That's "Oz - The Game".Can you rape dudes?
Glad for censorship? Hmm.Glad Amazon banned it.
This isn't "censorship". This is a "business doing what it wants to do."
That's "Oz - The Game".Can you rape dudes?
Glad for censorship? Hmm.Glad Amazon banned it.
Its self-censorship. Just another mark on the growing list of individuals and companies that make an about-face when confronted with accusations of "immorality". While voluntary, they are all essentially allowing more conservative elements to dictate what they can and cannot say and sell rather than facing the consequences of taking a stand.This isn't "censorship". This is a "business doing what it wants to do."
Just because someone plays a game like this doesn't mean they have any real desire to rape, just like a person who plays Grand Theft Auto probably doesn't have any desire to go on a murder spree. Banning the game or making it less available doesn't solve any problems whatsoever.And playing a "rape videogame" because you like rape but are worried about the consequences of rape... umm... how long will that last? If someone really wants to murder, how long do you think they'll settle for VG? It would be better to seek help for why they have this desires before they hurt someone...
Those things vary from person to person. So now I ask you, judgmental much?
Those things vary from person to person. So now I ask you, judgmental much?SSOOOO.. let me get this right, DECENTCY & COMMONSENCE...VARYS from person to person? SO a game about RAPEING innocent women...is NOT indecent?
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Decency is relative, yes. Common sense is often lacking. A game about raping someone, while perhaps indecent by your standards and those of most people, is nonetheless harmless fantasy in and of itself, and is protected under the first amendment.Those things vary from person to person. So now I ask you, judgmental much?SSOOOO.. let me get this right, DECENTCY & COMMONSENCE...VARYS from person to person? SO a game about RAPEING innocent women...is NOT indecent?
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So very true. If you counted all the people/aliens/monsters/etc I've killed over the years in various videogames the number would easily be in the hundreds of thousands if not millions, and yet I have absolutely no desire to kill anyone.Just because someone plays a game like this doesn't mean they have any real desire to rape, just like a person who plays Grand Theft Auto probably doesn't have any desire to go on a murder spree. Banning the game or making it less available doesn't solve any problems whatsoever.
Such as? It sounds like the same thing to me, I guess, at least as far as visualizing an ally with some guy in a trenchcoat going, *psst!* "Hey, you wanna see something that'll make your toes curl?"/\/\
He said a backmarket. As in, not a secret market, but the places that sell these kinds of things normally.
Well I'm offended that you're offended, and I condemn the fact that your closemindedness condemns them.Yes, I condemn people for fantasizing about rape. I'm not going to stop doing that either.
I condemn the act, and I condemn those who would think about it as a hobby,
I'm pretty sure most people do, but that isn't what we're talking about here.and I condemn seventy times those who actually commit the act.
I don't think anyone said that either.There's nothing wholesome or right about it.
Your neighbor is totally into it, you should leave the neighborhood now, before he rapes your dog and then your cat, saying, "I like a little pussy every now and then."And yes, it's none of my business, so in reality I don't know how many people do. Nor do I want to know.
Thing is, that's the viewpoint I want government to have. But as a private person, if I find out I'm living next to people who are fantasizing about doing stuff like that, I'm movie my wife and children as quick as possible.
The thing is, and this is a constant joke about networks too, the "majority" of customers has nothing to do with self censorship of this kind. All it takes is one complaint about something and they would pull it. Sort of like how the school will cancel all Halloween parties because one kid's parents whined about it being Satan's holiday, and no amount of protest from any larger number of people will make them go back on that.When a business pulls a product from it's shelves because it knows that product will be offensive to a majority of it's customers, that's not censorship, it's freedom.
And some of us worry about how limiting those laws might be made.Like I said above, in this country people are free to think and do what they want, within limitations of the law.
Or so they and you think, but since no one even really knew about it, I doubt anything would've come from them continuing to sell it. After all, I don't see many people refusing to buy things from Amazon because they sell Caligula.And other people are free to feel offended and condemn, and businesses are free to stop selling something that will inevitably shrink their consumer base.
Again, you said something that doesn't make any sense. What I'm exercising is my right to free speech and my concern that some aspect of free speech may be limited because it involves a taboo subject.No, you and others are exercising your right to not be offended, and those that aren't can buy these things in the backmarket that caters to tastes like this.
That's what we on the internets refer to as backpedaling.But that simply isn't what he suggested at all, in fact he has even said that he doesn't support that,
And I'm entitled to be concerned that he would be concerned what goes on in the privacy of his neighbor's brain.so I really don't know why you are making such a big deal out of such a small statement, he is entitled to find it concerning whether you like it or not![]()
That was Australia.
I guess where my concern would come in if this would apply to simulated stuff (i.e. role play of some kind), artwork, etc. or if it would only apply to the real deal, as in someone actually went out and raped and killed someone and took pictures of it. Because as cynical as I am towards humanity in general, I doubt much of that actually happens. Nothing I could find made a point of saying the murderer who was the poster child for the crusade to pass that legislation actually had any real rape/snuff porn or not, it simply says he had "violent" porn, which is pretty vague, really.Anyway, the big print says that an extreme image is only one that depicts, in a medium that falls under the official definition of pornography, ie. produced with the sole intent of causing sexual arousal:
(a) an act which threatens a person’s life,
(b) an act which results, or is likely to result, in serious injury to a person’s anus, breasts or genitals,
(c) an act which involves sexual interference with a human corpse, or
(d) a person performing an act of intercourse or oral sex with an animal (whether dead or alive)
That was the impression I had, but I could be mistaken. It could be that's just what the mother was pushing for and she didn't get all of it. Keep in mind this is from a discussion I had on another board before the legislation had actually been passed.So again, whilst I think the entire thing is rather unneccesary, I say you are also rather overstating the matter in saying that this outlaws "all violent porn." which is the statement you made.
Yes, you should only feed it fruit and vegetables....Feeding your mind on horrid things, especially detestable things like rape- isn't good. It isn't healthy.
This statement tells me you lack a basic understanding of the difference between fantasy and reality.And playing a "rape videogame" because you like rape but are worried about the consequences of rape... umm... how long will that last?
Well, let's see, I play Halo, F.E.A.R., Call of Duty, and enjoy first person shooters in general. I also own a gun. I have yet to murder anyone or feel the need to murder anyone, so that kind of blows your point right out of the water. Watch now as its back is broken and it slips beneath the waves.If someone really wants to murder, how long do you think they'll settle for VG?
Yes, they should take the bridge to total freedom with Tom Cruise, since Scientology is the only real authority on the mind.It would be better to seek help for why they have this desires before they hurt someone...
Yeah, those bastard hunters - murderers, all of them!I mean, people often don't care about animal abuse... nevermind that almost everyone who abuses, murders people starts by abusing animals.
Rosy never says no, unless you want her to, then you can just show that uppity bitch and her five sisters who their daddy is.Someone who finds rape fun, buys videogames of it... is really healthy and going to stick with that? Like watching sex on TV is so much better than the real thing? Haha! Right...
"Decency", just like "morality", is indeed relative. And "common sense" is not common.SSOOOO.. let me get this right, DECENTCY & COMMONSENCE...VARYS from person to person?
Maybe in the game they are bad women, and dress provocatively.SO a game about RAPEING innocent women...is NOT indecent?![]()
Unfortunately in this country, yes, we do have people who try to sue the gun company because someone used their product to kill someone. I can only imagine it's a matter of time before Boeing is sued for 9/11. On a more positive note, Jack Thompson has been disbarred because the court system finally determined that he was full of shit." Even if you raped someone after playing the game, the people who made the game would not be at fault."
This, of course, would be argued differently in a court of law, as we have seen people try to do with games like grand theft auto.
So you're cool with murder simulators then? And besides, these womens' virginity is clearly the enemy in this game; I'm sure the mission objectives are to destroy the evil hymen and any resulting evil fetuses, lest they burst from their chest and grow at a rapid rate into a hideous monster that will kill us all, one by one.I have no problems playing game slike Left4Dead, Gears of War, Halo, etc where the goal is to kill the enemy;
Yes, damn those people for having fantasies and thoughts you don't like, damn them all to hell!a game like this offends me that someone would even think to make one.
You can be as offended as you like. If you don't like the game, don't buy it. You have a right not to. What you don't have a right to do, however, is tell other people they can't make, buy, sell, or enjoy it.a game like this offends me that someone would even think to make one.
NO.irregardless
I think they had a right to do as they did. That doesn't necessarily mean I think their decision was the right one, or made for the right reasons.Libertarians think that a private business like Amazon is wrong for pulling the game because they don't want their name associated with a game that glorifies rape and forced abortion. That's capitalism in action, so what's the problem?
I think they had a right to do as they did. That doesn't necessarily mean I think their decision was the right one, or made for the right reasons.Libertarians think that a private business like Amazon is wrong for pulling the game because they don't want their name associated with a game that glorifies rape and forced abortion. That's capitalism in action, so what's the problem?
It's not so much that as a reaction to them pulling it and the pervading attitude in this thread, which is simply to reject the game like Jack Thompson would reject Grand Theft Auto or any other "murder simulators".Libertarians think that a private business like Amazon is wrong for pulling the game because they don't want their name associated with a game that glorifies rape and forced abortion. That's capitalism in action, so what's the problem?
The point of contention there is the juxtaposition of a fantasy that in reality threatens no one with an obsession that has an actual potential to be harmful to his spouse. That and the strawman of that comparison, rather like others have brought up kiddie porn.People who defend the idea that just because you think about something that doesn't mean you're going to follow-through on it are jumping on Hoser's case for thinking that rape fantasies are wrong and being uneasy if his neighbor was basically stalking his wife, both things that never extended beyond his own thoughts and personal actions which would effect no one but himself (and his family) if true.
He suggested people, in a general sense, should be worried about someone having taboo sexual fantasies, so yeah, that kind of touched a nerve with me, especially since that kind of statement has been pretty standard issue for the kind of moral crusaders who pushed through laws like the one in the UK discussed earlier.They're saying that just because he personally thinks it's wrong that it's likely to lead to legislation even though Hoser suggested nothing of the sort.
Touche. Though to be fair he didn't exactly articulate himself very well on the original point.So thinking it does mean you're going to follow-through on it, then?
It's not so much that as a reaction to them pulling it and the pervading attitude in this thread, which is simply to reject the game like Jack Thompson would reject Grand Theft Auto or any other "murder simulators".
The point of contention there is the juxtaposition of a fantasy that in reality threatens no one with an obsession that has an actual potential to be harmful to his spouse. That and the strawman of that comparison, rather like others have brought up kiddie porn.
He suggested people, in a general sense, should be worried about someone having taboo sexual fantasies, so yeah, that kind of touched a nerve with me, especially since that kind of statement has been pretty standard issue for the kind of moral crusaders who pushed through laws like the one in the UK discussed earlier.
And I'm entitled to be concerned that he would be concerned what goes on in the privacy of his neighbor's brain.
Well it is all right there in the link I provided earlier, "violent porn" or "extreme images" as they are calling them specifically only refers to pornographic material that depicts activities that endanger the life of cause serious injury to the genitals which is fairly specific and certainly rules out anything like fantasy rape which results in neither of those things.I guess where my concern would come in if this would apply to simulated stuff (i.e. role play of some kind), artwork, etc. or if it would only apply to the real deal, as in someone actually went out and raped and killed someone and took pictures of it. Because as cynical as I am towards humanity in general, I doubt much of that actually happens. Nothing I could find made a point of saying the murderer who was the poster child for the crusade to pass that legislation actually had any real rape/snuff porn or not, it simply says he had "violent" porn, which is pretty vague, really.Anyway, the big print says that an extreme image is only one that depicts, in a medium that falls under the official definition of pornography, ie. produced with the sole intent of causing sexual arousal:
That was the impression I had, but I could be mistaken. It could be that's just what the mother was pushing for and she didn't get all of it. Keep in mind this is from a discussion I had on another board before the legislation had actually been passed.So again, whilst I think the entire thing is rather unneccesary, I say you are also rather overstating the matter in saying that this outlaws "all violent porn." which is the statement you made.
What does "irregardless" mean?
Isn't it just a longer way of saying "regard"?
The most frequently repeated remark about it is that “there is no such word.” There is such a word, however. It is still used primarily in speech, although it can be found from time to time in edited prose. Its reputation has not risen over the years, and it is still a long way from general acceptance. Use regardless instead. [bolding mine]
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