Videogames Are to Blame for the Parkland School Shooting, According to Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin
Photo by Scott Olson/GettyThe victims and families of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School continue to mourn as they search for answers as to why former student Nikolas Cruz opened fire in the halls of the Parkland, Fla. school, killing 17 people. While law enforcement officials continue their investigations, one lawmaker thinks he knows what to blame for the 18th school-related shooting in the U.S. in 2018: videogames.
Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin believes videogames, along with TV shows, movies and music, are to blame for the third-deadliest school shooting in national history due to the “culture of death” that is “celebrated” within the medium. In an interview with Leland Conway on WHAS, Bevin chose to attribute Cruz’s actions to the medium wherein players “celebrate the slaughtering of people,” as opposed to Cruz’s alleged white nationalist ties, history of mental illness, exposure to increasingly militaristic rhetoric, examples of dissociative behavior or the relative ease with which he was able to purchase an AR-15 rifle. Nope, it’s clearly the videogames.
Bevin drummed up the old adage we’ve heard countless times before, one that has also been proven wrong countless times before. That didn’t stop him from continuing down that path, though:
There are videogames that, yes, are listed for mature audience, but kids play them and everybody knows it, and there’s nothing to prevent the child from playing them. They celebrate the slaughtering of people. There are games that literally replicate and give people the ability to score points for doing the very same thing that these students are doing inside of schools, where you get extra points for finishing someone off who’s lying there begging for their life./p>