Before I start, I just want to say that I do not intend to question your skills or aptitude as a parent. You've taken an active interest in what your son does in his free time, so that demonstrates both imo.
So how do you rationalize that while military propaganda in (a select number of) video games will encourage minors to take interest in the armed forces, greatly increasing their chances of walking into a recruiter's office after reaching the age of majority, when they can legally be held accountable for their actions due to the presumed development of their morality and ethics, but being exposed to realistic graphic violence on TV, movies, and a majority of video games has no effect on a kid's predisposition to violence at all, considering how much easier it is to just try and smother another kid with a brick as opposed to waiting seven years and enlisting? (Yes extreme example, but I'm making a point)Jacob.pederson said:Heck yes it's an epidemic. I've personally witnessed supposedly fully grown men take the path which starts at rainbow six, and ends in a recruitment office. I'm also personally aware of what the end of that path looks like as my Dad is a Vietnam vet. (of course he had to rely on the more traditional propaganda way back thenThe3rdEye said:Wait... are you saying that you are fine with your nine year old kid playing violent M video games, but that you censor out the military recruitment propaganda because with all the other sources out there, failure to resist the temptation to enlist in the armed forces is some kind of epidemic?Jacob.pederson said:My kid (currently 9) was playing Unreal Tournament at age 4. So he has you beat thereIxionIndustries said:As long as the kid isn't going around shooting people because he saw it on Call of Duty, then I have no issue.
Hell, I was playing fucking Unreal Tournament when I was 6, so I grew up around that kind of shit.
The kid said his favorite games were shooters. Big deal. Fuck, lighten up for a bit.But I do censor games like Call of Duty due not to 'mature' content, but due to the militaristic propaganda inherent in them. Male children have a hard enough time resisting that message without throwing it into every moment of their playtime
I find that there are very few games that need to be censored due to mature content, although there are a few, GTA certainly comes to mind.
And that's not even touching the entire "reducing someone to shiny red paste is fine, but a little nookie isn't" thing.![]()
I may not be a father, but I do remember my cousins and I beating the hell out of each other. The difference is that we only did that maybe on average once every two weeks. There's really no limit to how much violence we can ingest through modern media, not to mention that modern media can bring us as to close to the real thing as actually being there, unless you used squibs and/or paintball guns back in the late 70's early 80's.Jacob.pederson said:I'm gonna go out on a limb here and assume you are not yourself a parent? Yes, young males reducing each other to red paste is perfectly normal. Way back in the 80's when our video games where still beeping and blooping at us, we followed up by heading outside to shoot each other with sticks, cardboard cut-outs, and occasionally plastic guns. Males are violent. Whether or not we have a game for that fantasy or not, we will act it out any chance we get.
That does put certain things in a different light, although it does seem odd that drilling someone's cerebellum with a 5.56 isn't something to flinch at, but kissing is. Honestly though, I don't fall under any banner in regards to the sexual censorship spiel. Obviously portraying sex in a violent or non-consensual context isn't something to be letting anyone under age of majority see, but other than that they'll find out and experiment somehow, better it be the "touchy, feely" kind from romance (sub)plots.Jacob.pederson said:Lastly, on the sexual censoring thing. Censoring sexual content for a nine-year-old, isn't a mater of prudishness, it's a matter of comfort. Sexual content makes my nine-year-old uncomfortable. He hides under a blanket when there is so much as kissing in Farscape. When he becomes mature enough to have interest in that type of narrative, then I will no longer censor it. This is not in any way intending to support the unhealthy christian cultural obsession with sexual censorship.