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The myth of the violent gamer

CNET News.com’s Charles Cooper finds there's a growing chorus of blame laying responsibility for the coarsening of society on the game development community.

Charles Cooper Former Executive Editor / News
Charles Cooper was an executive editor at CNET News. He has covered technology and business for more than 25 years, working at CBSNews.com, the Associated Press, Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet.
Charles Cooper

There’s been a lot of buzz on the legislative front about what “to do” about violent video and computer games.

This is a red herring if ever there was.

IÂ’m not looking to let the cyber game industry off the hook for its sundry stupidities (Do we really need a game reenacting JFKÂ’s assassination?) But laying blame for the coarsening of society and the desensitizing of so many of our youth at the doorstep of the game development community is a cop-out.

In the search for root causes, has anyone noticed how religion has figured in recent stories about shooting incidents leading the national news? Terry Ratzmann last month went on a shooting rampage. Should we infer any link to his regular church attendance? The local cop interviewed by the Associated Press believes the motive the motive had something to do with the church.

And what to make of Dennis Rader, a man who was president of his church council and described as a faithful Christian? These days heÂ’s in policy custody and accused of being the notorious BTK killer.

Well, you get the point.