comparison

             The Military-Nintendo Complex is a collaboration of authors John Naisbitt, Nana Naisbitt, Douglas Phillips. The Military-Nintendo Complex and Black Women and Motherhood by Patricia Hill Collins express comparable and incomparable points. Although these two pieces of writing have some resemblance, their overall topics vary. The Military-Nintendo Complex is a chapter from High Tech/High Touch: Technology and Our Search for Meaning that focuses on how parents fail to see the influence that media and video games have on their children. Meanwhile in Black Women and Motherhood, the focus is on how African American women play major roles in their families and environment. Both works focus on parenting but from different perspectives.
             Both works of literature use parenting to support their thesis. The authors of The Military-Nintendo Complex along with Collins author of Black Women and Motherhood express the importance of good parenting. Examples of good parenting are having an
             open line of communication, always being aware of children's welfare, and education
             both inside and outside the classroom. Both selections focus on the effects that parenting have on children. Children whose parents tend to focus more on parenting are mostly likely to be productive adults. Both authors express the importance of children being raised by their parents so that they may be accepted in society. Despite the fact that the both selections have parenting in common, they fail to have any other valid
             connection. In The Military-Nintendo Complex parents have failed to see the effects of violent video games, meanwhile in Black Women and Motherhood parenting is described in order for the reader to understand how important children are in their family. The authors may have used personal experiences to help develop their overall points.
             John Naisbitt "was a former executive with IBM and Kodak"(Gary Colombo, Robert Cullen, Bonnie Lisle ...

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