Does Violence in the Media Cause Violence in the Community?
An argumentative essay on media violence being connected to violence in our country.
Over the years, scientists and researchers have been striving to find the connection between media violence and societal violence. In the community, researchers in one camp are trying to prove that people who are exposed to violence in music, television and videogames ultimately will exhibit increased aggression and ultimately violent behavior. With regard to music, scientists have said that listening to death metal and gangster rap causes listeners to become aggressive and violent, and have stated that related music from bands such as Slayer and Judas Priest influenced the youth who committed the shootings at Columbine High School. Music from gangster rappers such as “Tupac Shakur” and groups such as the “NWA” have also been cited for encouraging violence in many communities or neighborhoods, especially the slums in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Los Angeles. Other entertainment Medias such as television have also been strongly accused, television for its obscene violence and video games for teaching children how to kill. Unfortunately for media naysayers there has been little to no conclusive scientific evidence showing media violence as a cause of societal violence.
The media becomes a scapegoat for those who refuse to admit that in some American households, exposure to violence and abuse, poverty, alcohol, drug abuse, and loose gun laws have influenced impressionable youths more than any rap song or “slasher” movie; a sub-genre of horror movies, ever will.
Many groups that are used as examples by researchers as being under the influence of media violence live in the projects and the ghettos of major cities such as Philadelphia, New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, all of which have similarities. All these neighborhoods are lower class, mostly populated by minority groups such as African-Americans, Latinos and recent immigrant nationalities of all ages. The major connection is not the ethnic groupings or dislocation of recent arrivals alone, but of the history of violence, abuse and the presence of firearms in the home that already existed in these neighborhoods prior to the media boom. The musicians blamed for influencing and aggravating violence in the slums of the major cities, were born and raised in these areas. The music is in fact a reflection of the lives of these rappers, and the turmoil and violence experienced by the rappers growing up. Rap music lyrics are just a single example of violent music that is available in parallel with societal violence.
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