WIL WHEATON dot NET

50,000 Monkeys at 50,000 Typewriters Can't Be Wrong

idiots on parade

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I’ve stayed away from editorializing in the last few months, but I suspect a lot of “off the table” topics are going to come up in the new year — there’s just too much going on in the world that’s pissing me off.
Let’s start today with this jackass story pile of crap in the New York Post:

IN this season of ecumenical brotherhood, here’s a suggestion for how to advance the cause of peace: Sell your stock in Take-Two Interactive Inc.
In case you can’t quite place the name, New York-based Take-Two Interactive is a Nasdaq-traded company in the video game business.
[…]
[L]et’s first pause for some thoughts on the core question of what this company actually does – which is to produce and market video games of such luxuriously violent and disgusting content as to leave one simply speechless.
The latest installment in the company’s best-selling “Grand Theft Auto” series – “Grand Theft Auto: Vice City” – has been on the market for a little over a year now and has already sold more than 5 million copies.
[…]
In fact, “whatever you want” is what the game is all about. Thanks to its artful and complex programming and its incredibly realistic graphics, the game creates the impression of being inside a totally unscripted, live-action drama in which you can manufacture your mayhem as you go along.
People, this is insane. This is 10,000 times worse than the worst thing anybody thinks Michael Jackson ever did to a little boy – or than any lie the feds think Martha Stewart ever told them, or any line in any song that Bruce Springsteen ever sang that rankled a cop in the Meadowlands.

Yeah, you read that correctly. Michael Jackson’s accused of seven counts of commiting lewd acts on a minor — that’s legal speak for a whole bunch of inappropriate touching and who knows what else — and this genius suggests that the content of a video game is WORSE than that.

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30 December, 2003 Wil

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floating in my tin can → ← i’m dreaming . . .

66 thoughts on “idiots on parade”

  1. Sabrina says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:30 pm

    Hey Unca Willie, glad to see you’re doing better! One thing I have to say about your article: Wow, that’s deep!
    Happy new Year!

  2. Junyr says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:31 pm

    I would have to say that artificial violence is not worse molestation. Period.

  3. ze-mag says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:38 pm

    Thank you. They did place ratings on games, right. I am glad Wil is listening, unlike the mind that wrote that editorial piece.

  4. Kathleen says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:44 pm

    People are messed up. Everyone is going to witness violence wether its in a video game, a movie or real life.

  5. Tim Sullivan says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:46 pm

    Un-fucking-believable! As an old fart, all I can say is that it is a real shame that responsible parenting has seemingly gone out-of-style. Kudos to Wil for taking his role as parent to his 2 step-boys (his most important role EVER) seriously. Jeez!

  6. julie says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:49 pm

    Glad to see you’re better!!!!!! I agree that video game violence is way different than child abuse, of course. The person who wrote that is probably just crazy or looking for attention and obviously has some weird thing against video games, which no one is forced to play.

  7. Tim says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:51 pm

    That has got to be the most biased, one sided piece of swill that I have ever read. I am amazed that this guy actually works for the New York Times. What ever happened to objective journalism? Pehaps I am in the minority here, but I don’t think that expsoure to violent media always makes you violent. For every one example this guy cites as proof that video games cause violence, there are millions of regular people who play the same damn game and still live normal, productive lives! This is just the new scapegoat of this decade. In the 1980’s it was Judas Priest with subliminal lyrics. the 1990’s had those gothic kids who would play Vampire the Masquerade, and now we have video games to blame. I just realized I’m ranting…I’ll stop now.

  8. Gonnas says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:53 pm

    I’m assuming that Kill Bill is the equivalent of murder, then?

  9. Sally says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:57 pm

    Damn that thing called “parenting.” Imagine the concept!!
    The NYP blows anywho!

  10. technomom says:
    30 December, 2003 at 3:58 pm

    This from the paper owned by the same outfit that is giving us “My Big Fat Obnoxious Fiance” on television. I believe that they also have a sitcom that this week featured a character wearing a shirt that had “SLUT” written on it. Yeah, I’ll have my kids watch that instead of playing GTA.
    Priceless.
    JoAnn

  11. Jenny Finster says:
    30 December, 2003 at 4:22 pm

    ::Quietly applauds you.::

  12. Wyatt Draggoo says:
    30 December, 2003 at 4:25 pm

    Holy Crap—a role model for parents! I bet you don’t even blame anything your kids do wrong on society, either. It’s about damned time. I’ve got a 2 year old, and people are already telling me that all I will need is a TV and some video games (who cares what they are!) and I won’t have to spend any time with him at all.
    WTFO!
    If you’re not planning on spending time to raise your children then Don’t Have Children. It’s that simple. That just annoys the crap out of me.
    Be responsible parents. Raise your children. Teach them what’s right and what’s wrong. Don’t depend on his school, or his babysitter, or parental control software to do it for you.

  13. Fluffy says:
    30 December, 2003 at 4:35 pm

    argh, what a rediculous article and morally offensive! (not yours of course)
    Actually i quite fancy going out and buying the game now just to see what all the fuss is about. Maybe someone should mention that to whats his face!

  14. Dan L says:
    30 December, 2003 at 4:41 pm

    Amen There are more bad things in the world than violent video games.! Glad to hear you are getting better

  15. MoonGoddess says:
    30 December, 2003 at 4:42 pm

    *picks up her jaw off the floor*
    Thanks for posting this Wil. I’m so very glad I don’t usually read editorials, as people like this one make me so angry. I’m afraid to write a response, lest I blow up and call him what he really is and embarass myself. *blush*

  16. Amber says:
    30 December, 2003 at 4:53 pm

    Thanks for sharing this with us all. My boyfriend is addicted to GTA:Vice City, so it’s almost always being played in our house. I honestly don’t see what the big deal is with it. Anyone with the smallest bit of intelligence will know it’s just a freakin’ game!

  17. FryGuy says:
    30 December, 2003 at 5:10 pm

    Wow, wait until this guy hears about Manhunt.

  18. Roy says:
    30 December, 2003 at 5:14 pm

    Lovely article (sarcasm in reference to the first one quoted). Video games are not molestation, not even close.
    I also am doing the parenting thing. I own GTA3 and GTA:VC, and I won’t even play them when my kids are watching. Can’t say that I agree with you on the loaded weapons thing. I’d rather teach my kids how to safely handle a gun under my supervision than to have them find one and experiment with it. Then again I was raised around firearms and I rather doubt that you were. (Not giving you grief or anything, just pointing out a difference in mindset)
    The spew over GTA is simply another brick in the wall spearting us from any concept of personal accountability at any level. Pathetic.

  19. Daniel says:
    30 December, 2003 at 5:34 pm

    Dear Mr Byron,
    Your extreme distaste of this game, and possibly the game’s publisher is noted, and even acknowledged. I would like to point out though that your article really lacks credibility when you stray and comment about the content of games. I see 2 separate and distinctive issues here.
    1) Take Two Interactive is filing funny numbers.
    2)Rockstar Games, a subsidiary of Take Two makes a game with notable and controversial violent themes.
    I take issue with your attempt to connect these two separate issues. Your arguments lack any form of objectivity, and any retraceable proof.
    You try to make a connection to kids or adults playing these games and violent crimes, and while the jury is still out on this one you don’t make attempt to reference any studies to the support your arguments. for example:
    FOR one thing, the age cutoff is totally unenforceable, and everyone knows it. And cases surface constantly in which “Grand Theft Auto” has been linked to violence and killing. In Tennessee last summer a motorist was killed and his passenger wounded when two boys – aged 14 and 16 – played “Grand Theft Auto” and then decided to go out and take sniper shots at cars, just like in the game.
    Besides: By what preposterous reasoning can one argue that once someone turns 17 years of age it magically becomes OK to glorify mass murder? Are we saying that it would have been OK for that Beltway Sniper guy – who was apparently in his 40s – to have been allowed to play “Grand Theft Auto” before going on his killing spree, but it wouldn’t have been OK for that young teenager who went along with him to have done the same?
    All you are saying here is that you think their is a connection between a game and an act of violence regardless of Age. And while I agree that the laws governing these games are not being enforced as per who can buy these games and who cannot, At age 17 or 18 it is understood that 99.999% of the population understands the difference between a game and reality. Let me draw you an analogy to your posturing that sounds almost as ridiculous:
    Monopoly is a horrible game. It teaches ultra right wing capitalism, it encourages underhandedness and trickery, as well as ruthless competitions, and glorifies material wealth. This game promotes the idea that the poor should be ignored and made fun of. The rich should only pay taxes or charity when they are forced too, by a governing body thanks to the fact that the game forces charity and taxes only when players land on the square that forces them to pay. This game also promotes a disturbing amount of violence and ill reaction as when I was a child I never left a game of monopoly without throwing my money at someone or having someone hit me because I was winning. to conclude Monopoly is a horrible game, and I believe that you should sell all your Milton Bradley stocks as a result of this game being so un-brotherly and enforcing so many questionable morals in today’s society. Also The CEO’s father is a criminal so by default so it the CEO.
    I believe you may have a valid point about why someone should sell their take two stock in that they are not a good company, but your argument about what the company produces lacks any real points. It’s just a red herring, and it sucks that a journalist of all people would ask the governments to start to censor this type of game. As always Parents should control what their kids are doing, and if you don’t like what they are doing TURN IT OFF. If you don’t want to play that game then again TURN IT OFF. Don’t ask the governments of the world to stifle free speech because you find something distasteful. Otherwise you might as well scream about the Soprano’s and Band of Brothers etc…
    Thanks for you time, and please consider that unless you can support what you say you sound like someone who doesn’t know what they are talking about.
    This is what I sent the author of this… I can’t beleive it provoked such a novel!

  20. Spunkyknight says:
    30 December, 2003 at 5:44 pm

    People are generally retarded and prove it daily on a global scale.
    Just because its in print doesnt mean its worth reading.
    Violent games/pork chops taste good!…Violent games/bacon taste good!
    This guy probably put a short/sell on the stock and is just trying to ride the price down and unload it.
    Martha Stewart’s a man, baby!
    And finally…
    I didnt know that “rankling cops”, especially when done by Bruce Springsteen, was a threat to the tenuous fabric that holds our society together. Is this guy referring to past articles he’s written?
    Are we sure Tipper Gore didnt write this article under a psuedonym?

  21. ELi says:
    30 December, 2003 at 6:02 pm

    Just remember, the NY Post is not the NY Times. The Post is a tabloid. Pure and simple. It may not have alien abductions, but it goes for the sensational rather than anything with real journalistic merit.
    They’re just playing to their audience.

  22. Michael W says:
    30 December, 2003 at 6:10 pm

    Wil,
    Thank you for posting this article and thank you for being a good parent. I must ask, however: When do Ryan and Nolan get to make the decision to play their choice of video games? Just an innocent wondering…

  23. redrhino says:
    30 December, 2003 at 6:51 pm

    It will be a most glorious day if the next version of GTA-VC you COULD abduct,molest and beat a child to death in this game.After all the whole hooker and stripper thing is played out.Perhaps we could also euthanize a whole retiement community while were at it.That will teach those nazi book burners to tell us what we can and cant do as a society.

  24. Crissy says:
    30 December, 2003 at 6:55 pm

    I just wish they would stop blaming all the worlds problems on video games and movies. A lot of people, such as myself, have watched these same movies and I personally LOVE playing GTA vice city. I’m perfectly sane and normal and I don’t feel like hurting or killing anyone. I just think its ridiculous and they need to quit focusing on blaming the media industry and start focusing on the actual people and teach responsibility!

  25. Neph says:
    30 December, 2003 at 7:06 pm

    My god the ignorance of some people is stunning.
    The comment about the game being 10,000 times worse than ANYTHING Michael Jackson ever did to a little boy, was the most disturbing comment I think I have read in a long time.
    WTF where they thinking when they wrote that?
    The answer is as you said, parenting. The problem is there are too many people with the title of Parent that don’t do their job. That is what we should really be concerned about I think.
    P.S. I am glad you are on the road to recovery wil. 🙂

  26. Ali says:
    30 December, 2003 at 7:18 pm

    As the mother of a 2 year-old and the wife of a video game junkie, I’ve had many discussions with my husband about how to deal with the violent video games that he plays. I feel that until a certain maturity level (i.e. having the ability to determine the difference between reality and fantasy), he shouldn’t be allowed to see the violence.
    We have made our TV room off-limits to him, so that my husband has a place to play his games without the chance for our son to accidentally view it. (This has the added benefit of giving us a room to hide in when we need to be away from him!)
    I get so angry when people want to blame elements in the media for the results of their poor parenting skills. All it takes to make sure your kids aren’t unduly influenced is MAKING SURE YOUR KIDS AREN’T UNDULY INFLUENCED!! Pay a little bit of attention to what your kids are watching on TV or viewing on the Internet, and there won’t be a problem!
    Bad parents are a hot button for me…sorry to rant.
    Glad you’re feeling more human…that crud has hit a lot of people pretty hard!

  27. RF says:
    30 December, 2003 at 7:27 pm

    It would be nice to think that the tit that wrote the piece actually reads your blog and what we all say….and then thinks “hey, maybe my first three wifes were right…I really am a neurotic loser….damn.”

  28. Mark Thomson says:
    30 December, 2003 at 8:26 pm

    Mmm sounds like another small minded red necked bible toting moron that wrote that article. It never ceases to amaze me that the world has grunting morons like that in it! No wonder we have wars, racism and other unpleasantness when you have some clearly small minded people like this out there. I also agree with Will – I’m a practitioner of “Parenting” as well… and wouldn’t let my kids play this game, but I don’t need some moron forcing there views on me. I’m quite capable of thinking for myself. This guy should try it sometime…

  29. Roy says:
    30 December, 2003 at 10:59 pm

    Actually, Mark, I have a number of redneck family members, and they tend to really like GTA. Rednecks like violence in entertainment =)

  30. Mike Jericho says:
    30 December, 2003 at 11:40 pm

    I would advise a pleasant accomodation between the two abovementioned themes. Mindless, unrestrained violence and Michael Jackson.
    But only after I’ve finished my LUNCH.

  31. Kynn Bartlett says:
    30 December, 2003 at 11:52 pm

    I think you just got trolled by the New York Post, myself.
    –Kynn

  32. Cecil says:
    31 December, 2003 at 3:51 am

    Computer game viloence = child abuse?? I’ll be the first to admit I’m a little behind the times, but how does a computer fantasy world ever justify abuse in the real world?? Haven’t we rehashed this enough??

  33. Rob Sweet says:
    31 December, 2003 at 6:47 am

    Hiya, Wil. Thanks for speaking up and for being an active parent instead of kicking the kids in front of the tube to play video games for days at a time. I was in my favorite pub the other day listening to some great live music and somebody’s kid was there (12 or 13, not 7 or 8) playing a GBA the whole time and totally ignoring the great stuff around him – it just kills me to see that. If you’re going to ignore everything around you, at least READ A BOOK for god’s sake. It’s entertaining *and* you’ll probably write and speak more articulately than most of your friends.

  34. Tim says:
    31 December, 2003 at 7:05 am

    That guy has some serious perspective issues that he needs to be made aware of.
    I’ve sent him a letter about this article and highly recommend everyone else do so as well.

  35. Cheekysquirrel says:
    31 December, 2003 at 7:21 am

    I’m afraid Mr. Byron has accomplished his goal with that article. Journalists make outrageous statements like the Michael Jackson statement to gain attention. That is all a jounro cares about. Being right or wrong or telling the truth is irrelevant to a journalist. Having people sit up and take notice whether to argue or support is everything. The best thing to do with journalists is ignore them. Don’t argue with them, it only encourages them to come out with even more blatent crap.

  36. Jc says:
    31 December, 2003 at 7:31 am

    I am stunned and amazed that not only could someone believe that crap enough to write it down, but that someone at the NY Times would allow it to be published. Also, thank you for pointing out what seems to continually be forgotten–children have parents. The parents are there to decide and control what the children are exposed to. Since I am always seeing children at graphic slasher horror films, I can only assume that parents are overlooking this simple concept. I am so sick of people trying to restrict/censor/ban what I as an adult can watch/read/listen to..etc. based on what is appropriate for children. I am an adult with adult problems and sometimes I want entertainment that isn’t appropriate for kids. And there’s NOTHING wrong with that.

  37. Annie says:
    31 December, 2003 at 8:03 am

    As an 18 year old I find it really difficult to comprehend that a person would have actually taken the time out of a day to write such a pile of junk, I mean seriously! I was always told when I was younger to avoid things like this and, although I’d complain and bitch and moan about it, I’d always listen because I knew my mum was only trying to take care of me and raise me right. It is so incredibly obvious that this person doesn’t have kids…he doesn’t even have common sense!

  38. lonewolf says:
    31 December, 2003 at 8:08 am

    I hate when the media or right wing groups keep going after video games and movies as the reasons why society has gone the way it has. I do believe there will always be people who will do things they shouldn’t that was inspired to them by video games or movies ( I remember some kids that decided to imitate a scene from the movie “The Program” and laid down in the middle of the road and ended up getting ran over), but violence in society has been around for a much longer time than either of these to mediums. If they think video game players are the cause of problems, maybe we should look at other groups. I think Christians have killed more people in a year than video game players (by the way, I am a Christian). I think what really needs to happen is people need to start taking responsibility for themselves and stop trying to blame others.

  39. Zack Shutt says:
    31 December, 2003 at 8:08 am

    Nice to see your back Wil, excellent job with this post.
    I loved watching you on Unscrewed, nice job!

  40. Metalboy says:
    31 December, 2003 at 9:43 am

    Here is what I sent the dumbass yesterday…
    Christopher,
    I fail to see how playing a VIDEOGAME is “10,000 times worse than the worst thing anybody thinks Michael Jackson ever did to a little boy”. I guess you subscribe to the theory that “Heavy Metal Music” is behind all of the Columbine Style shooting and has nothing to do with these kids parents.
    How about not damning a videogame company and damning all of the parents who don’t care what their child does or plays. Parents who use the TV or game system as a baby sitter.
    Did you ever play space invaders as a kid? What is the point of the game? Kill Aliens. Save the Earth. Lets just say space aliens are real. You are still killing. Sure, GTA has better graphics, but the point is the same.
    See you have to realize that Video Games are NOT Real Life, not matter how realistic the game are. If someone can’t tell the difference, they are either high (where are the parents?), or just really stupid. (how are they breathing?)

  41. emmie says:
    31 December, 2003 at 10:41 am

    This guy is probably just trying to get a rise out of people. Ignore it.

  42. flickguy says:
    31 December, 2003 at 10:44 am

    Point A) Video game violence does not promote real-life violence. If anything, it prevents real-life violence. (I’m living proof of that, having worked for 8 years in a grocery store, and coming home to my Goldeneye game on my N64 and ruthlessly slaughtering anything that moved, so that I wouldn’t go out, buy an AK-47 and murder everyone in that store.)
    Point B) Video Game violence does not promote real-life violence. People with no sense of responsibility promote real-life violence and then blame it all on the video games. YOU made the choice to buy the gun. YOU made the choice to pull the trigger. NO ONE is to blame for the murder of Anonymous Person #5465 but YOU.
    Point C) Bad parenting is not always the problem, either. Good parents, as I’ve learned — again from personal experience — can have bad children. My mother raised my brother and me, practically by herself. We are both reasonably good people. She also raised my sister, however, and my sister was — until she had children of her own and finally understood all the lessons Mom had tried to teach her — a Very Bad Girl. Mom laid down the same rules with her. Mom taught her the same values. They just didn’t seem to take.
    Point D) I hope everyone who reads this web site has a safe and happy New Year’s Eve. Don’t drink and drive, and if you do, don’t blame it on your parents or on video games. Take care.

  43. Nate says:
    31 December, 2003 at 10:55 am

    Man. I like how quickly this guy went from being “rediculous[sic]” to being bible-toting. Let’s do this guy a favor and flesh out his argument a little bit.
    GTA’s true crime is that it exposes millions of children (or people) to the idea that unrestrained violence can be enjoyable. These same people then leave their PS2 (or whatever) and head out into the world, more open to the idea that shooting someone on the street is a funny thing to do. Thus its true impact on the world (though difficult to estimate) will be countless crimes (murder, rape, etc.) that will certainly out-number Michael Jackson’s limited (though no doubt horrible) number of offenses.
    Now, this argument is–in my opinion–very definitely flawed. But no one seems to understand that it is the argument, certainly not Jason Bergman’s own reactionary and poorly thought-out response, which consists of, “But it’s art, and, well… crime’s so much worse than art, you know!”
    Sure, the article we’re all discussing is a piece of trash, but (as has been pointed out) it’s from an overtly reactionary paper.
    I wholly agree that Mr. Wheaton’s parenting approach is right on the mark. But on the other side, there are scores of parents out there who either won’t or can’t do the same thing. Do we just yell at them about what they should damn well be doing?
    I’m not saying the right approach is to yank free speech, but it’s worth thinking about.

  44. Shawn Scarber says:
    31 December, 2003 at 11:17 am

    The real problem I see here is the failure of this individual to distinguish between reality and fiction. I can understand the thought process behind the comment, because far there are far more games than Michael Jacksons, so therefore the games are doing a greater level of damage. But this is only true if you can account for fictional violence leading to real violence. Can a game, by its very nature do harm to a human being? Does a game have the ability to forces itself on a person like Michael Jackson allegedly did? I

  45. Patty says:
    31 December, 2003 at 12:49 pm

    Hey Wil,
    glad to see you are recovering. 🙂

  46. Xopher says:
    31 December, 2003 at 12:53 pm

    Tim, Jc, some others: This article appeared in the New York POST, not the Times. The Times is a respectable paper. The Post is a hardcopy Rush Limbaugh; ALL stories in the Post are right-wing twaddle (well, they did poke fun when the RIAA sued a 12-year-old, but that was an easy bandwagon to jump on).
    It’s been that way for a while, too. I remember a comedian mumble years ago when I was young, saying “New York City only has two newspapers — unless you count the Post, and why should you?”
    It’s really the daily form of tabloids like the National Inquirer and Weekly World News. It serves only to justify prejudice and ride misplaced outrage. And attack “Liberals” wherever they may be.
    New York Times, Washington Post: real papers.
    New York Post, Washington Times: right-wing troll organs.
    Wil, thanks for pointing this out, and I’m glad you’re feeling better. I must say, this article must really comfort Michael Jackson. I’m sure he would NEVER let any of his boys play Mature content video games, no sir.
    He’d best not make that the cornerstone of his defense strategy, methinks.

  47. Zak says:
    31 December, 2003 at 1:55 pm

    The New York Post is all about inflammatory articles written for the sole purpose of getting people who actually know or care about a topic so livid that they’ll raise a major stink about it, therefore providing increased attention for the newspaper and the writer involved. This isn’t the BBC, it isn’t about balanced, fair reporting. No one takes the Post seriously (at least, no one should), especially not for financial advice! Wouldn’t worry about it, myself.

  48. Keith says:
    31 December, 2003 at 2:59 pm

    Wow reading all these replys was great and i think most have hit the mark
    There have been studies on Video game violence that have stated that violence in video games actually decreases the agression that most people feel it lets them exert their anger. there have been studies to the contrary but the majority i have read about have been that violent games help lower agression as has been said many times about the fact still remains it is the resonsability of the Parent to do the best they can at teaching right from wrong somone above mentioned that somtimes you still have people who end up doing bad things with good parents to them i say your are absolutly correct we are all human and no matter what our parents do we still have free will and some will Rebel i do not have kids yet however my wife and i would not let our children play these types of games until we saw that they were mature enough to understand that they are mearly games. as for the comparison of MJ and GTA i cannot belive that somone would say that no matter how violent a “VIDEO GAME” is that the accusation of molestation is by any means better. even if the video games lead to violence how can you say the Molestation is a lesser crime then shooting somone we all should know right from wrong and should commit neither act
    Glad to hear your feeling better Wil

  49. Seth says:
    31 December, 2003 at 3:02 pm

    I was laughing and laaaaaughing…
    then I realized the article wasn’t by Dave Barry.

  50. B. Joseph Fekete, Jr. says:
    31 December, 2003 at 4:15 pm

    First, I think *all media* are making a very bad choice in making people “guilty by accusation.” Mr. Jackson has not been proven guilty of anything, and for right now, until he *is* proven truly guilty, I will continue to believe that the accusers are after him money. I *do* think his admission that sleeping with children is a very bad choice on *his* part, however, for even if totally innocent, the appearance of wrongdoing is heavy.
    *Tabloids* ARE tabloids, whether printed or broadcast.
    Many people drink, not all are alcoholics. Many people play violent games, not all commit violence or even want to. I think personal inner disposition is a very big factor in all this.
    I was lucky to have parents that “parented” me, but then I’m pretty old now–62–and from a different generation, from before the influence of tv-as-babysitter. At least, Wil, you still have the classic “right idea” and I applaud you. Nonetheless, children at some point, decide to go their own way. Good parents do have bad children at times, and I think we are too ready to place outside blame, when it really comes down to personal accountability. People commit crimes, not guns or video games.
    Everyone please have a violence-free new year, and those parents out there, the blessing of children who grow up to have learned and abide by your good rules.
    Peace!
    –Joe Fekete

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Lift every voice and sing,‘Til earth and heaven ring,Ring with the harmonies of Liberty;Let our rejoicing riseHigh as the listening skies,Let it resound loud as the rolling sea.Sing a song [...]

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it picks me up, puts me down

it picks me up, puts me down

I’ve been open and unashamed about my mental health struggles and triumphs, always willing to talk about my CPTSD, always willing to supportively listen when someone chooses to share their [...]

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