Politicians Once Again Blame Video Games After Deadly Shootings

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Not even a day after one mass shooting claimed 20 lives in El Paso, Texas and another resulted in nine dead in a Dayton, Ohio bar, lawmakers have quickly taken to mainstream news outlets in hopes of pinning the blame on video games. Approximately 15 hours after the first shots were fired in an El Paso Walmart, Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick (R) appeared as a guest on Fox News' Fox & Friends and inquired what the federal government had planned to do "about the video game industry."

“How long are we going let, for example, and ignore at the federal level particularly, where they can do something about the video game industry,” Patrick asked. The politician then references an apparent manifesto that surfaced online minutes before the attack in which the alleged shooter spewed anti-immigration ideologies while mentioning the Call of Duty franchise. Authorities have yet to confirm the manifesto is linked to the El Paso shooter.

“In this manifesto that we believe is from the shooter … he talks about living out his super soldier fantasy on ‘Call of Duty,’” continued Patrick. “We’ve always had guns. We’ve always had evil. But what’s changed where we see this rash of shooting?”


Patrick then mentioned that video games seem to be the "common denominator" amongst mass shooters. “I see a video game industry that teaches young people to kill,” he said. The Lt. Governor isn't the only right-leaning politician to lean into the ide since the shootings. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) also appeared on Fox News and was sure to bring up violent video games in his interview.

“The idea of these video games, they dehumanize individuals to have a game of shooting individuals and others,” McCarthy said. “When you look at these photos of how [the El Paso shooting] took place, you can see the actions within video games and others.”


Despite McCarthy's claims, researchers at England's University of Oxford published a study earlier this year that violent video games don't have an influence on the aggressive behavior of teens.

"The idea that violent video games drive real-world aggression is a popular one, but it hasn’t tested very well over time," study lead Professor Andrew Przybylski said at the time. "Despite interest in the topic by parents and policy-makers, the research has not demonstrated that there is cause for concern."


Since the first of the year, 252 mass shootings have been recorded with upwards of 282 killed between all incidents.

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Source: https://comicbook.com/gaming/2019/08/04/el-paso-mass-shooting-republicans-blame-video-games/

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"Politicians Once Again Blame Video Games After Deadly Shootings" :: Login/Create an Account :: 29 comments

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MidnightiePosted:

Anime Yes video games can turn someone and over time become violent.


No. If anything, they'll desensitize the individual. People have played violent games for years and nothings become of it. You get one person that's mentally unstable and video games are the first thing to be blamed.

raefonPosted:

Same was said throughout history of the bible, books in general, rock and roll music ( Elvis was the devil), rap music, Dungeons and Dragons and now video games.

People just need to blame something rather than society and its toxicity. so often found closer to home, within your own home, school and work.

AnimePosted:

Yes video games can turn someone and over time become violent.

LostPhonePosted:

Rin Yes video games are the problem. Not that the shooter is a white nationalist and pro-trump spewing out anti immigration bullshit. Amazing that people who are quick to deflect the real problems hold any power.


Literally had antifa in his profile

RinPosted:

Yes video games are the problem. Not that the shooter is a white nationalist and pro-trump spewing out anti immigration bullshit. Amazing that people who are quick to deflect the real problems hold any power.

LostPhonePosted:

naterocks500 Wrote a six page research paper on this back in high school. The information along with the studies are available online very easily and it points always to no effect, and the fact that anyone still thinks violent video games have any effect on aggression just goes to show they are delusional...


They do, it's simple.
Violent video games do not turn non violent people into killers, however they do have a potential over time to desensitize people to violence. When a person with pre-existing mental illness who is predisposed to violence plays enough violent video games, they cant become desensitized enough to the point they are willing to carry out atrocities.

Regardless, banning violence in games or anything is an infringement of U.S citizen rights and thus should not ever be pursued.

naterocks500Posted:

Wrote a six page research paper on this back in high school. The information along with the studies are available online very easily and it points always to no effect, and the fact that anyone still thinks violent video games have any effect on aggression just goes to show they are delusional...

YinPosted:

In the US, it seems banning (violent) video games will become a reality far before we do anything that would actually help.

LebronIs6Posted:

Love this article, read the bottom quote by a professor with a degree vs. the top two quotes from politicians with an agenda to blame anything and anyone but themselves.