So what's wrong with outlawing sales of video games that teach kids to shoot at police? Unconstitutional? Doubtful. Kids can't do lots of things adults can.
Very little would be wrong with it if (and that's a big if):
1) You could actually show real, convincing evidence that they actually do teach kids to shoot police. (Again, just because it is often repeated doesn't make it true. Remember, teen violence is way down from levels 10 years ago.) Trust me, if Jack Thompson could come up with hard evidence that this is true he would. Where is the data? Too often it sounds to me like a way to duck personal responsibility. I didn't mean to kill all those people... Judas Priest made me do it. Dungeons and Dragons made me do it. The videogames made me do it.
2) You did it without deputizing a non-accountable, non-governmental agency.
3) You did it in a way that hasn't
already 4 times been ruled unconstitutional by federal courts.
Its not so much that I want kids to play these games. However, I don't just accept with no evidence that they are harmful outright. I'd say playing a few rounds of Unreal Tournament makes me personally
less likely to commit violence, not more. Even if they are harmful... Prohibition doesn't work. We know this. It's like the drug war. In my high school, it was certainly easier to get cocaine or heroin than it was to get beer (which was itself easy enough to get). I would say that "protecting" children by outlawing them (and laws like this are designed to outlaw the games completely, because they know Walmart won't carry them if a giant chunk of their audience can't buy them), is what is really dangerous.
It's not that I believe that most of these games are
good speech. It's that I believe that freedom of speech (even to children) is essential to the exercise of democracy. Games are the future of entertainment. Heck, they're the future of the internet. How long before you use a "game engine" to access real information on the internet? MMORPGs are the start, but it's only going to get more pervasive, and more immersive. That's real speech, and it is essential that it be free and unregulated. Laws like this unfortunately have been shown again and again not to keep up with technology.
I believe in freedom...
To bear arms.
To tell the world what I want, in whatever way I want.
To drink beer.
To shoot heroin (if that's really what you want).
And to decide for
myself what videogames my children will play, and what tv shows they can watch.
Most importantly though... I'm angry that it is such a waste of our money! They know these laws will not survive court challenges! Heck, the author of the Minnesota law admitted in the interview that she never intended for the law to be enforced... It was about putting on a show for voters who don't know any better. A show that's costing taxpayers millions and millions of dollars when we have real problems to combat.
Just like "gay marriage", and all the other absurd "shows" they've been putting on (from both sides) which cost real money and real time.
As Matt said...
In my opinion, kids with guns is a bigger problem than kids with videogames.
Why can't we work on something that matters, and something that will actually accomplish something?