With a headline like that, there's only really one person who can be in the news.
Yes, Jack Thompson, comedy lawyer, is in the headlines again.
From The Register:
Games campaigner Jack Thompson believes that last week's school
shooting in North Carolina was caused by the teenager involved playing
violent video games. Thompson is the lawyer behind a suit against Take
Two games over its upcoming title Bully...
"This youth Alvaro Castillo you can go on the internet and see
portions of his video which is a suicide note," said Thompson. "He's
killed his father and he goes to his school and shoots up his school
and he's talking at length about the violent entertainment he's been
obsessed with since he was eight years of age and I now find from
speaking with a family friend that some of the entertainment was
violent video games.
"It's yet another example, you can add this to Columbine, Paducah,
Jonesboro Arkansas, Wellsboro, I could go on for half an hour giving
you the names of schools that sound like battlefields in World War II.
We have reality being infected with virtual reality."
However, Mr Thompson acknowledges the differences in the UK (we think):
"In the UK, you embody in your laws the notion that there is certain
adult entertainment that shouldn't be sold to kids," he said. "No one
is trying to ban it outright, but as it stands now, regardless of the
rating that the game may get, anyone of any age will be able to buy it
and that is just very dangerous. America has become the land of the
free and the home of the utterly depraved."
So, the system doesn't work in the UK. Or, is that America? Wherever the hell it is, it doesn't work, dammit...
(We also give it about a week before "Land Of The Free - Home Of The Utterly Depraved" makes it onto a t-shirt.)
The best part though, is Mr Thompson's views on those darned firearms:
Thompson rejects the argument that the problem is with the ready
availability of guns, rather than the availability of computer games.
"We've got more guns than people over here," he said. "I would
prefer nobody have any guns, but now that the guns are out there, the
genie is sort of out of the bottle. Nobody has come up with a way to
get the guns from the bad guys as well as the good guys, so that if you
pass a law that said everybody has to turn in their guns and we'll melt
them down and make a statue of Charlton Heston out of it or something,
the bad guys, the criminals would still hold on to their guns and us
good guys who are law abiding would be giving them up.
"I live in Miami, I'm not giving up my gun because if somebody comes
in my house I want to be able to kill him," he said. "Unfortunately,
when you have a country that is awash in guns, you have got to do
something about the stimuli to use those guns."
It's not the guns that kill people, it's those blasted videogames making people WANT to kill people that's the problem.
The games industry should consider itself fairly lucky we have Jack Thompson to fight. We have our very own supervillian. If we had someone informed, objective and clever, the industry might find itself in far more trouble.
Of course, if there was someone informed, objective and clever, this sort of thing would probably stop happening and Monday afternoons would be so much less interesting.