Don't judge me too harshly for this; I'm just trying to point out the other side of the debate, so that this doesn't become just a flame thread. Those annoy me.
Jobz post=18.72956.779277 said:
Parents who try to get violent games banned are just plain silly. It won't work because the right to create, produce and distribute these games are protected under the right to free speech which most developed countries have.
While this may very well be true, a country also has the right to protect the
moral integrety of it's people, even if it means stamping on the first amendment. To put this in perspective, let me use a much different example that constitutes, in essentiallity, exactly what you're saying.
About two years ago my uncle, a decorated Green Berett, died in Iraq. After his burial in Arlington National Cemetary, there was a memorial held for him in his hometown, which I attended. While we were there, a religious group from Tenesee (I think it was) interrupted our memorial by shouting such statements as "THE ARMY IS GAY!", "AMRICA IS GOING TO HELL!", and other such slanderous statements. After they did this for about fifteen minutes, everyone, disheartened, left (on a side note, a couple of them, including my grandmother, were followed home and harassed there. Most of them were arrested, but I know for a fact that a couple of the ones that harassed my grandmother had to be taken to a hospital; another one of my uncles apparently beat the ever-loving shit out of them).
A couple of weeks later, my grandmother (this is when we were still on speaking terms) hands me several pieces of paper and says that I need to get as many signatures as I can on it. It was a petition for a bill, the Let Them Rest In Peace Act. It would prohibit petitioners from entering a 200 yard radius of a funeral or a memorial. Well long story short, it passed (I personally got at least 1000 signatures, including most of my teachers and classmates; I made a formal request during first hour the day I got it) unanamously.
About a week later, the ACLU field a counter claim, stating that the bill "stomped on the first amendment". I kid you not. While it may be true that it destroyed their first amendment rights, all they were doing was slandering a dead soldier and our country.
Let me turn that around, so you can see it from the perspective of someone who doesn't aprove of violent video games, "Why do your first amendment rights superceed my child's mental saftey? If these games do cause violence, then developers shouldn't even be allowed to make them."
On some level they have a point; while some violent games do, in fact, have a point (I'd hold up COD4 and Half-life (well, everything after the original half-life) as a reference, and perhaps DMC3, because that was one hell of a point in my eyes) most of them are just insipid boom-feasts. Does that mean they cause violence, or that they should be banned, even if they don't? No; but it makes the point that much harder to defend. An art form is only as good as it's best work, and if no one can find it's best work, then it's a moot point anyway.
I've taken it upon myself to highlight certain points of contention for your viewing pleasure. Or, more, so you won't be as confused by what I'm going to say.
Jobz post=18.72956.779277 said:
(1)They just want to ruin everyone else's fun because they're too damn lazy to be real parents for a change and make sure that their children play age appropriate games. They don't want to take ten seconds out of their precious time to look at the rating. How do you think kids get those games anyway? (2)The stores won't sell them to anyone under 17 without a parent/guardian present.
Here's where I start to get insulted. First off, this is self supportive bullcrap. You're trying to prove yourself right by generalizing things. Let me correct you on a couple of matters.
1) This isn't nessecarally true. The parents who buy mature games for their children either
A, by which I mean the most part) belive their children are mature enough to know that video games aren't real (EDIT: These people don't complain to anyone about the violence in video games because they know about it) and
B, by which I mean the people you hear about) think of video games specificaly in the terms of Tetris.
Meaning the people you hear about don't know that there are games like GTA or Manhunt. They probobly lead very busy lives, and dont' watch much TV, so they don't see the advertisements, as few as they are. That means they're
genuinely surprised when these games turn out to be as violent as they are. And they pitch a fucking fit, because even thought they don't spend nearly enough time with their children, they do genuinely care about them.
Or it could be the kid's grandmother coming in to see him having digital sex. One of the two.
2) No. This isn't true at all. Retailers aren't supposed to sell mature games to minors and storetenders, for the most part, don't sell mature games to minors, you can't possibly say that all storetenders don't sell video games to minors at all. There was a point, if I remember correctly, when everyone was either unaware or didn't care about video game ratings. This is going to automatically envoke the response, once the general public becomes aware of the level of violence in some games, that they have to make the laws stronger, which is going to entail the possibility of banning some games.
We are still dealing with this. You can't just ignore it, because it's a major part of their argument. You have to deal with the problem up front.
Jobz post=18.72956.779277 said:
Plus the studies on whether or not video games promote violence have been inconclusive, and they try to pass it off as fact that playing/watching violent things as a child will turn you into an inherently violent adult. It's ridiculous, it's saddening, and it's insulting.
Yes, the video game studies are inconclusive, which is the reason nothing extreme is being done, but some of these people are the same people that belive that even the threat of nuclear terrorism constitutes the invasion of a foreign nation. If there is even a possibility that video games could cause violent behavior, then that threat needs to be eliminated.
In order to counter an argument, you have to know exactly what that argument is; what's more, if an argument
is in fact, baseless, then you should be able to prove its baselessness (look, mommy, I made a new word!). Instead of slinging mud at each other, let's completely dismantle the opposition's arguments and prove them to be nothing but uneducated dribble. I'll even start it off...
Any sort of effective counter-argument to an anti-video game argument is that you can't dismiss an entire art form just because you don't apreciate it's material, because most of the people who make these arguments
don't apreciate video games as an art form. I don't particurally understand painitings (or photography) but that's not to say I don't respect them as an art form. If you want to really blow a person up, try using debate as an example.
Let's continue on this track; instead of saying "this is bullcrap and I adamantly disagee with it" over and over again, let's all try to make an argument supporting our case. That's the intellegent thing to do, right?
Apologies Abound
Note: *sigh* That took me almost an hour to do, ya know...