Editors' note: the following column contains subject matter that some
readers may find offensive.
Many -- too many -- red-blooded American boys grow up on Japanese
video-game systems from Sony and Nintendo. Their cultural interests can
extend into Japanese cartoons ("anime") and some even discover Japanese
pornographic cartoons ("hentai"). How so? Boys play games and watch
cartoons like the "Dragon Ball Z" series, but can quickly surf the Web
and find related cartoon titles like "Dragonball X," only to learn they
are hard-core porn.
But that isn't all video-gaming boys can discover. CNN reports that
Japanese porn also extends to sick video games that center on raping
girls and women. One such game is called "RapeLay." The game begins with
a young teenage girl on a subway platform who asks the video player in a
high and tiny voice, "Can I help you with something?" The player then
chooses a method of sexual assault. Players can also follow the girl
onto the train and assault her older sister and her mother. Rape is not
an option on the menu; rape is the entire point of the game.
As the game continues, "friends" join in. Now the females can be raped
repeatedly. It even allows the player to impregnate a girl and urge her
to have an abortion. Rape the girl; kill the child.
The feminist group Equality Now has moved to have this rape game removed
from store shelves, but the controversy naturally has moved to the next
step: It has gone viral, being offered all over the Internet, in some
cases for free. This puts "RapeLay" in the same category as sicko games
like the high-school shooting re-enactment game "Super Columbine
Massacre RPG."
CNN says there are more "hentai" games where "RapeLay" came from.
Reporter Kyung Lah found another sexual revenge fantasy: find and rape
the woman who fired the player from his imaginary job. Along the way,
the player can rape other girls and women.
Lobbyist Taina Bien-Aime told CNN that "It's obviously very difficult to
curtail activity on the Internet. But the governments do have a role in
trying to regulate this sort of extreme pornography of children, both
in their countries, and through the Internet." Equality Now wants the
government of Japan to ban all games that promote and simulate sexual
violence, sexual torture, stalking and rape against women and girls. But
government officials wouldn't even talk to CNN about any government
action, or even an official expression of disgust.
But what truly nauseates is the manner in which some actually defend
this horror. Game players lodge the usual protest that just because you
do violent things on screen, it doesn't mean you'll do them in real
life. Last Christmas, the makers of the Japanese game "Shinobi Ryuu"
began with a declaration that the suffering characters being denied
their human rights aren't humans. They're merely fictional characters.
"We also thank all the kind people who see a character in the story
saying phrases such as 'help me' and take it as a real call for help,"
they said. "However, even though you are worrying for the characters in
the story, these are all lines spoken from a script. They are not saying
all this from the bottom of their hearts."
They're suggesting the people who would object are lunkheads who can't
distinguish fantasy from reality. Here's the reality: A new analysis of
130 studies by Iowa State psychology professor Craig Anderson found
exposure to violent video games makes more aggressive, less caring kids
-- regardless of their age, sex or culture. Common sense tells us it
doesn't sound like a healthy recreation activity: "I can't wait to get
home and do some subway raping to relax."
You just want to shake people who would defend a rape game. They'd
probably also defend and enjoy a game where they're a plantation owner
and load African slaves off a ship, sell and trade them, and beat them
and rape them. Does that sound like a healthy evening in front of the
TV?
Gamers also complain that it's a double standard to protest rape games,
but not violent shooter games. But many critics of video-game excesses
have also criticized shooter games with no basis in morality, as well as
shooter-and-rape games like the "Grand Theft Auto" series. In fact,
they've been attacked at the highest levels. "Those video games are
raising our kids," candidate Barack Obama said in lamenting the
introduction of "Grand Theft Auto IV" in May 2008.
These viral games like "RapeLay" may not be as easily acquired as that
nasty series of best-sellers. But they do sound the alarm, as candidate
Obama said, that parents always need to be aware that something truly
evil can be found in the virtual world of video games.
I PRAY IN THE
MIGHTY NAME OF JESUS THE KING OF KINGS THAT HE WILL SHOW UP WITH HIS
MIGHTY ARMY AND WIPE THE EVIL OFF THE FACE OF THE EARTH! SOON AS
POSSIBLE !