Thanks RS for supporting my argument (I'm sure it wasn't intentional) aside from a couple of minor points. Can you provide a link for that big study that says violent video games and movies aren't to blame for exacerbating youth violence?Rorschach wrote:Well I'm missing half the conversation but mantra has a Greenie anti-American outlook, you'll never convince her otherwise. She still brings up that video games and movies create violence... there was a report on a big study out recently that finally stated what crap that was. That the effects were much different than what were originally anticipated.
If I get time I'll find it.
As for Australian culture, well we now have multiculture... it was in fact the Filipinos who were the first group that brought in the American street culture late 70 early 80s. Baseball caps, baggy pants that rode well down exposing underwear and with crotches at almost knee level, and of course the music etc. They formed an enclave outside Blacktown where the name had to be changed from Plumpton to Dean Park because they couldn't pronounce it properly. Lots of Filipinos in the Labor Party or supporting it due to older members of the branch marrying Filipino women. Ah yes, ya gotta love multiculti. Of course it spread to other minority groups wanting to look "special".
We also have the Lebanese that Fraser let in mostly criminals and n'er do wells. And no I don't mean the Christians even though some of them have also formed criminal gangs.
Then we have other minority groups joining in and idiots like that Aboriginal Muslim idiot Mundine aping American culture. I still remember the day he showed up on TV dressed like a "Black" pimp, right out of the movies.
There is a lot of information saying otherwise and that our youth are becoming desensitised as a result of spending hours acting out deadly scenarios on their computer screens. Where did the Filipinos learn their American street culture?