2 Top Republicans Blame Video Games, School Prayer Restrictions, Social Network for Mass Shootings in Texas, Ohio
At least 2 high-level Republican lawmakers blamed computer game violence for “dehumanizing” individuals and motivating the El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, mass shootings over the previous 24 hours.House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, and Texas GOP Lieutenant Guv Dan Patrick appeared on Fox News on Sunday pointing to social networks disagreements, violent computer game and even a lack of prayer in public schools for possible reasons behind the shooting deaths of dozens of individuals. McCarthy signed up with Patrick in interesting the”millions of Americans who will head out to their location of worship “Sunday and who he asked to “all mourn together.” “[ It’s] Sunday early morning when most of
your audiences, half of the nation, are preparing to go to church and yet tomorrow we won’t even let our kids hope in our schools,” Patrick said on Fox & Buddies Sunday early morning.”We need to look at ourselves as a nation, there are lots of factors that go into these shootings, many aspects. And it’s not time to politicize it.”Republican Texas Lieutenant Guv @DanPatrick is requiring federal government intervention into the video game industry
, mentioning the Call of Responsibility recommendation from the terrorist’s manifesto he also wants you to hope more in school Dan Patrick is religious boomer personified pic.twitter.com/hOwaW4zzJS!.?.!— Rod Breslau( @Slasher )”I look at this evil act and condemn it for what it is: evil,”Patrick continued.”The length of time are we going to overlook, especially at the federal level, doing something about the computer game industry. In this manifesto that we believe
is from the shooter, in this manifesto he discusses living out his’extremely soldier dream on Call of Task.'””We understand that the computer game market is bigger than the motion picture industry and the music market combined,”Patrick said.” And there have been research studies that say it impacts individuals and research studies that say it does not, however I look at the typical denominator as
a 60-some-year-old father and grandpa myself, ‘What’s altered in this country?'” “We’ve always had guns and we’ve always had wicked, but what’s changed when we see this rash of shootings? And I see a video game industry that teaches young individuals to kill.””I look at social networks: the violence of simply bullying people on social media every day and we turn our head and we permit it,”Patrick added.McCarthy echoed the Texas Lt. guv’s remarks, informing Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo:”The concept of these video games that dehumanize
individuals, to have a game of shooting people and others, I have always felt that is an issue for future generations, and others
. We have actually enjoyed some research studies that have actually revealed prior to what it does to people. When you look at these pictures of how it took location, you can see the actions within computer game and others.” The two mass shooting attacks within 24 hr have actually left lots dead in Texas and Ohio and are just the most current U.S. shootings this summer season apparently perpetrated in at least two cases by 20-something white male shooters with far right-wing, white nationalist ties.Neither legislator referenced gun control laws as a potential solution for the ongoing mass shootings across the United States.< source media="(min-width: 992px )"data-srcset ="https://d.newsweek.com/en/full/1517169/republicans-blame-video-games-shooting.png?w=737&f=f0c1a2f11e7150599f48f18911f08e60 1x" >< source media ="( min-width: 0px) "data-srcset="https://d.newsweek.com/en/full/1517169/republicans-blame-video-games-shooting.png?w=450&f=64e6f3cf4166e5ddbe9ba458324e8688 1x"> Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Kevin McCarthy blamed computer game for assisting U.S. mass shootings. Screenshot: FOX NEWS
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