Here We Go Again
So, there
I was, yet another young black man who had fallen victim to the gang culture of
early nineties South Central San Andreas. My Christian name was Carl, but I was
known on the streets and among my gang as CJ. I had been brought into this
life by factors and influences that seemed out of my control at the time. But
by the grace of God I had escaped that death trap of an existence that I was
once caught inside. However, my new life suffered a massive blow when I found
out that my mother had been murdered. She had been killed in what they were
calling “a gang related shooting”, and I knew that this was a direct
repercussion of my running away from home with so many things left unfinished.
But no longer, I swore that I would get my ass back to San Andreas, avenge my
mother, and clean up the mess I left behind. Before I could even get out of the
car, I felt myself devolving right back into the same gang banger I thought I
had left behind. I was boosting cars, I was murdering any mother fucker in the
wrong color, I was senselessly and
mercilessly gunning down people on the streets , I was killing cops like it was
my damn job, and most importantly I was getting fucking paid. In between all
this brutality and bloodshed, I somehow found plenty of time to run a drug
empire, be a ruthless pimp, and reclaim my spot as the OG of my neighborhood.
Now, you may think that living a life as violent and reckless as I did may have
worn heavy on my conscience, but to your dismay, it doesn’t even phase me one
bit. And that’s primarily because I did all those things not as a young black
man in San Andreas (which is the entirely fictional setting of a Grand Theft
Auto video game ), but as a twelve year old white boy in Colorado Springs,
Colorado. I committed all these atrocities digitally, in my friend Nate’s
living room, through a Playstation 2 controller, and most likely with Cheeto dust on my fingers.
I am a
product of violent video games. I grew up playing some of the most
ultra-violent video games the world has ever known. From a young age, I witnessed
the ruthlessly graphic finishing moves in Mortal Kombat at the end of each
fight. I remember playing a samurai game called Shinobi, that was a just a
brutal gore fest of chopping other samurai to bits as you saved the world. I
played every single grand theft auto game, I had notebooks filled with cheat
codes that would make these games even more sinister at my own volition. I
played them all growing up, and never, not one damn time, did I feel compelled
by those games, those works of fiction, to go out and murder because I had lost
my ability differentiate between reality and fiction. It’s just downright
fucking absurd to say that video games have the level of influence required to
create a mass murderer from nothing.
We love
nothing more than to blame the inanimate. And why not? It’s so much easier than
to grasp onto the tangible evidence of our shortcomings. Modern day America is
the poster child for depravity and degradation, and we seem to be in a
perpetual state of ignorance to this fact. We are a country that has become
drastically more violent for decades, and instead of figuring out what in the
actual fuck is causing our fellow man to continue to murder in cold blood, we
have launched multiple campaigns advocating the damnation of objects. Congratulations
American politicians and self-righteous soccer moms alike, for making such a
profound fucking impact on the world and the safety of its people. We have put
the blame on everything from cap guns to hip hop, as potential reasoning for
why children are growing up to commit such putrid acts of hate. But all this is
for not, because the reason is us. The prevalence of violence on video games,
movies, and TV’s is just a direct response to our society. The games are only
getting more violent because the consumers thirst for those senseless video games
has only gotten stronger, because they need it, they crave it, they know
nothing else. They have already been desensitized by real violence for most of
their lives. So, what is a video game compared to the real thing? After all, these
are the kids that grew up around television sets that were constantly exposing
them to footage of the attacks on September 11th, the active combat
zones in Afghanistan and Iraq, police shootings, and countless school shootings.
All of these examples of such prevalent violent factors weighing on young, developing
psyches, and you want to say that it’s a video game that has caused these young
people to have massive mental breakdowns that result in murderous outbursts?
Seems a lot like people ignoring mental health problems because they’re the big
scary monster that we like to pretend doesn’t exist.
It just
seems so fucking audacious to claim that a sequence of moving pictures, covering
a narrative and following a story, could really drive someone to a dark enough
place to take the life of another human being for no reason whatsoever. That
place is vile, that place is void of redemption, and that place is dug into
deeper and deeper over the years. Years of being berated, abused, and violated
by every medium life has to offer.
Just imagine a life where your only
association with the rest of humanity has been persistently negative. You were
ridiculed and bullied as a child and into early adulthood, shown nothing but
disgust and rejection by the opposite sex, and most likely you’ve been horribly
abused by someone you once trusted. As a result, your mind wanders to some
pretty dark places and you begin to welcome ideas of vindication through
violence. You know that these ideas are wrong, so you seek help. You are asked
some generic questions about what people your age are supposed to be feeling and
based on your answers, you’re given pills for an anxiety disorder. But the
pills only change your perception and put a spin on reality, they don’t do
anything to change how people treat you, and now you’re in the same rut as
before except now you have some really neat little chemicals swimming around
your brain. So, there you are confused as to why you even sought help in the
first place. That feeling is called hopeless. That is when your final slip into
madness begins. That is when you put your guard down and let those vengeful
thoughts encompass your mind. You’ve written your manifesto, you’ve researched
military tactics online, you’ve bought all the necessary equipment to carry a
proper load of ammunition and supplies, you’ve got yourself a firearm, and most
importantly, you’re out of your fucking mind and ready to become a killing
machine. After you commit your massacre, and you are undoubtedly killed (either
by your own doing, or you got plugged full of holes by law enforcement), rest
assured that nothing will change, and your death will have been in vain. See,
despite your overwhelming background and history with terrible circumstance,
that has been proven over and over to be the building blocks for violent
behavior, your face will be on the news next to a picture of some camouflage
clad, assault rifle toting, militant looking mother fucker, all because the FBI
found a copy of Call of Duty in your Xbox. Then parents with children that have
symptoms just like yours, won’t have to face the fact that they have a potential monster on their hands, and they can
just ground him from video games instead of dealing with his demons.
As long as we keep objectifying these acts of
violence, resolution and peace will remain nothing more than fallacies.
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