An MPI Home Video Presentation of an ABC News Production
"This whole victimization - it's like a disease that's weakening America's moral fiber. Living consists of encountering weaknesses, the failings... and the problems that inevitably enter our lives. And dealing with those - that's the stuff of life." - Roger Connor, American Allegiance for Rights and Responsibilities
In his second original primetime special, ABC's John Stossel examines the excesses of the "victim movement" and how the tendency to blame our misfortunes on anyone but ourselves affects public policy and the workplace. More and more often, we claim to be "victims" of bad parents, an unjust society or a disability. Why should we accept responsibility for what happens to us? The Blame Game probes the "victim mentality" from three different angles.
The first segment looks at victims that seek compensation for their troubles by taking advantage of government programs or by initiating improbable lawsuits. Next, Stossel examines the unintended consequences of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), which provides a law so broad that it all but encourages surprise disabilities never intended by the law's sponsors. The final segment covers African American's stance on whether their problems are caused more by a willingness to succumb to the victim mentality than by racism.
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