June 7, 2006 4:59 PM PDT
Sen. Clinton: Feds must help parents on video games
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To that end, the New York senator said she's pushing for approval of federally funded research into the broad effects of media--everything from television to video games to the Internet--on children. A bill chiefly sponsored by Clinton and Connecticut Democrat Joseph Lieberman contains such a proposal and received unanimous support from a Senate committee earlier this year.
Speaking at an event here organized by the New America Foundation, a public policy think tank, Clinton dismissed critics who have questioned the need for such a project and its cost to taxpayers.
"We don't know the effects," Clinton said. "Never have children been raised in such a media-saturated environment. How do we get more research, better facts and evidence?"
Unless Congress acts, the parenting experience will be nothing more than a "great experiment on our children," she said. "I'd like to have a little more reassurance that it's going to turn out all right."
A longtime foe of violent and sex-themed video games, Clinton said she's also hoping that Congress will pass another bill co-authored with Lieberman that would impose fines on businesses that sell or rent video games with a "mature," "adults only" or "ratings pending" tag to anyone under age 17.
Clinton's call for more government involvement in family lives is hardly new. Her 1996 book, "It Takes a Village" drew fire from conservatives--and a response in the form of a book called "It Takes a Family" written by Republican Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania.
Clinton's office also released on Wednesday a one-page, downloadable "media guide" for parents. It spells out definitions for the ratings systems used by TV shows and video games and gives a brief rundown of technological parental controls available on video game consoles, televisions and services like TiVo.
"Obviously parents are on the front line, but a lot of them need help," Clinton said.
Clinton's remarks on Wednesday came just hours before the U.S. House of Representatives voted 379-35 to approve legislation that would impose a tenfold hike in indecency fines on broadcast TV operators--from $32,500 to $325,000. The Senate had approved the same legislation in May, so it now awaits President Bush's signature, which is expected.
The Parents Television Council, a nonprofit advocacy organization with more than a million members, was quick to applaud that move. Families are "fed up with the sexually raunchy and gratuitously violent content that's broadcast over the public airwaves, particularly during hours when millions of children are in the viewing audience," Brent Bozell, president of the council, said in a statement.
It doesn't look like politicians' scrutiny of media will be slowing down anytime soon. A subset of the House Energy and Commerce Committee plans to consider approaches to controlling access to violent and explicit video games at a hearing scheduled for June 14.
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video game, Sen., parent, Hillary Clinton, children
15 comments
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children. Individuals needs to stop relying on the nanny state and
take responsibility for their actions. It takes two, involved parents
to raise a child, not the Federal government.
Popularity has no bearing either, it just amounts to a 'Tyranny of the Majority'.
Let's try rational thought for a change...
need to be involved? If I, as a parent, see my child doing
something I don't like it's my responsibility to instill my values in
my child.
My parents did it. Their parents did it before them. It worked.
None of us are mass-murderers or raving lunatics unable to
differentiate between fantasy and reality.
The Government is good at many things. Parenting is not and
should not be one of them.
It's like today's parents are NOTHING like our parents.
It's scary how the government keeps invading our homes and lives little by little, eating away at our privacy in the name of security. Now they are going from BIG BROTHER to BIG MOTHER, not only are they watching us, they are slowly starting to tell us how to live, what to watch, how to play and where to eat.
But her liberal bootlickers will give her a pass on it because they know she doesn't really mean it. If a Republican advocated this, CNet "news" and the libs would be ripping them.
But not St. Hillary.... ROFL! The lib hypocrisy!
See: <a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.gamepolitics.com/" target="_newWindow">http://www.gamepolitics.com/</a>
Someone wrote: it is govt. entering our privacy and our family room.Leave it to parents Absurdest argument I ever heard. Are theey expecting every parent to sit at home whole day and master all the new technologies and media - which is by the way changing every day- and set up parental controls on their TV, go through internet sites and and set up filter, play anew video game before handing it over to kids, and may be watch a movie before taking kids for a movie ( in the absence of a rating ). Thats a job itself which an average or even well informed parent can not master and impose all the time. Instead of doing the policing at home let the parent get an assurance - from govt imposed ploicies that "It's Safe for kids" and enjoy their time with their kids with peace of mind.
We need more leaders to come out with such sensible laws and bills. They are long over due.
"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." - Benjamin Franklin