TV violence: victimless or venomous?
The epitome of who we are is essentially what we watch on television.
By: Jason Staggs
Issue date: 4/3/09 Section: Opinion
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Every time I hear my friends, or even strangers, talking about the gritty details of the latest murder on "CSI" or how many people they killed on "Grand Theft Auto IV" last night, which is often, I cringe a little, usually on the outside, and often visibly. Why? I hate to see people I know and care about hurting themselves like this.
What's the harm, you ask. Well, several things come to mind; the first of which is simply that absorbing images of violence begets more violence.
It is hard to deny that there is some correlation between the fictional images you absorb and the reality you project. Just as our bodies are what we eat, so too our minds are what we consume in the form of images, sounds and events. It is arrogant to assume we are above the influence of what we choose to do. Whether it is eating too much fast food, drinking too much alcohol, listening to 'music' that denigrates women or watching people kill each other on the tube, we become the product of our actions.
According to the American Psychological Association, people who watch more violence and aggression in their youth are more likely to be violent and aggressive as early as their 20s.
In a 15-year study published in 2003, L. Rowell Heusmann and others looked at the effects of childhood exposure to violence on television and came up with some alarming statistics. According to them, men who watched violent programs were "significantly more likely to have pushed, grabbed or shoved their spouses," and had three times the number of criminal convictions as other men in the study. Women were more likely to have thrown things at their spouses, and to have "punched, beaten or choked another adult" at four times the rate of other women in the study.
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