media violence off bo
TRANSCRIPT
-
8/2/2019 Media Violence Off BO
1/2
Media Violence Off
A. Link: The policies of the 1AC in response to youth violence encourage media and
political focus on violent tragedies.
1. The press hypes teen violence to get viewers.
Donna Ladd
[Media portrayal of juvenile crime means] overblown headlines and nonsensical editorials
calling for curfews and unrelenting zero-tolerance policies. Most media outlets,bloodthirstyfor a piece of the Columbine action, have virtually ignored the real picture, instead creating
"six-month anniversaries" of school-shooting tragedies to circle their cameras around.
2. Politicians hype violence to justify their legislation:
Beres and Griffith
Fear of youth crime often is focused on gangs. Prop. 21, for example, was justified by a findingthat youth gangs were a growing threat to the safety of the communityThe belief that youth
gangs pose a unique threat and have become more violent, bolder, and better organized
produces a popular demand for get tough policies against gang members
These fears lead to more harsh policies for juveniles:
Hodgon 08,
Many of the laws passed in the 1990s to increase the numbers of youth tried in adult court have astheir roots fears of the coming super predator. In multiple media stories in the 1990s, the
adolescent offender was depicted as violent, incorrigible, and on the fast track to a life of crime.Whilestate legislatures acted quickly to change policy
B. Impact: The focus on violence in media and policymaking increases violence in youth:
The B.A.D.A.
The effect of media violence on the behavior of viewers (especially young viewers) has been debated [seen] for
over three decades. [with] [r]esearch [showing] over that time period has shown a clear correlation between media
violence and thedevelopment of aggressive, and violent behavior. Exposure to media violence appears to
impact[s] children in several ways. First, [C]hildren learn from watching actors model violent behavior
This turns the AC because with its policies come increased child awareness and desensitivity
toward violence, increasing violence.
C. Negate to depoliticize youth violence. Revoke the policies of the AC so that politicians
no longer employ fear-tactics to strengthen their regimes. Through education,
assessments, and community-based treatment programs, juvenile crime will no longer
be feared by the public but understood and mediated.
http://www.alternet.org/authors/1663/http://www.alternet.org/authors/1663/ -
8/2/2019 Media Violence Off BO
2/2
CITES
Linda S. Beres* and Thomas D. Griffith** 2000
DEMONIZING YOUTH
* Professor of Law, Loyola Law School.** John B. Milliken Professor of Taxation, University of Southern California Law School.
http://llr.lls.edu/volumes/v34-issue2/beres-griffith.pdf
Donna Ladd
April 1, 2000
http://www.alternet.org/books/16
SILICON LOUNGE: America is Demonizing Kids
Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Abuse
DEVELOPING HEALTHY COMMUNITIES:
A Risk and Protective Factor Approach toPreventing Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse
1995
Hogdon, Hilary. Border Disputes between Juvenile and Adult Criminal Justice Systems:
Exclusion and Transfer Law, 2008
http://llr.lls.edu/volumes/v34-issue2/beres-griffith.pdfhttp://www.alternet.org/authors/1663/http://www.alternet.org/books/16http://llr.lls.edu/volumes/v34-issue2/beres-griffith.pdfhttp://www.alternet.org/authors/1663/http://www.alternet.org/books/16