Rather than write a formal address about the president’s decision to start a war with Iran, White House staffers spent time ...
The White House’s video Friday began with a brief clip from the video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.
Reporters have the power to “show the suffering that war always brings ... so that it does not turn into a video game,” the pope said this week ...
For several days in a row, the White House has posted videos on X of the U.S.’s strikes on Iran spliced with footage taken ...
The Pope tells reporters to "show the face of war and tell it through the eyes of the victims so as ​not to turn it into a video game." ...
On a summer day after the Civil War began in 1861, civilians including elites, politicians and socialites packed picnic ...
The pontiff told an Italian television program that it is up to journalists "to show the face of war and to relate it through the eyes of the victims, so as not to transform it into a video game." ...
The article criticizes the lack of accountability of the bombing in Iran and the use of video games to sell the war.