Guest guest Posted May 6, 2008 Report Share Posted May 6, 2008 Hurting animals for no reason (whether they are rats, cats, dogs, etc.) is definitely a sign of antisocial personality disorder (APD). It's caused by a mixture of nature and nurture. Video games can't cause antisocial personality disorder. I think that people (NT?) choose to get confused on this issue. The correlation actually goes something like this...People with APD get a real rush when they see someone hurt. They can get that rush by hurting someone themselves or by watching it on TV/video etc. It's similar to an addict...They just need that high. Like you, I feel sick when I watch beheadings, rapes, etc on TV; for them it's almost orgasmic. > > I've been thinking for a while now about this whole issue of violence > portrayed in various sources and began to wonder just where does one > draw the line? For example at present video games, violent movies and > music are being blamed for breeding violence. In the 80's we > had 'vidoeo nasties'. However erradicate the aforementioned and what > are we left with? Cartoons often depict violence - just think of Tom > & Jerry. The news is often violent, accompanied by violent images and > sadly these are depictions of real life humans destroying one another. > > Also I have always found it interesting that as a child that there > were age guidlines regarding what I could watch, however I could read > basically anything I wanted as books did not have these guidlines. I > was an avid reader from quite an early age. I was a member of the > local library and I remember being quite shocked regarding the > content of some of the books I was reading - however the book > jacket/cover did not always give indication to the adult material > within. Mmmmmm the line 'don't judge a book by it's cover' instantly > springs to mind. > > I guess I am pondering just how far do we go? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 6, 2008 Report Share Posted May 6, 2008 " The people I know that hunt take pride in marksmanship or how quickly they reached the bag limit. I've never seen or heard any of them actually take pride in watching the animal die. " Well, a couple of my Uncles are responsible hunters (especially one who married into the family. He is Ojibwe/Chippewa). They won't go over the limit and are looking for a quick clean kill. The eat what they kill and usually mount the antlers. I don't have a problem with that. I used to fish and had to give it up. I hauled in something like 60 fish within the proper size limit in three days (Northern Pike, Perch, Crappy, Blue Gill) and I did not feel it was fair to the fish to keep going on that excursion. Now I practice catch and release if I fish at all, but I rarely go out fishing. But then again, some of their spawn are the cretins I described earlier, and those dolts have no respect for animals. Administrator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 20, 2008 Report Share Posted May 20, 2008 " With Tom and Jerry, Popeye and even the Three Stooges, you pretty much knew the violence wasn't real and was slapstick. I mean, people then had enough sense to know that if you hit someone in the head with a cast iron frying pan or a hammer, you'd probably kill them, or if you poked them in the eyes, you'd blind them, etc. " I know I am getting back to this fairly late, however I am not 100% sure I agree with the above and I will explain why. When my son was a lot younger and staying over at a friends house (who fortunately understands autism fairly well), he put a kitten in the freezer. Fortunately the kitten was discovered before any serious damage was done and yes it was okay. However when he was asked why he had done such a thing he said he had seen such on a Tom and Jerry cartoon and it was funny, therefore he wanted to surprise his friend and make her happy. Obviously it was explained to my son the seriousness and possible consequences of what he had done and how cartoons were not real etc, but it is just an example that some children do not automatically understand that cartoons etc are not real and that mimicking such could/will have dire conseqeunces in real life. > > With Tom and Jerry, Popeye and even the Three Stooges, you pretty much knew > the violence wasn't real and was slapstick. I mean, people then had enough > sense to know that if you hit someone in the head with a cast iron frying pan or > a hammer, you'd probably kill them, or if you poked them in the eyes, you'd > blind them, etc. > > I think the real problem came with the action movies probably in the 1970's > where the hero runs around shooting up everything but never takes more than a > flesh wound nor do any of the feature good guys get hurt either. The music > that I can see influencing violence is gangsta rap, because that's all it is: > violence and sex. Certain video games like Grand theft auto might also > contribute. > > A lot of it comes down to the individual. There is a TV series called " Most > Evil " which is about various kinds of evil things people have done and study > of the perpetrators. It is based on the work of a psychiatrist who developed > the rating scale. He says that generally speaking, there are three things that > are needed for people to do evil things. > > 1. A miswired brain. By that he means they are psychotic, sociopathic, > schizophrenic, etc. > 2. Brain damage either suffered at birth, a childhood or later injury, > possibly drug use damage. > 3. An abusive childhood. > > Granted there are exceptions to the rule, such as people with normal brains > and good upbringings that just go bad, but in the main this is what he has > found. > > I can see how this would apply to video games too. The unconscious brain > can't distinguish reality from fantasies of the waking mind. So in the wrong > brain, it could see this entertainment and games as the real world. Over time, > it would adjust to this " reality " and order its survival reactions accordingly. > I can also see this applying to high crime areas and such where children are > treated dismally, underfed, abused etc. That would give them the worst of > all three conditions. They would probably have some kind of brain damage from > malnutrition and abuse and they would see a very twisted version of reality > with lots of violence and brutality and neglect. > > So some people would be more susceptible to all of this than others. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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