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For Immediate Release
Contact:
David Horowitz
Media Coalition
212.587.4025
Richard Chernela
Kratz & Jensen Inc.
212.979.2700, ext. 223
SHOOTING
THE MESSENGER DEBUNKS LINK BETWEEN MEDIA VIOLENCE AND REAL VIOLENCE
Report
Finds Censorship Will Not Stop Violence
New York, NY, August 24,
2000 - The Media Coalition, a first amendment advocacy organization, announced
today the release of a comprehensive survey entitled Shooting the Messenger:
Why Censorship Won't Stop Violence. This first-of-its-kind report analyzes
and synthesizes dozens of studies and mountains of statistics, debunking the myth
that there is a causal link between violence depicted in the media and real-life
violence. The report demonstrates that while research indicates numerous causes
for violence, none of them link directly to media violence. The report shatters
current assumptions that scapegoat the media for the complicated, multi-faceted
causes of violence.
"When violent crimes hit
the headlines, people want to lash out at something, anything, and assign blame,"
said David Horowitz, Executive Director of the Media Coalition. "The media is
too often that something, even though, as our report found, there is no causal
link between the violent content in the media and real violence."
Responding to the misplaced
notion that violence depicted in books, magazines, movies, music, TV and video
games causes violence, the report points out that during the 1990s, media, as
well as access to media, has proliferated across the United States. Simultaneously,
however, violent crime has fallen to its lowest level in nearly 30 years.
Shooting the Messenger
is divided into four main sections. The first, "The Social Science: Studies Don't
Support the Conclusion that Media Cause Real-Life Violence," reviews a wide range
of current studies, digging beneath the surface to demonstrate that the supporting
evidence is inconclusive at best. This section also notes that even research linking
media with violent content to an increase in aggressive play, such as children's
wrestling, as opposed to actual violence, is contradictory.
"How Not to Stop Violence,"
the second section, finds that neither content regulation nor censoring of youth
are effective methods of preventing violence. In a look back, Shooting the
Messenger acknowledges that every generation has sought to protect its children
from "corrupting culture." The report cites a wide variety of examples, from half-dime
novels that the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice called "traps for
the young" to an essay in a 1914 issue of The Atlantic, claiming that the
film and publishing industries were creating a generation sophisticated in sin.
The third section, "The
Real Causes of Violence and Crime," reviews the multiplicity of interrelated social,
cultural, familial and cognitive factors that can lead to violence, including
family dysfunction, poverty, genetics, and failure to communicate.
Shooting the Messenger
wraps up with information on "How to Help Kids be Smart Media Consumers." The
report points out that parents can and should teach their children to view media
critically so they understand the messages behind what they view and how to apply
these messages to their value systems. Recommendations include encouraging adult
guidance, heeding voluntary media ratings and teaching media literacy.
"Media do not reach children
in a vacuum," Horowitz said. "Children process the messages they receive in the
context of their value systems. By giving children the tools they need to understand
what they are seeing and hearing, parents can help their children absorb a wide
range of media and messages consistent with the positive values taught by parents,
teachers and peers."
The report concludes that
the answer for problems created by speech is more speech, not censorship.
"Censorship cannot eliminate
evil - it can only kill freedom," Horowitz said.
Single copies of "Shooting
the Messenger" are available free of charge by writing to the address below or
visiting www.mediacoalition.org. Multiple copies of the report are available for
a nominal fee of $1.00/report and can be ordered by contacting:
The Media
Coalition, Inc.
139 Fulton Street, Suite 302
New York, NY 10038
The Media Coalition is an
association that defends the First Amendment right to create and distribute books,
magazines, recordings, movies, videotapes and videogames; and defends the American
public's First Amendment right to have access to the broadest possible range of
opinion and entertainment. The Coalition was founded in 1973. It represents most
of the booksellers, publishers, librarians, periodical distributors, recording
and videogame manufacturers, and recording and video retailers in the United States.
Its members are:
- American Booksellers Foundation
for Free Expression
- Association of American
Publishers
- Freedom to Read Foundation
- Interactive Digital Software
Association
- International Periodical
Distributors Association
- Magazine Publishers of
America
- National Association of
College Stores
- National Association of
Recording Merchandisers
- Publishers Marketing Association
- Video Software Dealers
Association
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