my take on it. The first time i dropped a soldier in MW and realized he wasn't dead, I walked passed him. He then pulled a pistol and shot me. so I shot him back. Obv the wounded in that game just don't give a fuck.
It's up to the creators to decide whether they want to insert that subject matter into their game. It's not their job educate gamers. Also, you don't have to "TL;DR" something that's only 3 sentences long. You could've just added the last bit onto the end and made your post a full paragraph.skullduggery said:Wow guys, chill out. Just because the IRC established *one* subcommittee that was probably set up by a younger staff member to take a look at video games (which constantly display the graphic use of more or less indiscriminate violence), and how the medium could educate gamers on how international war conventions work. I think it'd be interesting to put that into effect.
TL;DR: Stop screaming "LEAVE GAMES ALOOOOOOOONE!" every time someone brings up actually relating games to real life.
I don't think the economics of patent violations are what is keeping the economy as bad as it is or that those same economics are what's going to lead into a global war. While it may be true that China is building up a larger military base (I haven't researched it, so I'll go under that assumption for now) it's simply not true that standards of living in China are not rising due to foreign trade. Trade is what's making China what it is today, and if we're going under the assumption, as we normally are in international affairs, that the country is acting, as a whole, in it's own best interests, it's not going to just sever trading ties with practically its entire consumer base. Yeah, patent violations are a problem here, but unless they're a big enough problem to warrant economic sanctions (and I guarantee you, they are not. Whomever is innovating, they don't have enough sway to outvote both the people who don't want to go to war with China AND Walmart.) everyone's going to stay at peace, because they don't want to fuck up a good thing.Therumancer said:It's like this, I think the Red Cross is trying to hold out until the last second on board a sinking ship. While this goes much deeper than the intent of this article reality is like this:
In a REAL war, the biggest bastards win. There are no good guys, or bad guys, only a winner and a loser. If your considering morality in any way, shape, or form, then it's not a real war. If one side is playing by rules of engagement and the other isn't they had best be sure to have them outgunned to a massive degree or they are going to lose... period. It's been so long since powerful nations like the US have been in a real war that we've lost sight of this for a long time, but I think we're starting to regain our understanding of this through both the media (like video games) and observation of world events. Video games showing what a real war is like if your going to win through the brutality involved are basically under criticism for putting reality before political principle.
This was covered in the book "Starship Troopers" and at the very beginning of the movie version to some extent. Personally I prefer to use my own examples in pointing fingers towards Chivalry and Bushido both of which were codes of military conduct and honorable battle. They were great until in the case of Chivalry the side that should have lost decided they didn't want to lose and be conquered and decided to massacre the opposing force with long bows when they took the "field of honor". The Samurai aristocracy got taken down by revolting peasants, in part due to their codes of engagement. A lot of early Japanese martial arts could be summarized as "how to fight dirty against a guy with a sword using modified farm tools".
Right now the world is heading towards one big doozy of a war, indeed if the world ends on 12/21/12 it will probably be due to a war. This was is over economics and trade, not quite the massive battle against an evil empire people like to think of when it comes to war. To put it simply things are coming to a head with China, China has been running a robber economy where it has been violating patents from the first world to produce knockoff goods in sweatshops which it then resells for a fraction of the price. This has lead to China becoming a huge economic power. Rather than increasing the standard of living for it's people however it's been building up it's military and becoming increasingly belligerant. The US cut a deal with China to "borrow" money (to offset what it was losing in taxes) in exchange for not taking direct action hoping that the success in China would have filtered down and changed it's social order. Without going into more details, with the economic state of the US, the issue with it's credit score, and how this affects a lot of nations who have been being similarly screwed (even if a lot of the people there are cheering for the US taking a few lumps, the US isn't the only country losing quadrillions to parent and copyright violations) it's to the point where either China knocks it off and pays repairations, or the rest of the globe eventually collapses and China basically takes over. The thing is though that since China innovates very little (which is not to say nothing at all) that if it DOES knock it off it's going to wind up dropping itself back down into an entirely impoverished hellhole. We're at kind of an impasse, and China has been building up a substantial military to fight with.
I think a lot of people see this coming, some have been talking about the inevitability of an East Vs. West war for decades now as it's creeped closer and closer and the west decided to morally blindfold itself. I think The Red Cross, and various "peace at any price" movements are becoming increasingly freaked out over increasingly trivial things like games as a reaction to it. Especially seeing as anyone with half a brain knows this is going to be about who controls the world, and cultural/societal elimination, as opposed to these glorified police actions we've been calling wars after WW II ended.
Or in short, I think The Red Cross realizes it's moral relevence is slipping and is involved in a bit of QQing as the sad state of reality slips in, and we're seeing that to an extent in media like war games that have beein getting into a "this is how it is" including the brutality, torture, and collateral damage, as opposed to being presented in the antiseptic fashion of a 4-color comic book where the good guys manage to save the day while remaining untouched paragons of left wing virtue.
Well, this subcommittee would be looking into accomplishing the former through the latter. They're essentially saying that "Hey, we see you're studying if videogames increase the likelihood of people violating our spiffy conventions. We'll put money towards that sort of research."Superior Mind said:So dumb.
How about ensuring that real life armed forces comply with the Geneva Convention before you start looking at how digital characters are treated in a video game.
You forget that the UN is the United Nations, and most of the people there have a "You're either with us or you're against us" mentality concerning the feuding between Israel and Palestine. Plenty of countries are going to back their combatant no matter what atrocities they commit, because they feel a sense of comradeship with the one and/or a sense of antagonism with the other. Israel should be brought into line, but with a combination of their own nukes (They've all but admitted to having) and their patrons on the security council, they aren't likely to get more than a slap on the wrist, as you've noted.chadachada123 said:Sadly, the Times has moved to a freaking payed site, so I can't link the 8+ different articles they had where Israel bombed, shot, or otherwise murdered not only innocent civilians in Gaza but also GODDAMNED UN PEACE WORKERS AND RED CROSS AID WORKERS. They also prevented other workers from entering areas with wounded civilians, causing the death of at least several people. I'll find other sources, but they were my primary. Source for some of those: [link]http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/08/un-israel-kills-driver-on_n_156168.html[/link]Toy Master Typhus said:Please dochadachada123 said:I can cite a few if you'd like
There was an incident where the Israeli army ordered 100 civies into a house and then bombed it less than a day later, killing 24 of them. [link]http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/israel/4206913/Israel-bombed-Gaza-safe-house-full-off-evacuees-says-UN.html[/link]
Here's a DIFFERENT story of Israel bombing UN-owned SCHOOLS owned by civies: [link]http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/07/gaza-israel-obama[/link]
An incident where the Israeli army forced at gunpoint an 11 year old child to act as a human shield in front of gunfire from Hamas. Here's the follow-up, they were convicted, but an Israeli judge essentially gave them no punishment. Three months probation and a reduced rank from Staff Sargent to Sargent: [link]http://rt.com/news/israeli-soldiers-child-free/[/link]
As stated, incidents involving shooting UN workers.
An incident where a sergeant ordered a sniper to the roof of a building to assassinate an elderly woman walking down the street despite not being even suspicious. (Found this one: [link]http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1163259/Israeli-troops-admit-killed-innocent-civilians-Gaza-war.html[/link] )
Israel using white phosphorous on civilian targets, a violation of the Geneva convention: [link]http://www.vtjp.org/background/gazaweapons.php[/link]
Here's the search for the Times articles, but the full text can't be read without a login. http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/public/sitesearch.do?querystring=human+rights+gaza&p=tto&pf=all&bl=on
The fact that an entire country can OPENLY slaughter people and get nothing but a "UN condemnation" (despite shooting UN workers) is disgusting enough, and this doesn't include any behind-the-scenes things that Israel and other countries are doing (justified or not, they violate IHL, which is the discussion here).
In Skyrim, whenever someone is severely wounded, they'll take a knee and plea for their lives. With one or two exceptions, after they heal enough they'll go right back to killing you, so it behooves the smart adventurer to leave nothing but corpses in his wake.Baresark said:Hey, you have all been trolled by the red cross, just like you were by PETA!
For real though, who cares what they think in regards to things they have no scope of power over. And, I can't really recall a game where you were playing the bad guys and shooting wounded, downed soldiers.
Faking surrender is a war crime in it's self (it lessens the chances of REAL surrenders not ending in the surrenderer being shot), so how can I be held respouncable?conflictofinterests said:In Skyrim, whenever someone is severely wounded, they'll take a knee and plea for their lives. With one or two exceptions, after they heal enough they'll go right back to killing you, so it behooves the smart adventurer to leave nothing but corpses in his wake.Baresark said:Hey, you have all been trolled by the red cross, just like you were by PETA!
For real though, who cares what they think in regards to things they have no scope of power over. And, I can't really recall a game where you were playing the bad guys and shooting wounded, downed soldiers.
Bye bye Captain America.Greg Tito said:The Convention agreed that medical personnel are protected and soldiers would not be experimented upon
I get what you're trying to say (and after the round of shots I'VE had, that's well done on my part), but I cannot accept censorship whatever its form. I don't have to agree with the content, but I agree that it shouldn't be censored. It's not real, real people are not having their rights or lives violated, therefore Geneva's code does not apply.IndianaJonny said:Greg Tito said:The Geneva Conventions have no jurisdiction over our imaginations or creative works, and The Red Cross cannot dictate whether a movie hero tortures a non-combatant or blows up a bus full of nuns on the way to saving the President of the U.N.Soviet Heavy said:What about movies? Or books? I thought the point of a fictional engagement or conflict was that it was FICTIONAL.C'mon guys, that's some pretty lazy and cheeky criticism. The IFRCs problem isn't that it's fictional, their issue is that it's participatory. The 2007 TRIAL report expressed concern at FPS players becoming "virtually violent", not that the games were nasty make-believe.Firia said:What about "virtual world" (their words) do they not get? It's fiction. Fake. Not real. The same can be said about books, and movies. There's some sick shit in sequenced letters and words. Not to mention in arts and crafts. But video games are somehow more real than these mediums?
Disappointed.
Now this news can either be a good thing or bad thing for the gaming industry depending on how we respond and the results may suprise us. If 'Courageous Restraint' was included in a few games we may begin to better understand the stresses and frustrations of real front-line troops. Sure, 'escapism' might take a hit, but taking the source material more seriously might open new avenues and ideas for games to explore. Maybe we should wait till we know more about the initative before painting up the protest banners?