The author of the 400,000-copy bestseller On Killing reveals how
violent video games have ushered in a new era of mass homicide -- and
what we must do about it.
Paducah, Kentucky, 1997: a 14-year-old boy shoots eight students in a
prayer circle at his school.
Littleton, Colorado, 1999: two high school seniors kill a teacher,
twelve other students, and then themselves.
Utoya, Norway, 2011: a political extremist shoots and kills sixty-nine
participants in a youth summer camp.
Newtown, Connecticut, 2012: a troubled 20-year-old man kills 20 children
and six adults at the elementary school he once attended.
What links these and other horrific acts of mass murder? A young
person's obsession with video games that teach to kill.
Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, who in his perennial bestseller On Killing
revealed that most of us are not "natural born killers" - and who has
spent decades training soldiers, police, and others who keep us secure
to overcome the intrinsic human resistance to harming others and to use
firearms responsibly when necessary - turns a laser focus on the threat
posed to our society by violent video games.
Drawing on crime statistics, cutting-edge social research, and
scientific studies of the teenage brain, Col. Grossman shows how video
games that depict antisocial, misanthropic, casually savage behavior can
warp the mind - with potentially deadly results. His book will become
the focus of a new national conversation about video games and the
epidemic of mass murders that they have unleashed.