Court: Why the First Amendment protects violent video games

X-play's Adam Sessler has a great summary of the high court's decision on video games:

http://www.g4tv.com/videos/53915/supreme-court-rules-against-violent-video-game-ban/
 
A humble response (which I shall let stand on it's own and not stringently defend), that forces us to ask one simple question: are videogames just another for-profit industry, or should they meet a higher standard of social responsibility? The quote is an essay about radio broadcasting, but I believe it is easily applicable to a new medium that is, for all intensive purposes, "broadcasting."

(some of the following is paraphrased, but the majority of it is from the essay "Host" by David Foster Wallace)

In the 1960's, FCC Chairman Newton Minow made a distinction between "the public interest" and "merely what interests the public."

It seems only fair and balanced to observe that Minow's old distinction reflected exactly the sort of controlling, condescending, nanny-state liberal attitude that makes government regulation such a bad idea. For how and why does a federal bureaucrat like Newton Minow get to decide what "the public interest" is? Why not respect the American people enough to let the public itself decide what interests it? Of course, this sort of objection depends on precisely the collapse of "the public interest" into "what happens to interest the public" that liberals object to. For the distinction between the two is itself liberal, as is the idea of a free press's and broadcast media's special responsibilities - "liberal" in the sense of being rooted in a professed concern for the common good over and above the preferences of individual citizens.

Which does indeed entail government's arrogating the power to decide what that common good is, it's true. On the other hand, the idea that at least government officials are elected, or appointed by elected representatives, and thus are somewhat accountable to the public they're deciding for. What appears to drive liberals most crazy about the right's conflation of "common good"/"public interest" with "what wins in the market" is the conviction that it's all a scam, that what the deregulation of industries like broadcasting, health care, and energy really amounts to is the subordination of the public's interests to the financial interests of large corporations. Which is, of course, all part of a very deep, serious national argument about the role and duties of government that America's having with itself right now.

And around and around it all goes.

To quote Sessler, "hooray for gamers," perhaps, if what gamers want is another for-profit industry, and not an industry that is accountable to a higher standard of social responsibility.
 
stealth toilet said:
To quote Sessler, "hooray for gamers," perhaps, if what gamers want is another for-profit industry, and not an industry that is accountable to a higher standard of social responsibility.

As was stated, the video game industry self-regulates with the ESRB rating system.

There is no point to government taking social responsibility for something that individuals, groups, companies, or industries do for themselves.

But, beyond that, the scope of "what gamers want" is limited. This decision could have set precedent for other laws encouraging censorship. Unfortunately, that is one case where slippery-slope logic is applicable. Once a legal precedent is set, other cases follow with decisions based on prior ones.


This statement is applicable, just substituting free speech for right to bare arms.

As the Founding Fathers knew well, a government that does not trust its honest, law-abiding, taxpaying citizens with the means of self-defense is not itself worthy of trust. Laws disarming honest citizens proclaim that the government is the master, not the servant, of the people.
 
As was stated, the video game industry self-regulates with the ESRB rating system.

According to who? Regulated by who? Accountable to who? The only reason the industry self-regulates (the effectiveness of which is unknown) right now is because it's more profitable money-wise than to let government regulate it.

There is no point to government taking social responsibility for something that individuals, groups, companies, or industries do for themselves.

It is not a matter of the government "taking social responsibility for something," but a matter of the government (a.k.a. the public) ensuring an industry is actually taking social responsibility, and will continue to do so even if it no longer becomes profitable money-wise for them to do so. It's a guarantee that won't fluctuate along with market forces.

Laws disarming honest citizens proclaim that the government is the master, not the servant, of the people.

But in this case the people are either servants to their elected government, or servants to a for-profit industry. Which is worse? The master you lets you have some say in how affairs are conducted, or the master that gives you none?
 
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