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Can we sit lawmakers down and slap some sense into them in the form of a "Today's Technology for Idiots" book?
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Why is it unconstitutional to ban minors from certain videogames, but it IS constitutional (supposedly) to ban them from certain magazines (i.e. porn)?
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Re:
Furthermore, the level of violence in most video games already exists on free television which is not regulated to that degree. So the precedent has been set. What's the point of regulating the consumption of video games to minors when you don't do the same to more readily accessible media like television?
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Re: Matt Bennett and Jim Norton
Jim: Clearly, you haven't been playing video games recently. Go play games like Postal and Grand Theft Auto. I guarantee that you will not find that level of violence OR obscenity in any television show (public or cable) or rated film.
Furthermore, games are different from television and film. The repetitive action and focus on honing skills makes them more of a learning tool than simply watching a TV series (where each episode is different and probably watched only once) or a movie. The U.S. military uses a console video game system to improve soldiers' shooting accuracy and instincts, for Pete's sake.
I think that the video game laws that have been proposed to date are unconstitutional, because they're overly broad and don't know what the heck they're trying to regulate. But I do think that access by minors to SOME of these games could and should be restricted under the same rationale we use to restrict minors' access to porn, alcohol, tobacco, and sex.
Oh, and the government also restricts the time slots in which radio and tv shows can broadcast content unsuitable to minors, so the whole video game thing really isn't as outrageous as you might think.
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Re: Re: Matt Bennett and Jim Norton
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