PlayStation Driver Turns Killer
from the ban-racing-games! dept
For all the people out there who want to ban first-person shooter video games because they think it makes children shoot up schools, here's another target: it's time to ban racing games. I'm sure some folks are going to start suggesting that after hearing that a teenager killed a woman after taking a car for a joyride. He had never driven before and his only experience "driving" a car had been by playing games on his PlayStation. Of course this happened in Australia where people apparently aren't quite as litigious in the US. The family of the woman who has killed has said they "forgive" the teen and hope he gets a light sentence. In the US, they'd already be suing the kid, his parents, Sony for the PlayStation, and whoever made the driving game he used.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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so true
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America ..
C'mon, folks, those out-of-work lawyers have to do SOMETHING! Send this boy to camp? Send that boy to the Audi dealer or something.
Quite seriously, though, the US has a society that likes to point a finger and say "YOU did that", but I think it's really a case of not pointing a finger and saying "*I* did that". It seems that Americans - as a group - don't seem to like to admit they blew it, and I'm not sure if that's because it opens them up to lawsuits or not. That's, imho, what's contributing to this litigious society. The logic's circular, but I'm not sure which chicken or egg came first.
The isn't-my-fault problem is a larger one, and we can see it in everything from child behaviour (who brought that screaming kid to Denny's any way?) to shopping (okay, so you don't need light-bulbs; can you put them back in the light bulbs aisle?). It's just no one's fault, no one's responsibility, and it's making the common man that much more of a commoner.
I guess all that litigation is required, so that people will have a Policy they can look up and use to dictate their everyday behaviour. Should I let that old man cross the street in front of me? Should I hold the door open, or will she sue me for discrimination? Should I refrain from running over the Handy Dart driven by the drunk, obese woman, swerving into the 45mph traffic, even if it means hitting the obscenely big-and-thirsty SUV house-boat driven by the soccer-mom who's sharing her time between driving and giving her spoiled brats time-outs for fighting over the remote control to the DVD payer?
It's apparent that we need new policies down here, but I'm not sure which ones.
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Re: America ..
"When you raise youre hand a point a finger, three curl around to point back at you".
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As opposed to?
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Ghandi
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