Fungi Forums
Miscellaneous => General Chat => Not at the Dinner Table => Topic started by: WarpRattler on June 27, 2011, 11:40:01 AM
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http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2011-06-27-supreme-court-violent-video-games_n.htm
Huzzah!
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That's-a so nice
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He said the ban was intended to permit parents "to direct the upbringing of their children"
I thought first off that the ESRB ratings (or whatever they're called now) were for assistance with that. Secondly, it is the parents' responsibility to raise the child, not the government.
I would not think for a second that I wanted or needed someone else to take care of my daughter. I currently have control over what she is subjected to, and though that's going to change in a few years (she'll do that 'growing up' thing) I can still offer her guidance. Sometimes parents need guidance too, but hopefully they have enough sense to watch what their children are exposed to (though that sadly is often not the case).
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It's idiotic to pretend like violence doesn't exist. Sooner or later the little ****ers are going to learn about it.
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The one thing I just don't understand is what the people promoting this bill thought the ESRB was for.
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Well, to be fair the ESRB is really rather stupid sometimes.
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Funny how the government doesn't even think of the simple fact that violence has been around forever and is actually a part of life... it took well over 20 years to convince them...
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For those who don't get it: the point of the bill would have been to make it easier for parents to not be parents by overriding the ESRB's system with a mandatory government-run system and making it outright illegal to sell video games deemed "overly violent" to minors. In the process this would have effectively censored much of the industry; most games currently rated M, and even some games rated T, would have become 18+-only, which would most likely have lead to stores ceasing to stock them (as is the case now with games with the existing AO rating).
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For not turning every store in America into a Toys R Us, I thank common sense.