Originally posted by Darion
So, are you indicting video games or violence in the media in general? I would agree on the latter, but most argue that video games are the primary method through which children are turned into serial killers, and this I do not buy. Especially considering that the numbers do not support it.
I'm indicating both. You can't JUST agree with the latter and not the former. I mean if you agree that watching violence in the media can have an effect on you, how can you disagree that playing it out and *ahems* WATCHING IT through video games does not?
I don't think its the primary method at all. Point is, there are MOUNDS of things that pile up to cause such things. Its like the swiss cheese model for incident assessment used in Air Traffic Control (found here). Its never just one thing that causes the incident. Its like multiple things that line up just right to allow a single hole through the entire model. In Aviation everyone either blames 1) the pilot or 2) the Air Traffic Controller, nevermind the countless other factors that had impact to the issue in question. The point is, Video Games CAN BE one of those things that contributes. I don't think there's an argument in the world that can refute that, once again if they don't have any influence over your behaviour go look up the thread "How I realized I'm addicted to Thresh" and you'll see multiple indications. To say its the PRIMARY and ONLY reason for such behaviour is false as well, but to outright dismiss it altogether because its not the only reason is just as false.
So with that lets go back to what DR Phil said there Darion:
I read that and thought he's NOT talking about the V Tech shootings specifically, rather he's making a societal statement regarding the issue of violence in "youth". And even then he admits that video games are not some be all and end all when it comes to violence in youth. He quite explicitly states that it is only a contributing factor "You take that and mix it with....."
DR. PHIL: Well, Larry, every situation is different… The question really is can we spot them. And the problem is we are programming these people as a society. You cannot tell me - common sense tells you that if these kids are playing video games, where they’re on a mass killing spree in a video game, it’s glamorized on the big screen, it’s become part of the fiber of our society. You take that and mix it with a psychopath, a sociopath or someone suffering from mental illness and add in a dose of rage, the suggestibility is too high.


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