Sulkdodds
Companion Cube
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2003
- Messages
- 18,845
- Reaction score
- 27
Oh shit!
Source.
Scandal! Boris Johnson misses a chance to criticise Labour's education policy and instead jumps on luddite band-wagon and attacks games console with sledgehammer. Coming soon: Boris Johnson stages xbox-smashing protest in front of Oxford Street HMV store. Well, it could happen.
I don't expect much of a debate here because A. this is a gaming website, go figure and B. it's a stupid argument anyway and fairly easy to demolish, but like most things in politics, it makes for a good laugh. As do the comments on the Telegraph's article, some of which make sense and some of which are ludicrous to the point of hilarity.
On another note - long time, no see, chaps.
Boris Johnson said:The writing is on the wall...computer games rot the brain...
...I refuse to believe that these hypnotic little machines are innocent...
...the nippers are bleeping and zapping in speechless rapture, their passive faces washed in explosions and gore. They sit for so long that their souls seem to have been sucked down the cathode ray tube...
...they become like blinking lizards, motionless, absorbed, only the twitching of their hands showing they are still conscious. These machines teach them nothing. They stimulate no ratiocination, discovery or feat of memory ? though some of them may cunningly pretend to be educational. I have just watched an 11-year-old play a game that looked fairly historical, on the packet. Your average guilt-ridden parent might assume that it taught the child something about the Vikings and medieval siege warfare. Phooey!
Source.
Scandal! Boris Johnson misses a chance to criticise Labour's education policy and instead jumps on luddite band-wagon and attacks games console with sledgehammer. Coming soon: Boris Johnson stages xbox-smashing protest in front of Oxford Street HMV store. Well, it could happen.
I don't expect much of a debate here because A. this is a gaming website, go figure and B. it's a stupid argument anyway and fairly easy to demolish, but like most things in politics, it makes for a good laugh. As do the comments on the Telegraph's article, some of which make sense and some of which are ludicrous to the point of hilarity.
On another note - long time, no see, chaps.