And 89% of grandparents thought that heavy metal was a problem. They are just attacking things they don't understand. It happens with every new form of entertainment. This whole issue will disappear once the gamer generation are the ones in charge
Just stop with this shit, do we really have to go into why this statement is asinine or can we just let it drop as a poor choice of words?Moth_Monk said:Sometimes I wonder if it's true that Americans are stupid.... >.>
ShinyCharizard said:And 89% of grandparents thought that heavy metal was a problem. They are just attacking things they don't understand. It happens with every new form of entertainment. This whole issue will disappear once the gamer generation are the ones in charge
Chances are we'll be blaming Holodecks and Virtual reality for all of our kids problems. Though too be honest I think our generation is going to be more open to new things than those before us. At least I hope that will be the case.Verkula said:ShinyCharizard said:And 89% of grandparents thought that heavy metal was a problem. They are just attacking things they don't understand. It happens with every new form of entertainment. This whole issue will disappear once the gamer generation are the ones in charge
I wonder what the gamer generation will blame, and I also wonder If any generation will look back and realize the same shit is happening over and over again.
From the way the media represents us, the US (and especially the meat and potatoes midwest where I'm from) must sound like a terrifying place to the nice, plush, gun-free countries.Stavros Dimou said:Uhm... Sorry,excuse my question which might sound silly to you,but I don't live in USA.
Is USA a place where pistols are sold in supermarkets next to butter products, and are casually left on top of dinner tables in the households like they are ashtrays or something,and parents give rifles and shotguns to their teen kids as rewards and presents for their birthdays ?
And if the answer is 'yes' then you think that video games are the most concerning factor for the violence of minors ?
The truth is that according to psychology young kids tend to have idols that want to be like them,and that they are not mature enough to think of the importance of the consequences some actions would have in the real world,so taking that in mind,yeah,young kids should be shielded from violence.
"monkey see monkey do" as they say.
But if the kid just sits for eating its launch on the table,and there are assault rifles all over the dinner table,then perhaps there are more serious matters that need concern.
I'd never heard of them either (mabye because I'm not American), but after spending five minutes on Google looking into them they don't seem to be extremists or anything - compared to a lot of other groups, they sound like they actually have a pretty reasonable approach.ohnoitsabear said:Yeah, I'm not going to trust a study from a group called Common Sense Media. They sound like they have an agenda to push, which means their study is probably biased as fuck.
I doubt it. People always look to blame everything but the real cause for what others and themselves do. They always have, it's human nature. Our generation will find something else to blame everything on, even if it's no longer video games. Besides, our generation might still do blame video games too, the reason that the media is targeting games right now is because video games are an easy target, and it'll still unfortunately be an easy target a few decades from now.ShinyCharizard said:Chances are we'll be blaming Holodecks and Virtual reality for all of our kids problems. Though too be honest I think our generation is going to be more open to new things than those before us. At least I hope that will be the case.Verkula said:ShinyCharizard said:And 89% of grandparents thought that heavy metal was a problem. They are just attacking things they don't understand. It happens with every new form of entertainment. This whole issue will disappear once the gamer generation are the ones in charge
I wonder what the gamer generation will blame, and I also wonder If any generation will look back and realize the same shit is happening over and over again.
Acutally, they did ask about stuff other than video games including bullying, easy access to guns, TV and movies, real life crime, toys, sports and music. Some of the questions lumped, TV, movies, games and music together.Caramel Frappe said:They should of done a survey for the parents showing movies, books, and television too in order to see if they'd say the same thing.