Instant editorial
Well, for us, it's instant. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Richard Rhodes, on
the other hand, has clearly put many hours of research and careful thought into
his article "The Media Violence Myth." You can read it in its entirety
by going to broadcastingcable.com,
scrolling down to Elsewhere on the Web and clicking on "Challenging the
Media Violence Myth." Or you can go directly to the site of the American
Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression at abffe.com. For those of you still
working without a Net, what you would have found is a thorough and well
researched debunking of the "general cultural consensus"-fueled by
wishful thinkers and Congressional fulminators-that media violence begets
societal violence. As such, the article should also be required reading for
those, like us, who are suspicious of highly touted studies that finger media
violence, but perhaps more important for Sen. Lieberman and all other culture
cops who use them as ammunition against the media. Rhodes skewers the Eron/Huesmann
study on violent behavior, a study used to help push the V-chip through
Congress, pointing out that it was based on a sample size of three. Yes, that's
not a misprint. The co-author of the study admits as much (sounds like a case of
publish and perish to us), although he refuses to take the next step and concede
that the study is statistically meaningless. He has promised to respond to
abffe.com, as have other academics and interested parties. In fact, by the time
you log on, a vigorous and healthy debate of the reigning politically correct
wisdom on media violence may already be in progress. We hope so.