I posted a link to
Anthony Martin's latest column on Facebook about debunking common mass shooting myths, and some discussion ensued about the effects of video games. One person expressed uncertainty over dismissing them as a cause, and I replied:
My
personal belief, not scientific, but just intuitive and based on what I
see in life, is that gaming might be a catalyst for some--but anyone
that close to the edge could be set off by anything, and attempts to
regulate, control and ban would be as "successful"
as "gun control"-- in other words, anyone who can't be trusted with a
[gun, video game, matches, fill in the blank] can't be trusted without a
custodian--and they need to leave the rest of us the hell alone until
our actions prove ourselves a danger to ourselves or others.
He cited Lt. Col. Dave Grossman's work and the 2001 Stanford Study on Media Violence. My response:
I've
promoted Grossman's work and am aware he believes that, but he is
offering an opinion, and his outstanding credentials in his field of
expertise do not make him infallible in all. In re studies, I admit I
have not competently analyzed the Stanford
one, because I don't possess the specialized education to do a thorough
job of it. My layman's understanding is that it artificially measured
"aggression" (to include playground taunts) and did not separate TV
viewing from video gaming in terms of causation. So is extended viewing
and gaming the cause, or the fact that your parents (or parent) leave
you unsupervised for so long? And what does that say about the example
they set and the limits, expectations and standards they set, and
behaviors their conduct induces and allows? So many other factors can
have effects on the results. Plus, only one limited study hardly seems
sufficient to declare certainty. I've seen enough"gun studies" to be
wary of accepting any as the final word. Bottom line: I don't think
anyone can take the population of gamers and come up with a sound and
reliable prediction of what percentage will be caused, persuaded or
motivated to commit homicide as a result, because it is so
infinitesimally small as to have no statistically measurable validity,
and parenting, economic and environmental factors have not been filtered
out--and that goes for Stanford, too, which was done in 12 Bay area
schools, meaning their subjects were overwhelmingly children of
"progressives"--tell me THAT won't screw a kid up. I see no legitimate
law that could be enacted here, but plenty of ways for those who would
rule us to gin up concerns to exploit and further their control.
While it's just my opinion, I don't think I'm wrong, especially about the "law" part.
How about the myth that if you tell a big enough lie often enough that people will believe it? That myth is true.
ReplyDeletehttp://history.howstuffworks.com/history-vs-myth/10-biggest-lies-in-history.htm