Hear hear for common sense:
http://www.crunchgear.com/2011/06/2...cannot-ban-the-sale-of-video-games-to-minors/
http://www.crunchgear.com/2011/06/2...cannot-ban-the-sale-of-video-games-to-minors/
I certainly see this happening with Walmart and other large chains.
After Sam Walton died, family values were thrown out the door in favor of profits. I remember back in the mid-1980s when Sam Walton banned the sale of heavy metal groups like Ozzy and Iron Maiden. After Sam died, the stores started selling those albums again.
Most large companies will not take a political stance on anything, they get caught in the middle and lose business from one side or the other.
As for video games, those choices should be left up to the parents and the local communities, and not the state or federal government.
After Sam Walton died, family values were thrown out the door in favor of profits. I remember back in the mid-1980s when Sam Walton banned the sale of heavy metal groups like Ozzy and Iron Maiden. After Sam died, the stores started selling those albums again.
Most large companies will not take a political stance on anything, they get caught in the middle and lose business from one side or the other.
As for video games, those choices should be left up to the parents and the local communities, and not the state or federal government.
Ozzy and Iron Maiden?
This has nothing to do with censorship, it's about raising kids.
That responsibility falls to the parents, and not the government.
Not true. Government is just the collective will of citizens. We've decided as a society that porn is not acceptable for children. Or liquor, beer, sex.
Access to those things isn't left up to parents.
Liquor, beer and sex are not protected rights - for anyone, much less children. Your trying to compare protected rights, and something that is not protected.
As a parent, I decide what video games are brought into my house.
My kids have their own steam accounts that I buy their games through. Its not the governments job to get involved.
You mean brain-dead parents who abdicate their own responsibility for bringing up their own children?I agree they should be, but in reality they will be made by angry parents trying desperately to control the world around them. If they cant force their government, they will force their local businesses.
I wouldnt be surprised if theres a large parent organization which routinely harasses corporate Walmart.
After Sam Walton died, family values were thrown out the door in favor of profits.
You mean brain-dead parents who abdicate their own responsibility for bringing up their own children?
The Supreme Court put the issue back right where it belongs - on the parents.
After Sam Walton died, family values were thrown out the door in favor of profits. I remember back in the mid-1980s when Sam Walton banned the sale of heavy metal groups like Ozzy and Iron Maiden. After Sam died, the stores started selling those albums again.
Most large companies will not take a political stance on anything, they get caught in the middle and lose business from one side or the other.
As for video games, those choices should be left up to the parents and the local communities, and not the state or federal government.
Lots of people have no idea that somebody would call something where you rape people, a game.
This case hinged on one BS thing. The argument presented by video game makers is that it's ok to restrict kid's access to sexual obscenity because there are "community standards" established for that; but that there are no such "community standards" for violence.
Which is BS because with regard to sexual content, the court decided what the "community standards" are, and they could do the same thing for violence if they wanted. It's BS to say one is ok and the other isn't.
The "community" doesn't want kids simulating rape and burning people to death anymore than they want them watching explicit sex.
I would also like to know what "community standards" games are being held to, and who the fuck is the authority which decides what they are? I don't remember being asked about this on the census. Do you?
I'd also like to know where California gets off in proclaiming that the "community standards" are the ones every parent should be legally forced to raise their children by.
This ruling takes away parental rights to have a say in what their children are exposed to.
