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CA Violent Video Game Ban Struck Down

sjohnson
79 Comments

Posted June 27, 2011 - By Stephen Johnson

Supreme Court Gaming Arguments -- The EMA/ESA Presents Their Case

In a major win for the video game industry and Free Speech, the United States Supreme Court has struck down California's game law. It was a 7-2 decision, ruling that California's law forbidding the sale or rental of violent games to minors do not comport with the First Amendment. In short: The Game industry won.

The 92-page decision boils down to the following passage:

"This country has no tradition of specially restricting children’s access to depictions of violence. And California’s claim that 'interactive' video games present special problems, in that the player participates in the violent action on screen and determines its out-come, is unpersuasive."

"We are thrilled by today's news," said Jennifer Mercurio, VP & General Counsel of the Entertainment Consumers Association in a a statement. "We had hoped that we would see this decision, and it's been a long time coming. That being said, there will probably be one or two legislators who attempt to test these new parameters, and the ECA will continue to fight for the rights of entertainment consumers."

The decision, written by Justice Antonin Scalia, regarded by many as the most conservative member of The Court, lays out an argument that acknowledges that research into the "harm" done by video games to minors shows only correlation, not causation, and so is not convincing. It also points out the level of violence contained in classic works of literature like The Odyssey, The Inferno, and even Grimm's Fairy Tales, as well categorizing California's attempt to regulate video games as "the latest episode in a long history of failed attempts to censor violent entertainment for minors."

Also discussed: The history of attempts to classify "new" forms of speech as special classes of protection. The Court has ruled that games are not "qualitatively different from other portrayals of violence" even though they are interactive.

Dissenting opinions were offered by Justices Clarence Thomas and Stephen Breyer, generally regarded as members of the court's right and left wings, respectively.

Justice Clarence Thomas' dissent lays out an argument that U.S. history clearly shows that the founders of our nation believed in the absolute authority of parents over their minor children. Summed up by:

"I am sure that the founding generation would not have understood 'the freedom of speech' to include a right to speak to children without going through their parents. As a consequence, I do not believe that laws limiting such speech—for example, by requiring parental consent to speak to a minor—abridg[e] the freedom of speech.”

Justice Breyer's dissent points out his belief that the California law at issue would not have created a new category of speech, and that it is already illegal to sell material depicting nudity to children. Further, according to Breyer, the law "prevents no one from buying a video game... all it does is prevent a child or adolescent from buying, without parental assistance, a gruesomely violent video game of a kind that the industry itself tells us it wants to keep out of the hands of those under the age of 17."

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CA Violent Video Game Ban Struck Down
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Comments are Closed

  • soccer5bl

    i enjoy the opinion additions to this article. Especially the part where you ignore the fact that the WSJ has proven Clarence Thomas is the most conservative member of the Court. Very pleased with the decision though partly because I disagree with Thomas' logic about speaking to children thereby allowing the government to best decide how a child should be parented. That thinking brings us much closer to Aldous Huxley's kind of Utopia, which he can keep by the way.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 11:00 AM
  • hellterskelter89

    I'm waiting for Jack Thompson articles. Lets get it on!

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:55 AM
    hellterskelter89
  • Bratbuddy1

    Ima be perfectly honest... I think this may not have been the best choice, I wouldn't want lil 12 year olds being able to buy AO games...

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:50 AM
    Bratbuddy1
  • westraz

    92 pages? time to brake out the en-turns lol

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:45 AM
    westraz
  • GamebustaZX

    YEAH !!!!

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:35 AM
    GamebustaZX
  • slayingsumfools

    This is good for gamers like you and I everywhere. I definitely feel like the parents who are more than likely buying these expensive game systems need to do a better job knowing what they are buying for their kids especially since the games have ratings like movies. Not to piss on the parade but I don't the Supreme Court cares one way or the other about games, they just know that it is big business and they're not trying interfere with big business or hurt retailers in anyway. You see they just shot down women suing Wal-Mart so and apparently Clarence Thomas is catching flack over his personal business connections but with that said yeah hopefully politicians will focus more on job creation and not destroying Unions or the public school system now.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:33 AM
    slayingsumfools
  • Luck702

    Interesting case, but its all arbitrary. Law or not, every store participates in the refusal to sell games to minors based on the ESRB ratings. Nothings changed or would have changed.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:33 AM
    Luck702
  • Autobot5

    I don't see why they're trying to pass this law. Generally, when a kid goes to buy a game, the employees at the counter ask their parents, Is it okay for them to buy this? Do you approve? Yada yada yada. I don't see why the government suddenly feels they need to step in and make more hassle over buyign a GAME!! I've been playing GTA, sniping people's heads off, drive-by shootings, and all, since I was 7. Nearly 10 years later, and I'm fine. I'm not a psychopathic killer. I'm not preparing to hijack somebody's car and go on a free-for-all, getting all my friends together for a drive-by shooting, and running people over and whatnot. There's not reason for this law to even come up. It's common sense, that the parents of the child are going to teach them that they can't actually do the things that happen in the game, that they can't hijack a car or run people over without consequence, that they can jump off a building and come out unscathed, or start from a checkpoint and try again. To think that this is what that 6.25% tax is going to.... -___-'

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:24 AM
  • linkfan57

    All I can really say is "W00t!!!!"

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:22 AM
    linkfan57
  • CareyGrant

    Did anyone honestly think they'd side against the (bigger than movies and music) multi-billion dollar gaming industry? In the US money talks louder than votes.

    And since when has prudish America -where violence is OK, but sexuality is not- ever shied away from violence?

    I'm glad with the courts findings. I just wish more parents would stop abdicating their responsibilities to electronic babysitters and paid more attention to their kids.

    Being a good parent is very hard work (especially in today's craziness), and with our hectic lifestyle it's made doubly so. But I can think of no more important job than that.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:13 AM
    CareyGrant
  • BONERJAM

    Its good to see that common sense still exists.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 10:02 AM
    BONERJAM
  • glc49

    Great decision. It is the parent's responsibility to monitor their children and that includes purchasing, viewing, and playing all manner of video games. It is NOT the right of government to assume this parental responsibility.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:49 AM
    glc49
  • elitesharp

    lets just be happy that the bill didnt pass, but one of these days some idiot game developer would make something as obscure as the hot coffee patch for GTA, or even more worst


    But hell, is not like is going to happen again...... right?

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:48 AM
  • Wozman23

    This and the gay marriage thing are a great step in the right direction to allow me to marry my PS3.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:38 AM
    Wozman23
  • C4ptainAw3some

    I wonder what Sessler's Soapbox will be about tomorrow...

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:35 AM
    C4ptainAw3some
  • B-minus

    Great news for a monday morning! I'm gonna celebrate by playing some violent games even though i'm in my 20s and could of just fine already. I'm really glad everything turned out how it should of. Video Games are free speech and art so therefor they are protected by the first ammendment. I hope we never hear about people trying to make laws that conflict with the first ammendment ever again.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:27 AM
    B-minus
  • KulasDevorn

    It is NOT the governments responsibility to parent children. There are already laws in form for this as well as fines, why do we need more? There is already the ratings system. So, when is enough? When do citizens take responsibility for themselves? When do parents PARENT and not try to sluff everything off on the Government? If your kid buys COD or Duke Nukem then you obviously let them, YOU are to blame, not the store or game company. Don't set around saying "well, I cant know everything my child does" and try to get out of your responsibilities. If you are a decent parent you can, friends I know who are parents do and watch everything in their child's life. If you cant, then your lazy and shouldn't be having a child in the first place. It's not Capcom or Walmarts fault, it's yours. End of story.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:17 AM
  • Pemoel

    Oh geez, Imagine that... PARENTS and RETAILERS should be doing their job? Who would have thunk it.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 9:05 AM
    Pemoel
  • Cryptomaster420

    thats right california bill AB1179 went to paper hell oh wait thats the paper shredder!!!!
    thats 1 for freedom of speach and gaming 0 for ahole politicians that tried to pass it

    Posted: June 27, 2011 8:45 AM
  • FuzzofPekinopolis

    Maybe now we can figure out how we are going to continue to produce and afford these games. We have til August to get our Federal Budget in order. Otherwise your money will be worthless, and you will be more concerned with feeding yourself rather than playing games.

    This is a great day for gamers, but how many millions of dollars were spent just to deny whack-jobs of what we already knew was the answer. They should make them pay for the wasted time and money. Or they should have made it so this unconstitutional kind of thinking about games will never make it back to the courtroom.

    Posted: June 27, 2011 8:36 AM
    FuzzofPekinopolis

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