So wait... news media "sensationalization" of these events, causes more of them, but pop culture like movies and video games doesn't?
So, Columbine inspire shooters, but Scarface doesn't? So Virginia Tech inspires more, but GTA doesn't? So Sandy hook inspires more, but Matthew Reilly doesn't?
Really gamers, come the fuck on, you're embarrassing me. Stupid speculation about games causing these acts is bad. Moronic defenses by Jim Sterling make us look foolish, and then making exactly the same claim about other forms of media makes us look retarded. The critics of violence in games say it inspires violence, and then we say that the news media reporting on it inspires violence. So, media representations of violence, and the making of celebrities from violent characters inspires violence? You don't see the parallels between the two lines of reasoning?
Before someone gets the wrong idea-I love my violent video games. I split my time between Mount and Blade, Skyrim, Gmod, Red Orchestra and CoD. But we don't need to get all scared about defending them. If they try to ban them, we can stop them. If they say something that's factually in error (Fox on Mass Effect, Jack Thompson on GTA), we can shut them down. When they make stupid connections between things, we can point it out. But try to claim similar things about the news is ridiculous.
Especially when you get all anti-science about it. Here's a list of things that cause aggression:
-Loud violent music
-Swearing
-Violent films
Really, I'd be suprised if violent video games didn't cause aggression. It still wouldn't show that they caused actual violence, and it still wouldn't show that they needed to be banned over anything else. See, science has no problem with it! Of course there are the dodgier people out there (*cough* Susan Greenfield), who are attempting to, with flawed studies, inform people that video games cause violence. Who tears them apart? Science and science media.
Here's some food for thought-maybe they make violent video games because they sell. Maybe they cover school shootings, because that's what people watch above other topics. It's convenient to call the news media leeches and the like, but seriously, we'd expect these things to be reported on. It's the quantity and the availability of the reporting, and the period over which it happens that gets to us. But as long as people are still interested, the news media gets money by doing it, so they keep doing it. The reporting is a by-product of the viewing habits. We can't just get away from it by scapegoating the media as the evil, it's simply giving us what they think we want. It'll change when enough people aren't interested in it any more.
So, Columbine inspire shooters, but Scarface doesn't? So Virginia Tech inspires more, but GTA doesn't? So Sandy hook inspires more, but Matthew Reilly doesn't?
Really gamers, come the fuck on, you're embarrassing me. Stupid speculation about games causing these acts is bad. Moronic defenses by Jim Sterling make us look foolish, and then making exactly the same claim about other forms of media makes us look retarded. The critics of violence in games say it inspires violence, and then we say that the news media reporting on it inspires violence. So, media representations of violence, and the making of celebrities from violent characters inspires violence? You don't see the parallels between the two lines of reasoning?
Before someone gets the wrong idea-I love my violent video games. I split my time between Mount and Blade, Skyrim, Gmod, Red Orchestra and CoD. But we don't need to get all scared about defending them. If they try to ban them, we can stop them. If they say something that's factually in error (Fox on Mass Effect, Jack Thompson on GTA), we can shut them down. When they make stupid connections between things, we can point it out. But try to claim similar things about the news is ridiculous.
Especially when you get all anti-science about it. Here's a list of things that cause aggression:
-Loud violent music
-Swearing
-Violent films
Really, I'd be suprised if violent video games didn't cause aggression. It still wouldn't show that they caused actual violence, and it still wouldn't show that they needed to be banned over anything else. See, science has no problem with it! Of course there are the dodgier people out there (*cough* Susan Greenfield), who are attempting to, with flawed studies, inform people that video games cause violence. Who tears them apart? Science and science media.
Here's some food for thought-maybe they make violent video games because they sell. Maybe they cover school shootings, because that's what people watch above other topics. It's convenient to call the news media leeches and the like, but seriously, we'd expect these things to be reported on. It's the quantity and the availability of the reporting, and the period over which it happens that gets to us. But as long as people are still interested, the news media gets money by doing it, so they keep doing it. The reporting is a by-product of the viewing habits. We can't just get away from it by scapegoating the media as the evil, it's simply giving us what they think we want. It'll change when enough people aren't interested in it any more.