Ralph Nader: Video game makers are "electronic child molesters"

Former presidential candidate Ralph Nader speaks during a news conference July 2, 2012 at Public Citizen in Washington, DC. / Alex Wong/Getty Images
Political activist and former presidential candidate Ralph Nader has come down hard on video games. In fact, he has gone as far as to call the companies that make them "electronic child molesters."
In a recent interview with Politico, Nader blasted President Obama's gun control package that was unveiled last week. The two-time Green Party presidential candidate said that the president's plan needs to go further in regulating video game creators that add violence to their games.
"Television program violence? Unbelievable. Video game violence? Unprecedented," Nader told Politico. "I'm not saying he wants to censor this, I think he should sensitize people that they should protect their children family by family from these kinds of electronic child molesters."[sic]
Nader's outrage comes on the heels of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., where 20 children and six others were killed by a 20-year-old shooter.
This isn't the first time Nader has used the phrase "electronic child molesters." After the Columbine High School massacre in Littleton, Colo., in 1999 when two students from the school murdered 12 students and one teacher, Nader raged that corporations shared some of the blame.
"All this is fine with the companies -- these boys and girls spent more than $25 billion last year, and what they got in return is violent, addictive, and tawdry sensuality," Nader wrote in his blog at the time. "These electronic child molesters have little sense of restraint or boundaries. Their odious fare is becoming more coarse, more violent, and more interactive to seduce these youngsters into an addiction of direct video game involvement in the mayhem."
This article originally appeared on CNET under the headline "Ralph Nader: Video game firms are 'electronic child molesters.'"
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http://www.destructoid.com/why-do-the-kids-love-call-of-duty--204608.phtml
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/digitalnation/waging-war/a-new-generation/the-army-experience-center.htm
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/digitalnation/waging-war/a-new-generation/the-army-experience-center.html
A small change would be Call of Duty not stating a new rampage until 10 minutes after all died in the last one, allowing Adam Lanzas mother to get him food instead of dieing from the effort.
Of course there would have still been the Right Wing youth camp rampage in Noway, and the militant Muslim one at a Jewish School in France
readersupportednews.org/pm-section/419-gun-control-/16523-gun-violence-war-and-war-video-simulations
I have an important message for you, dear Ralphie: I'm a grown ass man and I'm going to play whatever the hell I feel like.
German gamers already play the most violent games in the world right under the thumb of one of the strictest game regulation regimes in the world. It won't be different here, and our framework won't allow your regulators 1/10th of the reach German ones have.
Do you really think a few boring, grey-faced moral guardians can suppress our culture with the help of some inept representatives and senators?
So go ahead. We can make a meta-game of gaming. You try and stop me from playing stuff and I'll see how trivially I can work around whatever tiny, token roadblock you throw up.
Proof positive your talking about something you know little or nothing about. It's like a child saying they hate the taste of a food they've never even tried.
Many video games are an outlet for creativity (e.g. Minecraft). Personally, I'd rather my son play Minecraft than damage his brain by playing football.
And fyi. If YOU expose your 10-13 year old to a M rated game it is not the game industry thats a fault. The blame can only be placed on retailers and most importen you as a parent for not checking up on your own damn kids.
Take note of Japan, gaming is a way of life over there, like zero school shootings. Only in the USA do still consider it "childs entertainment".
Fix your society, fix your easy access to guns (especially for families with kids that suffer from bullying, depression and what not).
This Naders Logic is beyond flawed.