Pakistan Bravely Fights Back Against Fictitious Plot In Video Game
from the just-a-game dept
It's becoming something of a trend for Pakistan to ban and/or boycott things it doesn't like. It should be noted, of course, that different cultures have different levels of sensitivity about different subjects, but that doesn't mean we can't point out where we think they've got things wrong. Banning YouTube, for instance, is a head in the sand approach that just won't work. Getting into the business of monitoring all of your citizen's communications with foreigners and banning encryption is even more chilling. And it isn't just the Pakistani government getting into the act, either. Recall that one of their citizens called for the death penalty on the founders of Facebook due to some contest a Facebook user ran. So, while I'm all for cultural sensitivity, it shouldn't be expected in arenas where that sensitivity is not reciprocated.Which is why I feel comfortable laughing hysterically as some Pakistani shopkeepers are boycotting two video games because they don't like how the fictional plot line portrays Pakistan.
Both Medal of Honor: Warfighter and Call of Duty: Black Ops II are first-person shooter games, where players take on the persona of an American special forces agent and feature ultra realistic graphics. Terrorism and the role of local security forces are hugely sensitive subjects in Pakistan, which has barely recovered from the shock of discovering that Osama bin Laden was hiding in plain sight, barely 30 miles from the capital Islamabad.I'll leave the politics aside here, but it takes a special kind of awesome to be in nearly un-recoverable shock that bin Laden was hiding in your country when most of the world's media was suggesting as much for something like a decade. That he hid so easily near the nation's capital in a complex that was just begging to be investigated at the very least opens up the door for creative interpretations for how that might have happened. And that's exactly what the two games in question offer up as a fictional plotline. For example:
The latest installment of the Medal of Honor series opens with American Navy Seals coming ashore in Karachi docks on a mission to destroy a black market arms shipment. But when their detonation sets off a second, bigger explosion they realise they have stumbled on a much bigger terrorist plot, sparking a global manhunt. A chaotic car chase through the city follows amid warnings that the ISI - Pakistan's intelligence agency - is on the way.In other words, the game has a plot that involves Pakistani intelligence cooperating with terrorists. That's a possibility about as shocking as, oh, say bin Laden hiding a paper airplane's throw away from Pakistan's capital. But the point is that it's a fictional plot. Fighting against it is silly. You might as well outlaw the Narnia books, because wardrobe-makers are insulted that any of their products could transport folks to witch-infested worlds ruled by multi-syllabic lions. What possible explanation could Mr. Memon have for this call to boycott?
Mr Memon added there was a danger children would be brainwashed into thinking foreign agents were at war inside Karachi, possibly leading them into the arms of militants.
"These games show a misleading idea of what is happening in the city. You don't get the CIA all the way through Grand Theft Auto," he said.Quite true. On the other hand, no American stores in New York, Vegas, or L.A. are calling for a boycott of the GTA games because their cities are shown to be infested with shotgun wielding caricatures of Western culture. Because it's fiction.
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Filed Under: pakistan, video games
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In any case, I'd say it's not only a matter of not distinguishing between fiction and reality. It's about intolerance. And if I might add, it's from both sides of the coin.
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More Terrorism, Repression, Religious BS, and to end this Comment I will State:
Backwards Mentality comparable in some ways to the Days of Church & State.
And at the same time they got Modern Weapons to play out their Games.
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Uh, pretty sure the Feds make an appearance in various GTA games, doing various shady things.
"People have issues to separate what's fictional from reality. Ishihara and that moronic unicef branch in Japan are good examples. For them mangas about school girls lives is child porn."
He's not a good example for this; his attack on anime and manga is for the medium, not the content. Go take a look at some of his novels.
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Is there such a game?
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However, if no such game exists then it's not a sign that nobody will carry it, so the original criticism is irrelevant.
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http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=cd2d22f491
It appears to be a sniping game.
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People of Pakistan have suffered enough humiliation from your American companies.
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Re: People of Pakistan have suffered enough humiliation from your American companies.
A couple of questions:
1. How is one small sect of a nation's federal police force being portrayed as an enemy in a fictional game qualify as "humiliation"? I would suggest that it in fact does not.
2. You are not enemies in all, or even most of our games. Your hyperbole will win you no converts.
3. "The prophet Muhammad(PBUH)ridiculed in your media and your internet." Now this is just silly. America has bent over backwards to be as inoffensive as possible to your religion in particular, despite what that says about us as a free speaking nation. Your religion's intolerance for free speech in non-Muslim world's however, has some rather unfortunate trouble spots in its history. For example, see Salmon Rushdie. That said, it would be inappropriate to paint the entire religion with that extremist bunch, so I suggest you not do likewise with us if you want there to be tolerance between us.
4. "We do no have to tolerate your disrespect." Of course you don't. But I don't have to tolerate your intolerance, either. That's how this whole free speech thing works. If your ideas had merit, they wouldn't need boycotts and censorship to find a foothold. Sadly....
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Re: Re: People of Pakistan have suffered enough humiliation from your American companies.
Well, I suppose if it is true it may be a bit humiliating.
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Re: People of Pakistan have suffered enough humiliation from your American companies.
A couple of questions:
1. How is one small sect of a nation's federal police force being portrayed as an enemy in a fictional game qualify as "humiliation"? I would suggest that it in fact does not.
2. You are not enemies in all, or even most of our games. Your hyperbole will win you no converts.
3. "The prophet Muhammad(PBUH)ridiculed in your media and your internet." Now this is just silly. America has bent over backwards to be as inoffensive as possible to your religion in particular, despite what that says about us as a free speaking nation. Your religion's intolerance for free speech in non-Muslim world's however, has some rather unfortunate trouble spots in its history. For example, see Salmon Rushdie. That said, it would be inappropriate to paint the entire religion with that extremist bunch, so I suggest you not do likewise with us if you want there to be tolerance between us.
4. "We do no have to tolerate your disrespect." Of course you don't. But I don't have to tolerate your intolerance, either. That's how this whole free speech thing works. If your ideas had merit, they wouldn't need boycotts and censorship to find a foothold. Sadly....
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Re: People of Pakistan have suffered enough humiliation from your American companies.
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Re: People of Pakistan have suffered enough humiliation from your American companies.
"We are enemies in your games."
So are Japanese, Germans, Chinese, British, Africans and even Americans depending on the game. Why should you be treated specially?
"The prophet Muhammad(PBUH)ridiculed in your media and your internet."
Jesus, Yahweh and Xenu are also mocked and ridiculed. Probably the only god that gets regular praise online is Cthulhu, and I doubt most people are doing so seriously. The deity you've chosen to worship doesn't get any more or less consideration than the fictions of other religions.
"your internet"
The internet's American now? Why are you here?
"We do no have to tolerate your disrespect."
Well... bye...
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And, that probably was going to be the plot of Condemned 3, if the second game's sales hadn't doomed the franchise.
More vaguely, Splinter Cell: Conviction is about going after the government, if not specifically assassinating government figures.
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