From: Brian Atkins (brian@posthuman.com)
Date: Thu May 27 1999 - 17:58:43 MDT
Here is an excerpt from an editorial in the local Atlanta paper
today discussing what the author believe is the real reason for
the growing kid violence in the US. I agree with it...
----------------------------------------------------------------
Hard question follows kid killers
---------------------------------
by Leonard Pitts
(discussing how when asked, kids blame bullies and other known
facts of high school life, and how these things have not
changed in the past 50 years) ...
"So what's changed isn't school, but some of the students who go
there.
Who are these children? It's a question I find myself asking
with increasing frequency. A question that unavoidably attends
not just the recent rush of random killing by schoolyard shooters,
but also the equally troubling string of infancticides by secretly
pregnant teen mothers.
An answer seems to lie in the very mundaneness of their
motivations: in the mother who explains that she killed her baby
to avoid embarrassment or the shooter who says he went on the
rampage because he lost his girl or was picked on by a bully.
Who are these children?
But it seems obvious, doesn't it? These are the children of
entitlement. These are the children who were never shamed enough,
blamed enough, held accountable enough, or told "no" enough to
understand that the world does not orbit around them nor exist
for their immediate gratification.
These are the children for whom an excuse has always been
found, a way always made, a shortcut always carved, the children
who have never had to bear the consequences of their own actions
upon their own shoulders.
These are the children of the new age, the one wherein parents
worried so much - too much, I think - about bruising self-esteem.
As a result, these are the children who fall apart like a house of
cards in a hurricane the moment life deals them a hard slap or two.
The problem is that life doesn't give a damn about self-esteem.
Life just does what life will and demands that you deal with it or
not. Too many children do not. Cannot. Because they're not tough
enough.
These children are a reminder that our job as parents, teachers,
and elders is not to smooth the way but to teach a child to walk
safely in the rough places. It's a job we need to approach more
assiduously than we do.
Because ultimately, the answer to the question is chilling in
its simplicity: Who are these children?
They are tomorrow."
-- Join the ExI/>H SETI team today: http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/cgi?cmd=team_show&id=393------------------------------------------------------------------- Raise your expectations
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:03:50 MST