Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL
Originally Posted By: L_Sludger
Originally Posted By: Autobahn88
Here is an interesting study on media violence and children.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081119122632.htm
Good article. What do you think about the generation of young men who were raised on violent XBOX video games such as Call of Duty? They're ultra-realistic and serve to hone their skills for their murderous craft.
I grew up playing Rise of the Triad, Doom, Doom II, Quake, Wolfenstein....etc. Yet I didn't go on any wild and crazy killing sprees and I am confident that these games had absolutely ZERO bearing on my development. Family is a FAR more important thing to focus on here. That's where the true guidance (or the lack thereof) comes from.
I'm specifically naming Call of Duty, not Wolfenstein 3d or Doom II. Those games were mere fantasy and not at all realistic.
Call of Duty is extremely detailed and shows the real-world operation of weapons civilians (currently) have access to; this is a big problem that parents may not realize, that their children may be desensitized to violence. Kids as young as 5 are playing that game!
You made a good point about family. Apparently this kid had none, he came from a broken home and his guardian, his mother, was apperently a barfly.
Originally Posted By: L_Sludger
Originally Posted By: Autobahn88
Here is an interesting study on media violence and children.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081119122632.htm
Good article. What do you think about the generation of young men who were raised on violent XBOX video games such as Call of Duty? They're ultra-realistic and serve to hone their skills for their murderous craft.
I grew up playing Rise of the Triad, Doom, Doom II, Quake, Wolfenstein....etc. Yet I didn't go on any wild and crazy killing sprees and I am confident that these games had absolutely ZERO bearing on my development. Family is a FAR more important thing to focus on here. That's where the true guidance (or the lack thereof) comes from.
I'm specifically naming Call of Duty, not Wolfenstein 3d or Doom II. Those games were mere fantasy and not at all realistic.
Call of Duty is extremely detailed and shows the real-world operation of weapons civilians (currently) have access to; this is a big problem that parents may not realize, that their children may be desensitized to violence. Kids as young as 5 are playing that game!
You made a good point about family. Apparently this kid had none, he came from a broken home and his guardian, his mother, was apperently a barfly.