Video Games Violence And Children

POLICE BEAT
Anthony W. Kinnison, 43, 2000 U.S. 23, Delaware, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear.
Violence in Video Games
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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Full-Screen Edition) $3.70 Alas! The fifth Harry Potter film has arrived. The time is long past that this can be considered a simple “children’s” series–though children and adults alike will enjoy it immensely. Starting off from the dark and tragic ending of the fourth film, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix begins in a somber and angst-filled tone that carries through the entire 138 minutes (the shortest of any HP… |
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War Games (25th Anniversary Edition) $6.93 “Computer hacker David Lightman (Broderick) can bypass the most advanced security systems, break the most intricate secret codes and master even the m… |
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War Games $6.88 Cute but silly, this 1983 cautionary fantasy stars Matthew Broderick as a teenage computer genius who hacks into the Pentagon’s defense system and sets World War III into motion. All the fun is in the film’s set-up, as Broderick befriends Ally Sheedy and starts the international crisis by pretending while online to be the Soviet Union. After that, it’s not hard to predict what’s going to happen: g… |
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Stop Teaching Our Kids to Kill : A Call to Action Against TV, Movie and Video Game Violence $3.99 There is perhaps no bigger or more important issue in America at present than youth violence. Jonesboro; Paducah; Pearl, Mississippi; Stamps, Arkansas; Conyers, Georgia; and, of course, Littleton, Colorado. We know them all too well, and for all the wrong reasons: kids, some as young as eleven years old, taking up arms and, with deadly, frightening accuracy, murdering anyone in their paths. What i… |
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Taking Back Childhood: Helping Your Kids Thrive in a Fast-Paced, Media-Saturated, Violence-Filled World $5.91 An innovative road map to help parents bring creative play, quality relationships, and a sense of confidence and personal safety back into their kids lives One only need turn on the TV, stroll the aisles of any toy store, or visit any American elementary school to witness the formidable social trends that, over the past few decades, have begun to erode the quality of kids livesfrom media vi… |