Umm, that's exactly what this is. They're changing a small part of their game in order to appeal to a broader audience based on initial reactions. How is this any different?Char-Nobyl said:Nope. They don't. Movies alter more graphic content to lower the rating. This has nothing to do with the rating. Or, alternatively, they change endings or smaller parts based on test screenings. Again, no the same thing.
Right, actually. That is exactly right. US Constitutional rights guaranty US citizens freedom from government interference in specific places. That's how it works. That's why the majority of the Bill of Rights starts with the phrase "Congress shall make no law," because that is all it guarantees. That Congress will not make a law infringing on the enumerated right. After the 14th Amendment, select other rights (including freedom of speech) were applied to State governments as well, so that State Governments cannot infringe these rights either. That's right, the state government of any US State could actually pass laws against, for example, Freedom of Press until 1929. Because until that year, the constitutionally guaranteed right only applied to the Federal Government.Char-Nobyl said:Yeah, because the government passing laws is the only way that Constitutional rights have ever been infringed on, right?
Have you never heard of Segregation Academies? They started up in the 50s after Brown v Board required all public schools be integrated. So, some private schools declared themselves Whites Only, and as long as they got no government money, there was nothing the government could do to shut them down. Most of them have closed down or changed policies, but a few still exist today. It's not illegal. Any parent can choose to send their kid to any school they want so that they do not meet other races. They just cannot receive any public money for this.
I really want you to stop for a minute, take a step back and think. Because here is what you are doing. You are saying that public outcry is akin to government interference by invoking a Constitutional argument. You are saying that something illegal took place when people expressed offense by EA's decision to use the word Taliban. You are saying that it is wrong for a company to follow the market.
But even worse, you are comparing the publishing of a game to civil rights struggles. You mention the Muslim Community Center in Lower Manhattan, you mention Rosa Parks. How can you compare these issues? You're coming across as a really spoiled brat with no real world knowledge. Rosa Parks spent time in prison for not moving on the bus. She spent time in prison. You're bitching about a word change in a video game.
You're calling it art, but most famous artists died in poverty because they couldn't sell their work because nobody wanted it. Van Gogh sold one painting in his entire life because his stuff was too weird for the time. That was not a violation of his rights, even if he lived in modern America. You can't sell what people won't buy. That's the cost of artistic integrity. And EA isn't in the business of art, they're in the business of selling video games.
Please, take a civics class and an economics class and then come back. It's embarrassing, frankly.
EDIT: Fixed the quotes