“I unapologetically take my 10-year-old son to PG-13 movies and have for years”

Writing at Time.com,
Stetson University psychologist Christopher J. Ferguson disposes of
the latest study, this one in Pediatrics, denouncing the
increase in depictions of fantasy violence in TV, movies, games,
and the like.

Where the study’s authors assert a causal link between movie
violece and real world horrors (“We know that movies teach children
how adults behave…”), Ferguson trots out the same data we at
Reason have been citing for decades:
Both youth
violence
 overall and gun
violence
 specifically have declined precipitously
du
ring recent decades as movie violence
rose.”

Ferguson ends his column with this great passage:

As a media-violence researcher myself, I unapologetically
take my 10-year-old son to PG-13 movies and have for years, knowing
full well what’s in them. At the theater I see mainly families, not
hordes of unsupervised children. Moreover, there’s a vast gulf
between the cartoonish violence of PG-13 movies and real-life
violence. Beliefs in the harmfulness of PG-13 movies rest on the
notion that the human brain is unable to distinguish between the
violence of 
Thor and violence in
real life. Movie violence can sound offensive in the abstract, but
I suspect if many parents were asked if they would stop taking
their children to see 
The
Avengers 
or Man of
Steel, 
the answer would be “no.”


Read the whole thing.

Watch “Sex, Violence & Satan: 6 Unbelievably Dumb
Congressional Hearings”

 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/i-unapologetically-take-my-10-year-old-s
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"I unapologetically take my 10-year-old son to PG-13 movies and have for years"

Writing at Time.com,
Stetson University psychologist Christopher J. Ferguson disposes of
the latest study, this one in Pediatrics, denouncing the
increase in depictions of fantasy violence in TV, movies, games,
and the like.

Where the study’s authors assert a causal link between movie
violece and real world horrors (“We know that movies teach children
how adults behave…”), Ferguson trots out the same data we at
Reason have been citing for decades:
Both youth
violence
 overall and gun
violence
 specifically have declined precipitously
du
ring recent decades as movie violence
rose.”

Ferguson ends his column with this great passage:

As a media-violence researcher myself, I unapologetically
take my 10-year-old son to PG-13 movies and have for years, knowing
full well what’s in them. At the theater I see mainly families, not
hordes of unsupervised children. Moreover, there’s a vast gulf
between the cartoonish violence of PG-13 movies and real-life
violence. Beliefs in the harmfulness of PG-13 movies rest on the
notion that the human brain is unable to distinguish between the
violence of 
Thor and violence in
real life. Movie violence can sound offensive in the abstract, but
I suspect if many parents were asked if they would stop taking
their children to see 
The
Avengers 
or Man of
Steel, 
the answer would be “no.”


Read the whole thing.

Watch “Sex, Violence & Satan: 6 Unbelievably Dumb
Congressional Hearings”

 

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/i-unapologetically-take-my-10-year-old-s
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A.M. Links: Obamacare Website Subject to Cyberattacks, Snapchat Rejected $3 Billion Deal, US Jobless Claims Fall

  • A top Homeland Security
    Department official testifying before Congress stated that
    HealthCare.gov has been subject to approximately
    16 cyberattacks
    and one unsuccessful “denial of service”
    attack. This was the first time an administration official publicly
    acknowledged that there have been any cyberattacks on the Obamacare
    website. So, it’s not just the feds who want to steal your medical
    records.
  • Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz) said approval for the U.S.
    Congress is so low
    even his 101-year-old mother
    no longer supports the legislative
    branch.
  • A law banning undetectable firearms
    is set to expire
    , which has thrown federal law enforcement
    officials into hysterics about the potential security threats posed
    by 3D printed plastic guns.
  • Mobile messaging startup Snapchat
    rejected an acquisition offer
    from Facebook that would
    have valued the company at $3 billion or more.
  • A US aircraft carrier and two cruisers have arrived in the
    Philippines to help communities
    devastated by Typhoon Haiyan
    , one of the deadliest typhoons on
    record.
  • The number of people who applied for unemployment benefits fell
    by by 2,000 to
    339,000
    last week. 
  • Former German President Christian Wulff is
    going on trial
    accused of receiving and granting favors in
    office. 

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from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/am-links-obamacare-website-subject-to-cy
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Hey Congress, How About Proposing Actual Alternatives to Obamacare?

Writing in the
Wall Street Journal
, Ramesh Ponnuru (AEI, National Review) and
Yuval Levin (National Affairs, Ethics and Public Policy Center)
argue that the Republicans should propose a concrete alternative to
Obamacare. I think they are correct that if the GOP actually wants
to improve health-care policy – as opposed to simply enjoy immense
political gain in the near-term – it needs to do more than
slow-clap as the good ship ACA goes down.

Their basic idea is replacing Obamacare with 

a flat and universal tax benefit for coverage. Today’s tax
exclusion for employer-provided health coverage should be capped so
that people would not get a bigger tax break by buying more
extensive and expensive insurance. The result would be to make
employees more cost-conscious; and competition for their favor
would make insurance cheaper….

Medicaid, the country’s health insurance program for the poor,
“could be converted into a means-based addition to that credit” and
people with pre-existing conditions would have access to “coverage
through subsidized, high-risk pools.”


None of this
is particularly radical or out of step with most
people’s experience in every other aspect of our lives, where we
figure out what we want from many alternatives. At its core, it
simply suggests injecting more and clearer market mechanisms into
an area in which vagueness rules. Quick: Do you know how much your
last blood test cost you or your insurer? The answer is almost
certainly no. But you probably know how much your car’s last oil
change cost.

Ponnuru and Levin note that “conservative policy experts have
long proposed such approaches” but were rebuffed by House
Republicans in 2009, who chose instead to offer “an alternative to
ObamaCare that did nothing about today’s market-distorting tax
policy and thus did not do much to help the people whom that
policy—by inflating premiums—has locked out of the insurance
market.”

There’s a strong case to be made that their plan doesn’t go far
enough in addressing cost issues (Medicare!) and there’s a reason
to be queasy any time “tax benefits” float into conversation (our
tax code is already complicated enough). But their basic idea is
worth exploring and discussing not just on the nation’s op-ed pages
and blogs, but in Congress.

At the top of the
required-reading list for Congress and other policy analysts should
be Ronald Bailey’s 2009 Reason story, “In
Health Care, Nobody Knows Anything
.” Bailey starts by
paraphrasing the screenwriter William Goldman’s famous maxim about
Hollywood and noting that premiums had doubled over the past 10
years. He then proceeds to lay out a clear and concise case for
increasing basic market competition by dismantling 

the McCarran-Ferguson
Act
 of 1945 that allows state governments to regulate the
business of insurance without federal government interference. The
Act is, in part, responsible for the evolution toward state
insurance markets dominated by just a few large insurers. Consumers
cannot purchase insurance policies that are not licensed by their
state insurance commissions and which do not incorporate all the
mandates imposed by those commissions. Congress and the states
should open up competition between insurance companies by enabling
“regulatory federalism” that would allow individuals and employers
to purchase health insurance from other states.

At the same time he calls for changes that would allow more
competition among insurance providers (and a move toward actual
risk-based coverage, rather than pre-payment plans that obscure and
drive up prices), Bailey also argues for deregulation among health
care providers.

For example, many states have certificate of need programs that
forbid the construction of new health care facilities without prior
regulatory approval. Passed by Congress in 1974 as a cost-cutting
measure, the ostensible purpose of the programs is to keep health
care costs low by requiring advance approval by state agencies for
most hospital expansions and major equipment purchases. But
regulations don’t really work that way. “Market incumbents can too
easily use [certificate of need] procedures to forestall
competitors from entering an incumbent’s market,” according to a
2004 Federal Trade Commissionreport.
In fact, “programs can actually increase prices by fostering
anti-competitive barriers to entry.” State enforced monopolies
increase prices? Who knew?


Read the whole thing.
 And then read Reason’s
ongoing
coverage of
Obamacare.

The disastrous rollout of Obamacare has given the country
another chance to address problems with the health care industry,
all of which stem from a massive lack of exactly the same basic
market mechanisms that have allowed so much progress in virtually
every other area of our daily lives, from coffee shops to the
online world to airline ticket prices.

Yes, health care is
a specific market that requires certain specific rules and
regulations. But that doesn’t mean it requires fewer market and
pricing signals (the muffling of which always helps powerful
interests in a given industry).

Now is the perfect time to propose real alternatives that even
if not perfect actually increase the ability of individuals to make
meaningful choices that will affect their lives. Here’s hoping that
congressional Republicans and Democrats rise above themselves to
actually do something that might help us all rather than simply
position their partys for 2014 or 2016.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/hey-congress-how-about-proposing-actual
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Andrew Napolitano Asks: If Federalism Can't Keep Us Safe, What Can?

Andrew Napolitano’s Fox News colleague Jana
Winter was ordered by a state judge in Colorado to reveal her
sources on a story and threatened with incarceration. Winter lives
in New York and filed an application to her state’s courts asking
to block Colorado’s request. This should have been a no-brainer
demonstration of federalism, but the New York courts denied her
application. Napolitano points out the dangers of ignoring states’
rights like this.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/andrew-napolitano-asks-if-states-rights
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Andrew Napolitano Asks: If Federalism Can’t Keep Us Safe, What Can?

Andrew Napolitano’s Fox News colleague Jana
Winter was ordered by a state judge in Colorado to reveal her
sources on a story and threatened with incarceration. Winter lives
in New York and filed an application to her state’s courts asking
to block Colorado’s request. This should have been a no-brainer
demonstration of federalism, but the New York courts denied her
application. Napolitano points out the dangers of ignoring states’
rights like this.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/14/andrew-napolitano-asks-if-states-rights
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Ex-NFL Player Charged as Drug Kingpin Gets 15 Years in Prison After Pleading Guilty to One Count of Drug Conspiracy

at least he didn't play for the browns?The
Government
pursued a drug kingpin charge against former Dallas
Cowboys and Chicago Bears wide receiver Sam Hurd after he was
allegedly caught in December 2011 purchasing a kilo of cocaine from
undercover agents and agreeing to purchase up to ten kilos of coke
and 1,000 pounds of marijuana week from them. He pled guilty in
April and faced up to life in prison because of the amounts of
narcotics allegedly involved, and was sentenced to 15 years

today
.

The charge was part of two years of federal investigations into
Hurd, as explained in a great Sports
Illustrated
piece on the saga by Michael McKnight. Hurd
had been getting marijuana sent to him from California while
playing for the Cowboys and later the Bears, but the feds found no
evidence he ever made a profit off the marijuana he shared with
friends.

Hurd appears to have first showed up on the radar of federal
authorities when an informant tipped off an ICE agent based in
Dallas that someone (Hurd) was looking to buy a large amount of
cocaine. ICE’s purview is border security, but drug trafficking
appeared close enough. Based on the tip, they were able to seize
$88,000 from Hurd’s Escalade, which was being driven by his
mechanic, who was either the brains behind the attempted drug deal
or a go-for for Hurd, depending which you ask. Hurd actually went
to the ICE office, showing them a bank statement that listed his
withdrawal of the money and explaining it was being used to buy a
house for his mother (Hurd says now this was what the money was
allegedly for). He was unable to get the money back the federal
agents, and it appears his mechanics’ attempt to earn the money
back for Hurd was what led nearly two dozen law enforcement agents
to participate in the sting that caught Hurd and the mechanic
trying to purchase cocaine from undercover agents.

Read the whole
Sports Illustrated piece
, it’s worth the read, and
marvel at the waste of life, money, and time that the war on drugs
leaves in its wake.

Hurd, notably, would not qualify under any program the Obama
Administration might embark on to lower drug sentencing because the
government still treats larger-scale drug crimes much as if they
were capital offenses, and hasn’t even made an attempt to show more
leniency to people whose lives were ruined
over far smaller
consensual narcotics transactions.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/ex-nfl-player-prosecuted-as-drug-kingpin
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Prosecutor Asks That She Not Be Called 'the Government' Because the Term Is 'Derogatory'

Last month a Tennessee judge overseeing a burglary case
rejected
a pretrial motion in which the prosecution requested
that it not be referred to as “the Government” because that term is
“derogatory.” In the May 22 motion,
Assistant District Attorney General Tammy J. Rettig noted with
alarm that “it has become commonplace during trials for attorneys
for defendants, and especially Mr. [Drew] Justice [the defendant’s
lawyer], to refer to State’s attorneys as ‘the Government’
repeatedly during trial.” Rettig worried that “such a reference is
used in a derogatory way and is meant to make the State’s attorneys
seem oppressive and to inflame the jury.” She added that “attempts
to make the jury dislike the State’s attorney have no place in the
courtroom.” She therefore urged Williamson County Circuit Court
Judge Michael Binkley to bar Justice from using the
g-word during the trial and instead refer to her as
“General Rettig, the Assit District Attorney General, Mrs. Rettig,
or simply the State of Tennessee.”

In his response,
Justice argued that such an order would violate the First
Amendment. Should Judge Binkley nevertheless see fit to comply with
Rettig’s request, Justice said, he also should consider a few other
speech limits in the interest of neutral terminology:

First, the Defendant no longer wants to be called “the
Defendant.” This rather archaic term of art, obviously has a fairly
negative connotation. It unfairly demeans, and dehumanizes Mr.
Donald Powell. The word “defendant” should be banned. At trial, Mr.
Powell hereby demands be addressed only by his full name, preceded
by the title “Mister.” Alternatively, he may be called simply “the
Citizen Accused.” This latter title sounds more respectable than
the criminal “Defendant.” The designation “That innocent man” would
also be acceptable.

Moreover, defense counsel does not wish to be referred to as a
“lawyer,” or a “defense attorney.” Those terms are substantially
more prejudicial than probative….Rather, counsel for the Citizen
Accused should be referred to primarily as the “Defender of the
Innocent.” This title seems particularly appropriate, because every
Citizen Accused is presumed innocent. Alternatively, counsel would
also accept the designation “Guardian of the Realm.” Further, the
Citizen Accused humbly requests an appropriate military title for
his own representative, to match that of the opposing counsel.
Whenever addressed by name, the name “Captain Justice” will be
appropriate. While less impressive than “General,” still, the more
humble term seems suitable. After all, the Captain represents only
a Citizen Accused, whereas the General represents an entire
State.

Along these same lines, even the term “defense” does not sound
very likeable. The whole idea of being defensive, comes across to
most people as suspicious. So to prevent the jury from being
unfairly misled by this ancient English terminology, the opposition
to the Plaintiff hereby names itself “the Resistance.” Obviously,
this terminology need only extend throughout the duration of the
trial—not to any pre-trial motions. During its heroic struggle
against the State, the Resistance goes on the attack, not just the
defense.

The good news is not only that Justice triumphed but that even
the Government concedes that “the Government” has a negative
connotation.

[Thanks to Allen St. Pierre for the tip.]

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/prosecutor-asks-that-she-not-be-called-t
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Prosecutor Asks That She Not Be Called ‘the Government’ Because the Term Is ‘Derogatory’

Last month a Tennessee judge overseeing a burglary case
rejected
a pretrial motion in which the prosecution requested
that it not be referred to as “the Government” because that term is
“derogatory.” In the May 22 motion,
Assistant District Attorney General Tammy J. Rettig noted with
alarm that “it has become commonplace during trials for attorneys
for defendants, and especially Mr. [Drew] Justice [the defendant’s
lawyer], to refer to State’s attorneys as ‘the Government’
repeatedly during trial.” Rettig worried that “such a reference is
used in a derogatory way and is meant to make the State’s attorneys
seem oppressive and to inflame the jury.” She added that “attempts
to make the jury dislike the State’s attorney have no place in the
courtroom.” She therefore urged Williamson County Circuit Court
Judge Michael Binkley to bar Justice from using the
g-word during the trial and instead refer to her as
“General Rettig, the Assit District Attorney General, Mrs. Rettig,
or simply the State of Tennessee.”

In his response,
Justice argued that such an order would violate the First
Amendment. Should Judge Binkley nevertheless see fit to comply with
Rettig’s request, Justice said, he also should consider a few other
speech limits in the interest of neutral terminology:

First, the Defendant no longer wants to be called “the
Defendant.” This rather archaic term of art, obviously has a fairly
negative connotation. It unfairly demeans, and dehumanizes Mr.
Donald Powell. The word “defendant” should be banned. At trial, Mr.
Powell hereby demands be addressed only by his full name, preceded
by the title “Mister.” Alternatively, he may be called simply “the
Citizen Accused.” This latter title sounds more respectable than
the criminal “Defendant.” The designation “That innocent man” would
also be acceptable.

Moreover, defense counsel does not wish to be referred to as a
“lawyer,” or a “defense attorney.” Those terms are substantially
more prejudicial than probative….Rather, counsel for the Citizen
Accused should be referred to primarily as the “Defender of the
Innocent.” This title seems particularly appropriate, because every
Citizen Accused is presumed innocent. Alternatively, counsel would
also accept the designation “Guardian of the Realm.” Further, the
Citizen Accused humbly requests an appropriate military title for
his own representative, to match that of the opposing counsel.
Whenever addressed by name, the name “Captain Justice” will be
appropriate. While less impressive than “General,” still, the more
humble term seems suitable. After all, the Captain represents only
a Citizen Accused, whereas the General represents an entire
State.

Along these same lines, even the term “defense” does not sound
very likeable. The whole idea of being defensive, comes across to
most people as suspicious. So to prevent the jury from being
unfairly misled by this ancient English terminology, the opposition
to the Plaintiff hereby names itself “the Resistance.” Obviously,
this terminology need only extend throughout the duration of the
trial—not to any pre-trial motions. During its heroic struggle
against the State, the Resistance goes on the attack, not just the
defense.

The good news is not only that Justice triumphed but that even
the Government concedes that “the Government” has a negative
connotation.

[Thanks to Allen St. Pierre for the tip.]

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/prosecutor-asks-that-she-not-be-called-t
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