Trump's Video Game Summit: Developers On One Side, Partisan Hack Puritan Cosplayers On The Other
from the cool dept
As we wrote about, the White House's announcement of a summit with video game executives was initially a one-sided affair, with nobody in the video game industry having any idea what Sarah Sanders was talking about. The White House clarified afterwards that it would be sending out invites to industry representatives after the announcement -- which is weird! -- and it made good on that promise. We learned several days later that several invites had been accepted from within the industry, such as Robert Altman of Bethesda, Strauss Zelnick of Take-Two, and Michael Gallagher from the Entertainment Software Association. These are pretty much the names you would expect to be called to discuss video game violence, given the games produced by each organization, such as the Grand Theft Auto series.
Less expected was the list of fierce video game critics that were also invited, including Brent Bozell and Representative Vicky Hartzler of Missouri. Hartzler has been an avid critic of violent video games, while remaining a staunch supporter of gun rights, while Bozell is the founder of the Parents Television Council. The PTC is exactly the type of organization you're already imagining: a money-making machine built on the premise of the desire for a puritanical entertainment culture and one that is about as partisan as it gets. One other attendee at this summit of great minds was Retired Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, who trains police and advocates that they use more force rather than less, apparently at least in part due to his belief that officers that kill suspects will go on to have the best sex of their lives afterwards -- but for some reason still insists that violent video games are horrible and anyone who disagrees is the equivalent of a Holocaust denier.
In other words, this was almost perfectly crafted to be a shit-show.
And it seems that Trump's summit didn't disappoint in this regard. Reports indicate that the whole thing opened up, video game execs on one side of the table and their critics on the other, with Trump showing a sizzle reel of violent video games while commenting on how awful it all is.
Trump himself opened the meeting by showing “a montage of clips of various violent video games,” said Rep. Vicky Hartzler, a Republican from Missouri. Then, Hartzler said the president would ask, “This is violent isn’t it?”
“They were violent clips where individuals were killing other human beings in various ways,” she said.
One wonders just how violent everyone at the meeting suddenly became after witnessing this distillation of video game violence all in one sitting. For its part, the game execs attempted quite patiently to explain to Trump that science is a thing that exists, and that there have been studies done on the effects of video game violence, and how this is a meeting that never should have been called to order in the first place.
"We discussed the numerous scientific studies establishing that there is no connection between video games and violence, First Amendment protection of video games, and how our industry’s rating system effectively helps parents make informed entertainment choices," ESA said in a statement.
Whereas Bozell and Hartzler came away from the meeting bewildered why their non-scientific and ultimately unconstitutional recommendations hadn't been put in place years ago.
Bozell said he also communicated to Trump a need for “much tougher regulation” of the video-game industry, stressing that violent games “needed to be given the same kind of thought as tobacco and liquor.”
Hartzler, meanwhile, said she’s open to crafting legislation that would make it harder for youngsters to buy violent games.
“Even though I know there are studies that have said there is no causal link, as a mom and a former high school teacher, it just intuitively seems that prolonged viewing of violent nature would desensitize a young person,” she said.
"Even though science says otherwise, my magical powers granted to me by giving birth to a human being and teaching other human beings should rule the day" is an interesting argument for crafting legislation and policy, by which I mean that it's flatly insane.
The end result of this summit is about what you'd expect. It essentially serves for public self-gratification for those that think violent media is the culprit for all of America's violent ills, despite this media being available in roughly every other country where these same problems don't exist. The executives from the industry did right by pointing to such antiquated authorities as science and data, while their critics were left shaking their fists with the backing of the ethereal and non-quantifiable. Those outside the meeting with other ideas for crafting policy in the wake of the Florida shooting, meanwhile, saw this as the shiny distraction it was likely always meant to be.
“Focusing entirely on video games distracts from the substantive debate we should be having about how to take guns out of the hands of dangerous people,” Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said in a statement.
We need not agree with Blumenthal's policy prescription to recognize that his evaluation of this latest Trump summit is almost certainly correct.
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Filed Under: brent bozell, david grossman, donald trump, school shootings, vicky hartzler, video games, violence, violent video games
Reader Comments
The First Word
“"it just intuitively seems that..."
I've been trying to tell my bank that it just intuitively seems that I should have far more money in my account than my statement shows. I don't know why they won't just take my word for it.Subscribe: RSS
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You quibbling doesn't matter so long as Trump drives the agenda!
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Re: You quibbling doesn't matter so long as Trump drives the agenda!
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Re: You quibbling doesn't matter so long as Trump drives the agenda!
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Re: You quibbling doesn't matter so long as Trump drives the agenda!
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/trump-claims-database/?utm_term=.97c5c48bc30e
When you abandon reality, eventually the world abandons you.
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You can start crying your boner to sleep any time now.
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"it just intuitively seems that..."
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I’m surprised Trump didn’t call for a ban on Mortal Kombat on the spot. Maybe it has enough minorities getting decapitated for him to look the other way?
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He's just bought into the same tired arguments about immigrants that all but the upper classes dismiss. They're rich, so they should know what's fact, right? /sarcasm
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"I'm not racist, I'm just pretending to be, convincingly, because I know that some of my supporters are, and acting that way is a good way to get them to continue to support me."
That, even assuming it was true, would not really be any better.
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One of his sons made that very argument in his defense. 'Look, he has pictures that include black people, he can't be racist!'
Ignoring of course that just because you have a picture with someone, or even spend time with them, does not mean you necessarily like them, and that people will suck up to wealthy people if they think it will benefit them.
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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/jan/12/racism-and-donald-trump-a-common-thread-throu ghout-his-career-and-life
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Reporters took time to document this
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Re: Reporters took time to document this
Would you say the same if it was "violent internet content" rather than "violent video games" in the crosshairs? It would just be the next iteration of the SOPA/PIPA/SESTA/BS hydra to pop up.
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Ars Technica recently did some great research on the Biden meeting on the same topic ~8 years ago, and how he interacted with industry reps, and how his mind changed, and his approached changed, as information was provided to him. It shows a clear process of Biden taking the talking points he was given, going in with an open mind, and changing his mind as clear scientific evidence was presented to him.
Reporting on the Trump Meeting, shows a very different picture. Yes, it is similar to the pictures they keep painting of the Trump administration. But this news shows the current Administration's apathy for science and data based law making. It highlights the 'publicity stunt' nature of the Administration. This can help push Republicans to not re-nominate Trump under pressure from constituants to whom this subject matters (for or against, he did neither side favors with this stunt), and may provide ammunition for democrats up and down the card. It has value beyond the Legislative value.
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Letting yourself be trumped by facts isn't leadership. Leadership is trumping the facts, and its only fake news who wants to report about the sad loser facts.
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I do think that, to a certain extent, they're taking the bait here. This is a distraction created by the NRA, just like "let's arm teachers" is. Any reporting on this should come from that perspective: this is happening because the NRA is trying to distract the public from talking about gun control.
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Re: this is happening because the NRA is trying to distract ...
So how well is it working? A number of forums (like this one) are pointing out the First Amendment implications of trying to clamp down on movies and video games. Is that having an impact? Does framing it as a Second Amendment versus First Amendment smackdown help to make it front and centre in the public awareness?
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The students marching may not be of voting age this fall but 2020 is a different story. I wonder what kind of numbers we are talking about here.
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Re: Reporters took time to document this
...you...really don't think the President of the United States having an affair with a porn star, and then paying her $130,000 to buy her silence -- possibly using campaign funds to do so -- is newsworthy?
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Now if they only had the right of first reporting so that no other news outlet could report their 'breaking' news and capture ALL the income from that report. A report that is politically important, but belongs in the Sunday edition of a British newspaper in the section where they show some naked breasts.
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/sarcasm
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Trump said movies should have ratings.
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Yet another question
The answer might be found in how much Hollywood, and Hollywood related individuals, contribute to certain PAC's and directly to certain candidates. Those, of course, who support Hollywood doing whatever it wants, and pointing fingers at Silicon Valley, which is just a target that is easy to describe.
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Re: Yet another question
The broader issue is this: How can anyone possibly claim that any kind of media is responsible for causing violence when plenty of other countries read/play/watch/listen to the same media as the U.S.—because, you know, the U.S. exports it to those countries—yet do not suffer from the same plague of gun violence as does the U.S.?
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That does not mean that the issue cannot be resolved. To do so would take years, if not decades. The resolve question comes into what to do over those years and decades. Banning or controlling video games probably isn't one of them. Controlling what one watches on TV/cable probably also is not one of them. Getting parents and other adults who are involved with young people looking for signs, then doing something appropriate about those signs (sending them for more professional evaluation and counseling would certainly be a start, which then brings up cost and what to do about that?).
Training people what signs to look for, and how to respond is the first issue. Well maybe the second, who to train might be the first.
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No, the first issue is “what the blue bloody blazes do we do about all the guns that we have and those other countries don’t”. Everything else is behind that.
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I find it hard to place the blame on an inanimate object (the gun) rather than something psychological. Do guns contribute? No argument there, but the gun isn't the instigator.
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You just answered your own question there. Other countries that have both guns and access to media with violent content do not have nearly the same issues with guns because they have fewer available guns.
This is not to say that no space exists for the discussion of the effects of media on young minds. Of course it does—and I will gladly welcome it. But until someone can prove that violent media is a direct cause of violent actions, I’ll worry more about the easy availability of guns in the U.S. than the easy availability of the latest entry in the Call of Duty franchise.
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Prove to me that the easy availability of guns affects the mind of the person that pulls the trigger, and THEN you've got an argument.
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The easy availability of guns increases the chances of gun violence, regardless of the mental state of whoever owns a gun. A young child who accidentally shoots themselves with a parent’s gun may never have seen even a single second of violence-heavy media, after all.
Violence and crime will happen regardless of how many guns are available in the U.S.; I would be a fool to suggest or believe otherwise. But reducing the number of available guns will have an immediate effect on how much gun violence can be carried out in this country. The Parkland shooting, for example, might never have happened if the shooter had never been able to legally get his hands on an AR-15.
Guns make killing easier because “causing violent harm to living beings” is the sole reason for which guns exist. Make guns harder to get and you will make the act of murder a little harder for people with violent intent. What makes that logic so damn hard to undertstand?
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Gun culture also ties into the "rugged individuality" trope and ideas of masculine competence and dominance, e.g. "Consider your man card re-issued."
Gun culture subscribes to a toxic paradigm of masculinity and personal competence that infers that not having a gun means you're weak and dependent on others for protection whereas gun owners are completely self-sufficient. That's the problem; start there.
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The answer might be found in how much Hollywood, and Hollywood related individuals, contribute to certain PAC's and directly to certain candidates.
Nailed it in one. Going after them might results in some terse calls about how if movies aren't going to be as profitable thanks to stricter limits then clearly the studios aren't going to have as much money to spend on 'donations'. As such, movies and tv are right out, and couldn't possibly have anything to do with violent tendencies.
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Well, the lawmakers can try. But games have First Amendment protections now, and that limits to a severe degree what said lawmakers can do vis-á-vis making life difficult for game companies.
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Limits what they can do long-term
As copyright and patent trolls show, just because your odds of winning in court aren't good doesn't mean you can't make the other side pay, and pay dearly.
It costs politicians nothing more than some time to put together and pass a bill, whereas a company impacted has to pay quite a bit if they want to challenge it in court. The risk and cost is entirely one-sided, such that I imagine any politicians looking to 'persuade' companies to cough up some 'donations' would feel quite safe in doing so, even if the bills involved were ultimately shot down.
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"A well-trained populace, being necessary to the security of a free people, the right of the people to keep and play games shall not be infringed."
This is hardly a new problem: There were in Britain, at one time, laws against time-consuming outdoor entertainments that didn't involve archery--because they distracted people from practice that would make them good militia.
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The Second Amendment Is A Wonderful Red Herring
I’ve said before that the “right to bear arms” is a wonderful tool that the Government can use to take away your real rights. All it has to do is make a feint towards weakening the Second Amendment in some way, and wait for the inevitable hue and cry and strident calls of “from my cold, dead hands” etc.
Then, in the midst of this hullabaloo, it can sneak in laws to curtail your freedom of expression or some other important right. And everybody will be too distracted to complain, or even notice.
The idea that guns give you some protection against Government oppression is a complete joke. And achieves quite the opposite effect.
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Re: The Second Amendment Is A Wonderful Red Herring
Yes and no.
You're absolutely right that this is a distraction from the gun control debate.
But I don't believe for a second that it's going to result in any legislation.
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So will SDCC now sue Congress for having "Con" in its name?
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It should be noted,
It would be remiss to assume that the game industry is any different in that regard. Meanwhile the parent grieving over a grave has exactly how much to spend on conclusion driven research?
But by all means, you can read papers that might as well be titled: "How I sucked a corporate lawyers dick for my sociology research grant", and come to some conclusions.
There are of course, other ways to collect and evaluate data on this subject. But finding somebody with both the creds and the chops, who can do that research and still eat and pay the rent is a slightly different problem.
That somebody has an effective defense, doesn't make them right.
There is a point where interpersonal communication becomes battery. That point has been fairly well established over several decades of clinical psychology research. The diliterious effects of TV have also been well studied. The idea that games are completely without any negative impact, given what we otherwise know, is suspect to say the least.
So get back on your fiddle, and play me a tune about the undeniable innocence of people you drink beer with. But your not doing your brand any favors.
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On the flip side, the idea that games and other violent media are directly responsible for violent acts, gun-based or otherwise, is suspect to say the least. I was just shy of 10 years old when Namco released the original Splatterhouse on the TurboGrafx-16, and I have been playing violent video games since just around that age. Am I a little aggressive? Sometimes. Do I have violent thoughts? Show me someone who doesn’t. Did watching Johnny Cage decapitate people in Mortal Kombat or Tommy Vercetti blow away people in Vice City drive me to kill or harm other people? Fuck no.
If you want to talk about what possible effects that violence-laced media has on impressionable young minds, I’m all for it. But let’s not kid ourselves in thinking that said media is a direct cause—or the sole cause—of violence in our society. And let’s not further fool ourselves by thinking that banning violent media and leaving the actual tools of violence (i.e., guns) untouched will somehow stop all the violence. After all, if the government was to ban all media with even a hint of physical violence in it…well, I am pretty sure that The Bible would sure as shit qualify.
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Re: It should be noted,
It is a bit of a stretch to call that scientific, more like collusion.
"undeniable innocence of people"
Did you have a bad day? Why not tell us about it.
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Sounds sound.
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Less expected was the list of fierce video game critics that were also invited
Less expected? Really?
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If the problem is violent content...
I speak specifically of Movies and TV, far FAR more people watch people violently killed and maimed in movies and television shows than video games could ever hope to achieve.
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Re: If the problem is violent content...
I remember watching nightly news coverage of the vietnam war and was very grateful to have a high draft number. I noticed that such coverage was not afforded the public in any of the subsequent wars. Might be they did not want to repeat the 60s but ... here we go - they really think they can start up the draft again? This will not end well.
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Who thinks that?
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But it is not a stretch of the imagination to assume they have had talks about it and since they think they can do anything they want, it is inevitable. The shit will hit the fan.
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>“I would ask them respectfully for once to stop playing politics. If you care about this issue, you will look at Jonesboro, Ark.; Columbine; Newton, Conn.,” said Bozell. “In so many other places where you had mass shootings by children and every instance I just gave, that child who was the shooter was watching violent video games.”
Really? I'll bet in every instance, they were also drinking caffeinated soda a few days before the shooting! Do we need to ban that as well? Wait, I know what it was... it was the TERRORISTS! They breathed air, the shooters breathed air... coincidence?
Honestly though, between this and mom's magic feelings, you can't expect anything else. They're convinced of the rightness of their cause. No amount of science and logic is going to have any effect on that.
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Maybe they bowled, too.
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Because these folk are members of a cult which does not believe in science, logic or facts.
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Interesting. I just read an article reporting on a study which concluded that 80% of mass murders were committed by someone who had no interest in video games, violent or not.
Perhaps this Bozell character is a tad biased.
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It seems that some politicians and co-conspirators want to cause rioting and mayhem in their never ending quest for superiority over all things everywhere. The end justifies the means and they do not care about anything but winning, spiteful winning - must crush your opposition whomever it is.
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The only study that I thought was well covered only proved that games cause temporary bouts of aggression ie. "gamer rage". Those crazily destructive videos/gifs are an extreme version, but the feelings of "ARGH! I LOST AGAIN!!" are universal.
The vast majority of gamers will feel this "aggression" subside and fuel their desire to win the game or online game competition next time.
It happens in sports, any kind of competition or betting, too, people go (temporarily) apeshit when they lose. Most won't hurt someone, but usually express their feelings by yelling and/or hitting/throwing inanimate objects.
I'm not going to hurt, let alone kill another person just because I've tossed a controller across the room a few times and screamed in frustration. (What serious gamer hasn't done this?)
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Sounds like you've played Overwatch competitive.
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The end result of "I just know"
Did Hillary Clinton run a child-trafficing ring out of a pizza parlor in Washington? "I just know it's true" despite any evidence.
Did Hillary do something illegal by using a private e-mail server? "I just know it's true" despite numerous investigations by the FBI that didn't find anything.
Was Obama really born in Kenya? "I just know it's true" despite the fact that he showed his birth certificate over and over.
Has there been any proof that the government is going to take away people's guns, including the fact that the assault weapons ban was repealed? "I just know it's true".
And since our Dear Leader seems to be the master of "I just know it's true", of course video games cause violence.
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Re: The end result of "I just know"
Except they DID find wrong-doing. They just went on to say that they believed that no prosecutor would bring charges on said wrong-doing, despite the evidence... and they were right. No charges have been filed, nor are any expected at this time.
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Re: The end result of "I just know"
.... or a basement
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Re: The end result of "I just know"
Well now there is evidence, but it's Trump saying it not Obama or Clinton.
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Trump is half right, I will give him that...
They conveniently leave out the "Everyone who is not a white male is coming to rape you in the ass and steal your job." narrative. Or the "War on 'Christians'/Christmas/Jesus" narrative. Or the "War on our "Southern Heritage" narrative.
And as a final thought, a post I read on Reddit: "Would you rather have these kids pretend to be spec-ops in Call of Duty/Planetside 2/Battlefield, or would you rather have them pretend to be spec-ops with an AR-15 in the real world?"
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Violent video games
They played them...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=strWmj-vZ88
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Who will will take the blame for mass murders in the US?
Don't miss the fight on Mortal Kombat!
Only available in the United States!
Geo-blocking brought to you by the copyright cartel.
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Re: NRA (reality) vs. video games (fantasy)
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Thank you for post
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