Russert of NBC’s “Meet the Press” suggests video games made Cho do it
Jack Thompson and Dr. Phil have obviously found an ally in the person of NBC‘s Meet the Press”>Tim Russert, host of NBC’s “Meet the Press” talk show. In the show’s episode yesterday, Russert pointedly suggested that the Virginia Tech massacre could have been an offshoot of the growing violent video games culture.
Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, a guest in the show, gamely (no pun intended) asserted that “we do have evidence that children… exposed to violent television and video games, that that certainly does net out in more violent behavior.” As to what those evidences are, she never really did expound on.
But Russert wasn’t content with merely getting a nod from Secretary Spellings. He then turns to Mike Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services, and asks, “Any thought of looking into video games and the impact they may have on young children?” While certainly not being impressionable, Leavitt also wasn’t exactly forthcoming, stating that “we have to look at a lot of things.”
And this might actually be the better answer between the two guests. After all, it’s rather foolhardy to outright believe that video games are indeed responsible for the macabre act Cho Seung-Hui launched against his schoolmates. In fact, the so-called “Counter-Strike theory” is just as good as stale meat on a shiny silver plate. The policemen have already searched through Cho’s room in campus, and they have yet to find any evidence that he was a video game player, much more, of violent ones at that. Even if they did, this will do little in tangibly proving that it was the “Counter-Strike demons” in Cho’s head that prodded him to carry out his deadly deed.
At the end of the day, while the rest of the nation is busy looking under rocks trying to find off-tangential answers to questions that are shaking up our system, and while there are some who are spectacularly trying to spin their blame-game, there remains 33 families waiting for justice and mourning for the loss of their loved ones who will never be coming home.
Jack Thompson and Dr. Phil have obviously found an ally in the person of NBC‘s Meet the Press”>Tim Russert, host of NBC’s “Meet the Press” talk show. In the show’s episode yesterday, Russert pointedly suggested that the Virginia Tech massacre could have been an offshoot of the growing violent video games culture.
Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, a guest in the show, gamely (no pun intended) asserted that “we do have evidence that children… exposed to violent television and video games, that that certainly does net out in more violent behavior.” As to what those evidences are, she never really did expound on.
But Russert wasn’t content with merely getting a nod from Secretary Spellings. He then turns to Mike Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services, and asks, “Any thought of looking into video games and the impact they may have on young children?” While certainly not being impressionable, Leavitt also wasn’t exactly forthcoming, stating that “we have to look at a lot of things.”
And this might actually be the better answer between the two guests. After all, it’s rather foolhardy to outright believe that video games are indeed responsible for the macabre act Cho Seung-Hui launched against his schoolmates. In fact, the so-called “Counter-Strike theory” is just as good as stale meat on a shiny silver plate. The policemen have already searched through Cho’s room in campus, and they have yet to find any evidence that he was a video game player, much more, of violent ones at that. Even if they did, this will do little in tangibly proving that it was the “Counter-Strike demons” in Cho’s head that prodded him to carry out his deadly deed.
At the end of the day, while the rest of the nation is busy looking under rocks trying to find off-tangential answers to questions that are shaking up our system, and while there are some who are spectacularly trying to spin their blame-game, there remains 33 families waiting for justice and mourning for the loss of their loved ones who will never be coming home.