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SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

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Violent Video Game Effects on Children and Adolescents Theory, Research, and Public Policy (Oxford University Press, 2006)

December 9, 2007 by SPCS 1 Comment

by Craig A. Anderson, Douglas A. Gentile and Katherine E. Buckley

Description
Violent video games are successfully marketed to and easily obtained by children and adolescents. Even the U.S. government distributes one such game, America’s Army, through both the internet and its recruiting offices. Is there any scientific evidence to support the claims that violent games contribute to aggressive and violent behavior?

Anderson, Gentile, and Buckley first present an overview of empirical research on the effects of violent video games, and then add to this literature three new studies that fill the most important gaps. They update the traditional General Aggression Model to focus on both developmental processes and how media-violence exposure can increase the likelihood of aggressive and violent behavior in both short- and long-term contexts. Violent Video Game Effects on Children and Adolescents also reviews the history of these games’ explosive growth, and explores the public policy options for controlling their distribution. Anderson et al. describe the reaction of the games industry to scientific findings that exposure to violent video games and other forms of media violence constitutes a significant risk factor for later aggressive and violent behavior. They argue that society should begin a more productive debate about whether to reduce the high rates of exposure to media violence, and delineate the public policy options that are likely be most effective.

[Read more…]

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Filed Under: Censorship & New Technology, Computer games, Violence, Youth Crime

UK Child Support Agency forces sperm donor to pay child support

December 5, 2007 by SPCS Leave a Comment

A 37 year old British man, Andy Bathie, who donated his sperm to a “married” lesbian couple so they could have two children, is now being forced to pay thousands of pounds in child support by the the British government’s Child Support Agency (CSA). He initially agreed to help lesbians Sharon and Terri Arnold after being assured he would not have to be involved in the upbringing of their young boy and girl or have any financial responsibility towards them. However, the CSA has begun to dock his pay, forcing him to contribute financially to the children’s upbringing because the lesbian couple have split up.

The Evening Standard newspaper (see link below) has reported that Mr Bathie has launched unprecedented court action in an attempt to ensure he cannot be recognised as a legal parent to the children. He told the paper: “These women wanted to be parents and take on all the responsibilities that brings.”

“I would never have agreed to this unless they had been living as a committed family. And now I can’t afford to have children with my own wife — it’s crippling me financially.” [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Other

Dr William Lane Craig: If God does not exist, do objective moral values exist?

December 4, 2007 by SPCS Leave a Comment

William Lane Craig is Research Professor of Philosophy at Talbot School of Theology (La Mirada, California). At the age of sixteen, Dr. Craig first heard the message of the Christian gospel and yielded his life to Christ. Dr. Craig pursued his undergraduate studies at Wheaton College (B.A. 1971) and graduate studies at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (M.A. 1974; M.A. 1975), the University of Birmingham (England) (Ph.D. 1977), and the University of Munich (Germany) (D.Theol. 1984). He has written extensively on the cosmological argument, Christian apologetics, divine omniscience and divine eternity. His work has appeared in the Journal of Philosophy, Faith and Philosophy, Religious Studies, the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science and the International Journal for Philosophy of Religion. Dr. Craig lives in Atlanta, Georgia, with his wife Jan and their two teenage children.

Source: http://www.calvin.edu/publications/stob/speakers/craig.htm

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Filed Under: Moral Values, YouTube

Violent Computer Games and Youth Crime. Is there a link?

November 30, 2007 by SPCS 4 Comments

The NZ Herald reports: “Violent Xbox video games are being fingered by a top police officer as a possible cause of rising violence among young people.

“Superintendent Bill Harrison, national manager of police youth services, says youth violence rates have jumped in the past two or three years throughout the Western world, coinciding with the rise of new products such as the Xbox.”

See full story: Video violence beyond a game: top cop
Wednesday November 28, 2007. By Simon Collins 

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10478781&ref=rss

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Filed Under: Computer games, Youth Crime

The Case For Marriage

November 26, 2007 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Book Review by Kerrie Allen

THE CASE FOR MARRIAGE: Why Married People are Happier, Healthier, and Better off Financially.
by Linda J. Waite and Maggie Gallagher
(Broadway Books, 2000, 260pp, $29.90.Available from AD Books)

image The Case for Marriage provides the solid research facts about why marriage is a social good, more than just sex – and why sex is better in marriage – and why marriage is good for men and women, as it is for children. The authors examine one of the most powerful myths in society today that marriage is good for men but bad for women. This myth, promulgated by feminists since as far back as the 1960s, and still rife in our universities today, is that marriage is crippling and destructive to women.The overwhelming evidence today, after allowing for the many variables, shows the contrary: marriage is good for women’s health and also good for their emotional, sexual, physical and economic health. And it is the same for married men. The old adage that women care more about marriage than men is also debunked. Researchers using a measure for personal dedication found men and women equally valued their spouse as the most important person in their lives and were both willing to sacrifice, invest and strive for their spouse’s well-being. While sex is a very important part of marriage, it is not (as with cohabitators) the defining characteristic of the relationship. When it comes to sex, rather than marriage being a “ball and chain” that dampens or ends one’s sex life, married men and women report greater sexual satisfaction than cohabitating couples and singles. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Family, Marriage, Moral Values

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