CX wrote:The thing is, laws only matter to the people who follow them. Did that Virginia Tech kid care that it was against the law to bring guns on campus? Would any criminal care that guns are banned anywhere? And even if you did manage to reduce the number of firearms in criminal hands, it's been seen in places where gun bans are in place (like the UK) that knifings and other violent crime go up, simply because the same criminals have found new weapons.
The argument made for "getting rid of guns" isn't that the criminals would care that it's illegal to own one, it's an argument made on the basis that fewer guns available means it would be tougher to get one. And I didn't say IMPOSSIBLE to get one so nobody needs to go off all "Oh there will always be guns smuggled in", well sure, but basic logic tells you that if something's legal and every law abiding citizen is X and every criminal is Y then the people that have the thing that's legal is gonna be Y + some fraction of X whereas if it's illegal and you still treat teh groups the same, the only people that are going to have them are some fraction of Y, none of X. The argument isn't that criminals will care what the laws are, it's about accessibility.
CX wrote:Alelou wrote:You add guns to a culture where life is cheap and kids grow up playing violent video games in houses where the parent never really grew up, then add in a warring gang or three, and you've got a really scary environment.
Much like guns, you cannot blame games for violent crimes, and no offense to you, but that's a Jack Thompson train of thought. Like with anything else, if someone is predisposed to violence, then violent video games would appeal to them, make sense? This does not, however, mean that playing violent video games makes one more predisposed to violence. If anything, if a kid can't tell the difference between the fantasy of a game or any other form of entertainment, then it is the parents fault for not insilling that ability or any other values in their children. Plus, I'm a big fan of first person shooters. Halo and F.E.A.R. are my favorite games. But I have yet to even be involved in a serious fight, and the only two I've been involved in were both initiated by someone else, and I stopped as soon as the threat to myself was past. I don't go around shooting people either, and I hardly think that life is cheap.
I don't think playing violent video games "predisposes" a person to violence because to me that word means "more likely to commit violence", but what I do think violent video games do is desensitize, and when I say this I'm talking about myself, I'm not like some child psychologist sitting in a lab. I think it is easier for me to be comfortable with the idea of taking a life because I've done it so many times on screen, I honestly do. It's all Pavlovian psychology and all that crap, it's conditioning.
And there's a book called On Combat by a LtCol Grossman from US Army SF that talks about this, how we can see from post-war studies and statistics that back in the day in WW1 or WW2, that the average man who was left to his own devices WOULD NOT fire his weapon and kill the enemy. When no one was round and no officers or NCOs were breathing down his neck to pull the trigger, something like less than 20% of troopers would pull the trigger and kill a man. In Vietnam that number was more like 50% and today it's even higher, something like 80 or 90, and Grossman (having trained warriors in the Army for like 25 years) attributes a lot of our modern day advances in realistic training and force-on-force training simulations, which include video game simulations.
Now, this isn't to say that after taking a life, a person like me who was desensitized to the aversion to killing before hand doesn't start shaking and puking his guts out in horror at what he just did, but the important point is the lack of aversion to doing it in the first place. I'll pull that trigger, and I think it's because we're a lot more accustomed to killing.
While we SAY that we don't consider life cheap, we see death and destruction every day on every media outlet there is and in our entertainment. I'm not going to stop seeing it, because I like it, but I still think it's affecting us.