I understand how violence in video games can very commonly be accessed by children and that many children do play those games, whether it be in isolation or online with their friends. These can be very graphic and real in certain cases.
Whether or not one is worse than the other in terms of watching hockey versus video games, we don't know. We don't have data. We couldn't comment on that.
I think most importantly it's really about understanding home environments. That's what I mentioned in my opening comments. We have to do all of this work within the context of understanding the environment in which a child lives, works, learns and plays. That is included in that. We need to understand the relationships and focus on not only the violence they witness or are exposed to, but more importantly we need to focus on violence they experience at the hands of caregivers and other people in their lives. The entire context of violence is important.