>There's also this. I've met sex addicts before and compared to people who are borderline obsessive about videogames they've almost always been incredibly ashamed about it because it takes such a toll on them mentally (several of them admitted to having issues connecting emotionally to the people they slept with, even if they really wanted to).
It seems to me that people in general are just really uncomfortable acknowledging any kind of problem related to sex, whether it's addiction, dysfunction, or whatever else. Sex is kind of placed on the same level as having bowel movements - everyone knows it happens, but no one wants to discuss it going wrong.
>The thing is, you have to actually demonstrate whether or not it's the video game that's addictive, or whether it's being used as a crutch to ease some other issue.
I don't think even that would help in this case, because what happens when they find that the real problem is that men are turning away from a society that shits on them? The elites don't want to acknowledge that, because they want men to be obedient worker drones.