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Tragedy on Virginia Tech Campus - 32 Killed
Message
De
17/04/2007 12:11:20
Mike Cole
Yellow Lab Technologies
Stanley, Iowa, États-Unis
 
 
À
17/04/2007 11:48:13
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Forum:
News
Catégorie:
Événements
Divers
Thread ID:
01216376
Message ID:
01216810
Vues:
17
>>>>>>>>>>http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=3045574
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>Our TV's says 34?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>If Michael Moore and your movies says true, your system helps people have gun easly. You should change this.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>Your perception is not correct. To obtain a gun legally, you have to be over 18 and go through a background check, and you have to license the gun. There isn't much we can do about people obtaining guns illegally, just as there isn't much we can do to prevent the sales of drugs.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>What would you recommend we do?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>I recommend a small change in cultural outlook.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>For example, maybe in movies, tv and games, shooting and killing could be treated as a 2nd resort instead of first?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Then, when killings like this happen, maybe the news media could stop turning these creatures into cult heros, and simply label them the cowards and garbage of society that they are without giving them pages upon pages of space for weeks on end.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>It is encouraging to see that you don't like Hollywood and media liberal elite, but still how you going to do it? Do you mean censorship?
>>>>>
>>>>>I realise that it's just a pipe-dream, but it would require a wholesale change in cultural attitude. It's not easy, but it can happen. There was a time when games didn't have ratings on them, but enough people became vocal enough about it that now they do. Little steps one at a time. Bottom line is that people have to want the changes. As long as people are satisfied with the status quo, as it appears that so many gun owners are, then little will ever change.
>>>>
>>>>Imho, these little changes move people to the opposite direction. Basically, TV started the process of making robotic idiots and Web/PC games finishing it.
>>>
>>>I watched a lot of TV and played a lot of video games growing up, and I am not a robotic idiot. In fact, I could argue that video games teach creativity, problem solving, and patience. I played some violent video games too, but I always knew it was a fantasy world that was not reality. Sure, I have imagined beating certain jerks to a pulp with a baseball bat ala some video games, but I knew that is not how society worked.
>>>
>>>Video games aren't the problem... lack of parenting is. Don't ban TV or video games... punish parents who don't teach their children differently!
>>
>>It is not so simple. Parents, even the best ones, cannot cover everything; and one cannot rely that they are the best. Most likely, 32 victims were good kids with good parents, but it took just one bastard to destroy everything. PC games affect human (esp. child) behavior, and they do it mostly in negative way. That's just the fact of life, no ways (e.g. punishment) to change it. Obviously, there are different people (parents and children) they will be affected differently; one can talk about averaged impact on societal level, but negative results could be very real.
>
>I agree. The other thing that seems to alwasys get overlooked is that not all kids are the same. Not everyone has the same intellecutal capacities. It's easy to say, "Anyone can see movies and games are fantasy". Well, unfortunately, that isn't really the case. And I agree that parents can't be everywhere all the time.

Yes, but should all kids be deprived of video games because one kid doesn't have the mental capacity to handle it? Or should the parents of that one kid have never given him a video game in the first place?

Should nobody be some vehicles because one crazy guy decided to run over a random person on the street?

Should all books be taken away because somebody read a Louis L'Amour book and he decided to have quick-draw fight with somebody else?
Very fitting: http://xkcd.com/386/
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