simulation. we do it with law enforcement and video training. you don t see it in ranger school but integral part of our training make killing response part of training. we have to do it. healthy people have to be trained to do and the video games do the same things to the kids. laura: ben, what i think about this, science or not, for young children to continually see images of heads exploding, chests opening up, you talked about the immorality of all of this. whether it s constitutional or not constitutional, maybe it as a societal we have to talk about what numbing ourselves to this very graphic violence. it s not a cartoon. this looks like a real person s head exploding and it s over and over and over again and doing it 10 hours a day and playing with people in other countries, that s where you are getting your stimulation. that s boys need to be outside playing and doing physical stuff. instead sitting there on these screens all day. i don t see how any of that is good. i ful
simulation. we do it with law enforcement and video training. you don t see it in ranger school but integral part of our training make killing response part of training. we have to do it. healthy people have to be trained to do and the video games do the same things to the kids. laura: ben, what i think about this, science or not, for young children to continually see images of heads exploding, chests opening up, you talked about the immorality of all of this. whether it s constitutional or not constitutional, maybe it as a societal we have to talk about what numbing ourselves to this very graphic violence. it s not a cartoon. this looks like a real person s head exploding and it s over and over and over again and doing it 10 hours a day and playing with people in other countries, that s where you are getting your stimulation. that s boys need to be outside playing and doing physical stuff. instead sitting there on these screens all day. i don t see how any of that is good. i ful
that would continue in the college years. so how he could ignore that is just really beyond me. why is it hard to get data on sexual assault on rape? well, first of all, you have to get over the societal, the fact that rape victims are made to feel that it is their fault, somehow, as opposed to other victims of crime. there a difficulty in reporting, in that many times these crimes are pushed aside by police. police don t follow through with prosecuting or attempting to prosecute rape, a lot of times. we know that 22% of police departments have problems with rape reporting statistics. rape kits don t get processed. so really, the whole system is stacked against a woman who want to report a rape from being afraid of her attacker to the judicial system. in your response, when will says the way college campuses are forced to address these so called rape epidemic, isn t that
peter baker is the author of days of fire, bush and cheney in the white house and i spoke to him earlier here in studio 1. welcome. was your portrait of dick cheney in this book different than the public image he had for eight years? i think it is. the public image was cartoonish at times. two dimensional. he was a puppet master. the sinister force running things. like all myths there was some truth. he was an influential vice president. very powerful, no doubt tarynly years. it s a relationship that was much more dynamic and changed over time. it sounds like although you ve been too polite to say so an indictment of the media if the image of the vice president of the united states was cartoonish and two dimensional. that s the nature of media today to some extent. you take a reality and exaggerate and then it gets to late night circuit where it becomes further exaggerated and becomes a larger societal
peter baker is the author of days of fire, bush and cheney in the white house and i spoke to him earlier here in studio 1. welcome. was your portrait of dick cheney in this book different than the public image he had for eight years? i think it is. the public image was cartoonish at times. two dimensional. he was a puppet master. the sinister force running things. like all myths there was some truth. he was an influential vice president. very powerful, no doubt tarynly years. it s a relationship that was much more dynamic and changed over time. it sounds like although you ve been too polite to say so an indictment of the media if the image of the vice president of the united states was cartoonish and two dimensional. that s the nature of media today to some extent. you take a reality and exaggerate and then it gets to late night circuit where it becomes further exaggerated and becomes a larger societal