Top House Republican Blames Video Games for Mass Shootings

Stop us if you've heard this one before.

kevin mccarthy
Getty

Image via Getty

kevin mccarthy

The seemingly endless flood of bad news can make a few short years feel like an eternity ago and it doesn't help when top politicians start trotting out '90s talking points in response to this weekend's tragedies. But that's just what House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is doing. The highest-ranking Republican in the House of Representatives believes violent video games may be a root cause of the recent mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton.

GOP House minority leader Kevin McCarthy follows up Dan Patrick on Fox News to say the influence of video games are represented in photos of the shootings, which is truly awful

can just one of you dipshits blame white supremacist terrorism pic.twitter.com/BKq51mLVXM

— Rod Breslau (@Slasher) August 4, 2019

"This may be a place where we could find this ahead of time," said McCarthy on Fox News. "The idea that these video games that dehumanize individuals to have a game of shooting individuals...I've always felt that it's a problem for future generations and others. We've watched studies show what it does to individuals, and you look at these photos of how it took place, you can see the actions within video games and others."

McCarthy wasn't content to believe the El Paso shooter's stated motive of attacking Hispanics to protest what he viewed as their gradual takeover of the United States. Instead, he opted to check on the video games again. It's worth noting that researchers have repeatedly found that there is no link between video games and real-world violence, and that the top Republican in the country, President Donald Trump, began his campaign for president with an explicitly racist appeal that warned his supporters of a supposed wave of criminals coming to the United States from Mexico. 

Rather than interrogating the ways that "us v. them" language from the leader of the free world might incite violence, McCarthy is down to dodge using some bugbears of the past.  People on Twitter heard this tired argument and let him have it. 

So explain the me how you came to the video game conclusion?? Nobody is out here stomping out turtles from playing super Mario. I’ve played about every shooting game I can imagine, don’t own a gun. Never had the urge to kill anyone.

— First Name Last Name (@klimshady01) August 4, 2019

Why is it that these video games only effect Americans?

Maybe you should look for some other reasons. pic.twitter.com/2kHFDXXDzN

— Tony Pelch (@TonyPelch) August 4, 2019

hey Kev my dude, which video game was it that inspired the El Paso white supremacist to 'like' a photo of guns arranged to spell out TRUMP? asking for 65 million friends

— Jeff Tiedrich (@itsJeffTiedrich) August 4, 2019

The plot of every video game going forward should be to remove @GOPLeader's head from his ass.

— Mr. Newberger (@jeremynewberger) August 4, 2019

I lived in Japan for 5 yrs as @CNN’s Tokyo correspondent and covered ZERO mass shooting. ZERO shootings AT ALL. Japan is a video game culture unlike almost any other country. What’s extremely, extremely rare in Japan—guns. https://t.co/COF7rEgw8y

— Kyung Lah (@KyungLahCNN) August 4, 2019

i been playing call of duty since idk when and i aint never said damn lemme get this gun and go in this public space and let this hoe rip cause i can do that in a video game

— Meech Arlert (@DemetriusHarmon) August 4, 2019

Straight up outlier. #VideogamesAreNotToBlame pic.twitter.com/0mzrr8Qrnq

— Travis Walsh (@TravisAwalsH) August 5, 2019

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