Games Made Me Do It Defense Didn't Work 104
BuddingMonkey wrote to mention a heartening ruling from a judge who saw beyond the anti-gaming hype. CNN is reporting that Devin Moor has been found guilty of murder, in a well publicized case where the defendant stated that video games caused his behavior. From the article: "Prosecutor Lyn Durham said Tuesday that Moore knew what he was doing when he grabbed a patrolman's gun and killed two officers and a radio dispatcher. 'And he knew it was wrong,' she said."
No Shit... (Score:2, Insightful)
--
Have you tried your Hot Coffee lately?
...also (Score:5, Funny)
Re:...also (Score:1)
Re:...also (Score:1)
Re:...also (Score:1)
Sad... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sad... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, yeah. It's easy to blame your past for *any* action.
There's plenty to be said for the kid's instinct. I don't really think it's unfair to say that he did what he did because it had worked for him before in other impulsive situations. He stole a gun from a cop and shot all three in the head. He wasn't shooting blindly, he was executing with intent to escape. He must have learned this *somewhere*.
But I feel as though it's an absurd defense to blame Grand Theft Auto for a shooting and claim it obscures your judgement of right and wrong. That doesn't mean he didn't learn "technique" or behaviour from a videogame, but that'd be like blaming Law and Order: SVU for a rape charge. We see plenty of things we're not supposed to do all the time on TV, in movies, and in games. We don't do them in real life because we understand the difference between the two things.
Nod (Score:3, Interesting)
And it also sickens me that it has become a trend not to take responsibility for your own actions. Like blaming obesity on McDonalds.
Now I want to file a law suit. Umm, let's see...for mental anguish caused as a result of being subjected to stupidity.
Re:Nod (Score:1)
Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:3, Insightful)
I am a HUGE fan of Law and Order: Lenny (aka the original series). "SVU" or "CI" never made an impression on me; they just seemed "slightly more extreme and more dodads to keep the unwashed masses watching".
The final straw was last weekend, when I caught a Law and Order Criminal Intent (I think) episode- where a young man was drugging young women and doing things to them. One victim had her calf muscles cut out of her legs while she was aliv
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't believe this sick crap is considerd to be top-rated, good prime-time television, but one second of janet jackson's blurry patially-revealed nipple brings on an enormous fcc fine.
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:2)
Small point, but they believe in Santa and the Easter Bunny because their parents, whom they trust implicitly, lied to them about it from the moment they were old enough to understand the concept.
They see images of Santa and the Easter Bunny, but it's the parents who (explicitely, by telling them or implicitly, by playing along and not correcting them) tell the child they're real, and should be believed-in.
Ditto violence and anti-social
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:2)
They see images of Santa and the Easter Bunny, but it's the parents who (explicitely, by telling them or implicitly, by playing along and not correcting them) tell the child they're real, and should be believed-in.
What do you mean, they lied to them? Santa exists! I know, I see him in the mall every year.
You
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:2)
Bilocation? No, that's Jesus, and we all know he's a myth...
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:1)
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:2)
Yeah, after watching Bugs Bunny cartoons, kids are dropping anvils on each other in the schoolyard all the time. I suppose that if we're really conservative with the 'up until a certain age' statement, there is some basis of reality in what you just said, however; I do not feel that it applies to any school-aged kids. Children c
Re:Child mindsets, Law and Order Criminal Intent (Score:2)
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
Re:Sad... (Score:1)
I do think that the video game thing does have some truth in it, though, because some kids have been playing video games since they were very young - however, I think this says more about the negative effects of bad parenting more t
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
Why?
I have an older brother who loved horror movies, so literally the first movies I ever remember seeing were chock full of violence. I basically popped out and became a child of Nightmare on Elm Street.
There's a lot of time in one day, my mom had plenty of time to teach me what's right and what's wrong.
If anything, the subjection to vio
Re:Sad... (Score:1)
In other words, yeah, Jason killed people, but Neo made it look like it was cool to do. "Friday the 13th" sends the message that Jason killed all these people, it was gross, it was a bad thing, everyone hated him for it, and he must've been pretty mental to do
Re:Sad... (Score:1)
When I was a kid, me and my friends used to play guns. We would take our little plastic rifles and pistols, then we would go out and shoot each other. Whenever we got shot we would pretend to be dead, and it was a lot of fun. We made it "cool" to go around shooting people. How
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
Even if it's an action flick it's o.k. for a child to watch violent media.
The reasoning is if your parent can teach you the difference between 'senseless' violence and 'meaningful' violence, you're o.k. (e.g. There's no such thing as 'meaningful' violence unless you're defending yourself.) This goes along with the child poster to your argument who puts the responsibility on the parent.
I suppose you could simplify it by saying:
A. Ba
Re:Sad... (Score:1)
However, since (I think) most (or, at least, a great deal) of this development happens between the ages of 2 and 6 (past that, most kids can distinguish right from wrong), your list is flawed. It should look more like this:
A. Parents B. Siblings C. Other relatives D. Friends E. Peers F. Media
Here's why: the child probably isn't in school yet (if he is, it's
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
No problem.
Re:Sad... (Score:1)
He brought up the point that in Friday the 13th, killing was made to look bad because Jason was gross and evil. In The Matrix, killing was thought to be cool because of Neo.
I was just saying that it doesn't matter how the violent media is displayed. A parent who is involved in their child's life is more than capable of cancelling out or as you already said enhancing the effects of
Re:Sad... (Score:2)
Re:Sad... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:People like this... (Score:1)
Re:People like this... (Score:1)
IOW Charles Manson should be in a correctional facility, NOT in jail, because he's insane and needs mental help, which isn't available in a jail. OJ should be in jail because he knows what he did was wrong, understands why, and did what he did out of anger, not out of insanity.
norman, please coordinate... (Score:4, Funny)
ILLOGICAL! ILLOGICAL! THIS DOES NOT COMPUTE!
Re:norman, please coordinate... (Score:1)
Re:norman, please coordinate... (Score:1)
In other words, Grokster got sued and gun makers didn't because you can't pirate movies and music without programs like Grokster and with these programs you can't do much other than pirate copyrighted material - but you can kill people without a gun and guns aren't just used for killing, they're also used for protection and for hunting.
Re:norman, please coordinate... (Score:2)
Re:norman, please coordinate... (Score:1)
The Bible made me do it! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:1)
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
Anyway, there are some translations that apparently omit SoS due to the fact that it comes off as a bit racy, so if you rate that, you'd wind up AOing that particular book. But then, if we go by ESRB rules, then yeah, just the "they knew each other" bits alone garner the AO rating for the collection.
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:1)
. . . What's Linux got to do with the Bible and the Song of Solomon?
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
Linux has distros.
Bibles have different translations, or variations.
He was making a joke about how he almost called different bible translations distros.
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
Don't forget the fact that the Song of Solomon would be alot racier if it was translated accurately -- the part where it goes 'thy navel is a cup that runneth over' or something along those lines -- the original word implied a place lower down that the navel!
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:1)
"Would you like a copy of the Book of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints?"
"Nope! Got my own! Got the best parts dogeared, too. This is where they rape the village whore... and this is where they kill the pagans..."
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:1)
I think 'R' would be too tame a rating for the OT. In order to properly rate it, you'd have to go ahead and revamp the entire rating system, then set a rating where only people over 600 were allowed to read it.
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
AO.
Re:The Bible made me do it! (Score:2)
"I would've gotten away with it too" (Score:1, Funny)
Re:"I would've gotten away with it too" (Score:1)
I'd say (Score:3, Insightful)
His mistake (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:His mistake (Score:2)
Replace Alabama with "ex-Confederate States" and it would be a bit more accurate. We could probably expand this past California too, but not sure what wording to use.
After RTFA... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:After RTFA... (Score:3)
It's the difference between a criminal and civil case. In a criminal case, it's "guilty beyond a reasonable doubt", which means "99.999% sure". In a civil case, the standard is "a preponderance of the evidence", or in layman-speak, "better than 50% chance". You might think that this is wrong, but it's how many families get some retribution on those who escape true justice, like OJ Simpson. In this case, of course, I totally side with the game maker and I'm glad to see the c
Re:After RTFA... (Score:3, Insightful)
they found him guilty BECAUSE the video game wasnt to blame, so what are they suing for?
Two reasons. First, money. Second, so they don't have to admit they are lousy parents - it's the game's fault, not theirs.
Re:After RTFA... (Score:1)
Actually, the people suing were not the parents from what I saw, but rather the victims of the officers killed. However, I imagine your first reason is on point. Thanks for giving the parents of the killer a potential lawsuit idea though! Although I'm sure a thousand slimy lawyers hav
Re:After RTFA... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:After RTFA... (Score:5, Insightful)
My local chain decided they would have none of this, and vowed to fight any such case brought against them in court. The frivolous lawsuits were curtailed pretty quickly, because the lawyers-for-hire figured out that this was no longer an easy way to make a quick buck.
Most businesses who have a lawsuit brought against them choose to settle because it is cheaper than fighting it out in court. Only the truly smart companies realize that this behavior just invites new lawsuits. Just look at what happened to mp3.com.
Re:After RTFA... (Score:2, Interesting)
I know I should feel sorry for these people as thier loved ones got shot and all, but all I can really feel at the moment is the urge to beat the everlasting shit out of them with a cluestick.
these stupid motherfuckers are doing more then just validating the killers defence, they're spitting on thier loved ones graves and cheapening thier memory in the process by using thier deaths as an excuse to grab some money.
Re:After RTFA... (Score:1)
Re:After RTFA... (Score:1)
Re:After RTFA... (Score:2)
He learned that he stood a chance of getting cancer from the trans-fat and he went on a killing spree because, well, he could potentially die soon any way.
How about this (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How about this (Score:1)
Re:How about this (Score:2)
"Darwin made me do it"
Get this... (Score:1)
Today, we always try to sue people. Sue, sue and sue. Sue McDonalds for selling food that's not good for you, suing some salesman because you were too ignorant to see that it was some kind of fraud and now you want to sue the video game makers? P-l-e-a-se!
I think that people are intelligent enough to make their own decisions. Kids should learn ho
Re:Get this... (Score:3, Funny)
you and i may be, but look around you, do you really want those people to be making decisions
Re:Get this... (Score:2)
'We'? How about the Americans ?
Re:Get this... (Score:1)
Re:Get this... (Score:1)
http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/bus-line-sues-wo
Re:Get this... (Score:1)
Re:Get this... (Score:2)
The victim's families... (Score:4, Informative)
Wow... just wow...
Does anyone else see the terrible, terrible irony here? If they held their logic true, they should be protesting the guilty verdict, since it obviously wasn't his fault, the video games did it. The article mentioned them hugging the prosecutor, so they were obviously pleased.
I hope they don't get one red cent.
Re:The victim's families... (Score:1)
Re:The victim's families... (Score:1)
yup, our lovable friend jack thompson http://ps2.ign.com/articles/640/640942p1.html [ign.com]
i can't wait to see this scumbucket in hell
Re:The victim's families... (Score:2, Interesting)
from heaven right???
Re:The victim's families... (Score:1)
Re:The victim's families... (Score:1)
Re:The victim's families... (Score:2)
I sympathize. . . (Score:1)
My friends ask "why not burn the game, make i
Good Verdict, let's hope it sticks (Score:1)
Best news Ive heard all day. (Score:2)
Im glad. (Score:2)
A really good day. Good job judge.
the paradox (Score:1)
Re:jail (Score:2)
1: to protect the public
2: to make others think twice before committing the crime.
3: to rehabilitate prisoners so that on release they don't re-offend. (many prison systems unfortunately have the opposite effect).
4: to get reven^W^Wpunish them for what they have done.