity about video games just like they get uppity about some books. These are the same people that don't think evolution happened, science is a joke, and then argue using sc
My email (Score:2)
I will now stop playing GTA and go molest a child. Apparently you would prefer that I did.
From,
A Concerned Ex-Gamer
How long until I expect a response?
You know what's REALLY funny about this? (Score:2)
For Example:
"You can pursue your goal by killing Haitians, of course, but you can also kill anyone (or everyone) else. You can machine-gun them, beat them with baseball bats, chop them up with machetes or run them over with stolen cars.
And when you do, everything will look incredibly and shockingly real, with blood spewing everywhere.
You can kill a cop, steal his gun, and then use it to shoot someone else. Or you can pick up
Bizarre logic (Score:2)
"Besides: By what preposterous reasoning can one argue that once someone turns 17 years of age it magically becomes OK to glorify mass murder? Are we saying that it would have been OK for that Beltway Sniper guy - who was apparently in his 40s - to have been allowed to play 'Grand Theft Auto' before going on his killing spree, but it wouldn't have been OK for that young teenager who went along with him to have done the same?"
So the author is proposing a moral quandry that has no basis in
How to turn a bad article into a positive review (Score:2)
Author is an idiot, but (Score:2)
If, for example, the gratuitous violence and prostitution of GTA is okay (I enjoy the game), then who's to say that a game as a rapist isn't? Obviously, even in America people would shrink from a rapist game, but where is the intellectual or moral line drawn? Is the line drawn merely by what will sell?
In movies, which I argue are the most relevant comparison, the MPAA rating system serves as a social control, bec
Re:This is how the real world views you. (Score:2)
You get the idea.
Right (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Right (Score:2)
Um, the editorial linked to in this post is real. It's part of the "real world". As I said above, in a comment marked as flamebait, this is how the real world sees you.
Re:Right (Score:2)
Re:This is how the real world views you. (Score:3, Funny)
Why this sudden obsession with being taken seriously? It's all fun and games for us.
Re:huh. (Score:5, Insightful)
My sentiments exactly. I had this whole nice long well thought out e-mail written out to send to this guy, and then I realized: It's the Post. No one reads the fucking Post.
My favorite part of this article is the fact that this guy is their business columnist. A business columnist giving out stock advice based on the fact that he disagrees with the moral content of the product a company makes. Yeah, OK.
Re:editorial reply (Score:5, Insightful)
I also got contacted by the Philadelphia Weekly after pointing out factual errors in their reporting of the "Warriors of Freedom" case.
Bottom line...we as gamers can't just sit around using all our pertinent arguments to flame each other here. People besides US need to realize how stupid these guys are being.
Write a concise article disagreeing with the author's take on selling Take Two for moral upright reasons, and then call him out for being against video games for some reason, but not against film, tobacco, the people who dump toxins into our water supply, etc.
No cursing, no flaming, no ranting.
Everybody get involved. Someone's gotta feel the backlash.
Re:IANAL (Score:2)
Re:IANAL (Score:3, Informative)
BTW, it was Billy Joel, and the song banned was "Only the Good Die Young". By his own admission (which I was persona
Re:IANAL (Score:2)
Re:IANAL (Score:2)
umm i don't know details cause i only saw the "adapted to movie version" but when some high profile priest was described in bad ways by Larry Flint they put it under the 1st admendment. rightfully so. this man has his right to publicly state his opinion so i don't believe rockstar can sue. but another example comes to mind about billy joel's (maybe idol i forget) best selling album was one that was put on the "banned" list of albums.
It was Jerry Falwell. Jerry Falwell had campaigned against Hustler and
Re:huh? (Score:2)
Re:huh? (Score:2)
A business writer should never be writing an article about something in the business world, he should be over reporting on troop movements and casualties instead. Because according to you:
"Report on the stuff that really matters, good job. Jackass"
Jackass indeed, not even a good attempt at trolling.