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"Violent rhetoric and violent behavior"

6 Comments -

1 – 6 of 6
Blogger russell1200 said...

There are too many moving pieces.
With the economy going into the tank you would expect more grumbling.

With an African-American In the White House you would expect certain groups to step up their attacks.

A Mormon-convert introducing catastrophe-preparation Mormon doctrine on the third most listened to radio show (Glenn Beck) to main stream Republicans
-versus the insanely American Triumphalism of Oxycotin –man.
-versus a widely dislike President (Bush W.) retiring from office.
Etc. etc.

Your last paragraph’s mechanisms appear to be better directed at the entertainment media rather than political commentators. It also goes against the decline in crime since the 1990s, and the much greater decline in crimes since 1900. That does not mean they are not valid points, it just means that there are other moving pieces.

After all, one could consider an alternative hypothesis: the increased level of political rhetoric would lead to an explosion of revolutionary violence across the board…

except they keep scheduling it beyond waddling distance from convenient parking.

January 20, 2011 at 3:01 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

From what I have read of this incident of Jared Loughner,one could suggest,that there is no evidence presented that he was a great TV watcher,or computer video watcher.And this blogsite only provides the links of that relationship not Loughners media usage,and or main influences except what has already been exposed.So you are indulging in a bit of theorising haven't you!?

January 21, 2011 at 5:13 AM

Blogger Dan Little said...

Anonymous -- as you see from the second paragraph, this posting isn't trying to assess the motives of this particular assailant. It is asking instead a more abstract question: are there causal mechanisms through which media rants could stimulate violence indirectly? And is there empirical research that is relevant to this question? And it seems to me that the careful research that exists on the issue of television violence and its effects on child aggression is in fact relevant here.

January 21, 2011 at 7:02 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I didn´t had to look that far. My country´s own history (Germany) gave enough examples for political hate rhetoric speeches. So tread very careful with the sort of hate speeches I hear coming from a country which gave us the free speech. This sort rhetoric and propaganda kills. Germany has learned this lesson.

January 21, 2011 at 4:04 PM

Blogger Fr. said...

I first started thinking about this issue by readin cognitive psychology on violence and video games. The evidence shows that it might work both ways: a video game can increase aggression, but it can also decrease it. (The act of gaming itself has no relationship to the results: 'make-believe' and figuration in general is not to blame, only the content of the act, as with role-playing games.)

January 29, 2011 at 2:40 PM

Blogger Fr. said...

By the way, this post and more links appear in some course notes which I am drafting at the moment. Comments welcome!

January 29, 2011 at 4:15 PM

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