Just throwin this out there

Interesting that Liberals say that modern media doesn't affect society that much but then defend gay characters in those same media outlets as a way of "moving society forward". Uh, wut? :confused:

I was watching my oldest son play a particularly violent video game a while back (some 15 years ago) and I said "You know there are people who think that you'll see this stuff and then want to go out and do it".

He looked at me like I had 3 heads and said: "It's just a video game".
 
Good point. But on the flip. If media and things don't influence kids then why are conservative always in such an uproar when tv shows depict same sex relationships. "It's just a TV show."
 
Difference is, homosexuality does not promote human survival.

Blowing the head off your enemy does.

Thus one is taboo, the other is not.
 
see how stupid and violent the right is?


they dont want their kids seeing people in love but they do want their kids to practice voilent behavior.

then this other idiot actually thinks violence preserves people.
 
What happens if the child does not pick up the message of "blowing ones enemy head off"

What if they pick up the message "blowing the head off this annoying bastard" and they are thinking about their brother or sister, hmmm?
 
Bad girls' brains is different...
:eusa_eh:
Brain change link to anti-social behaviour in girls
21 October 2012 - Brain scans showed significant differences
The brains of teenage girls with behavioural disorders are different to those of their peers, UK researchers have found. The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry study of 40 girls revealed differences in the structure of areas linked to empathy and emotions. Previous work has found similar results in boys. Experts suggest it may be possible to use scans to spot problems early, then offer social or psychological help.

An estimated five in every 100 teenagers in the UK are classed as having a conduct disorder. It is a psychiatric condition which leads people to behave in aggressive and anti-social ways, and which can increase the risk of mental and physical health problems in adulthood. Rates have risen significantly among adolescent girls in recent years, while levels in males have remained about the same.

Fear detector

In this study, funded by the Wellcome Trust and Medical Research Council, UK and Italian researchers conducted brain scans of 22 teenage girls who had conduct disorder and compared them with scans of 20 who did not. They also checked the scans against others previously taken of teenage boys with conduct disorder. The team found part of the brain called the amygdala was smaller in the brains of male and female teenagers with conduct disorder than in their peers.

The amygdala is involved in picking up whether or not others feel afraid - and plays a role in people feeling fear themselves. Girls with conduct disorder also had less grey matter in an area of the brain called the insula - linked to emotion and understanding your own emotions. However the same area was larger in boys with conduct disorder than healthy peers, and researchers are not yet sure why that is the case. The brains of those with the worst behaviour were most different from the norm.

[/B]Biological basis[/b]
 

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