May 18, 2007
The Violence Virus
The Violence Virus
Susan C. Scrimshaw says, "law enforcement, [...] is only part of the
solution" to youth violence. (Susan C. Scrimshaw, "The violence virus," Boston
Globe, April 22, 2007)
One element is the role of psychiatric drugs. Psychiatric drugs created a
generation of violent monsters from chemicals ingested under advice of the adult
community that should know better.
Another element is the effect of elected officials and police on setting
standards for young people. Police treat victims as suspects. Politicians ignore
abuses of police and the FBI.
Young people recognize hypocrisy in application of the laws. Public
officials ignore inconvenient laws. University development offices pressure
local communities to approve projects contrary to laws. There is no outrage
among the educated voters in eastern Mass. The one party-system permits abuses
of law and power not usually tolerated under a democratic republic.
There is no accountability for harms by wealthy and powerful persons. Young
people know this as well as adults. They join gangs for self protection. The
police do not perform their primary function, i.e., to protect citizens from
harm. Gangs fill the vacuum.
Respect for individuals will end much violence. But there is no respect for
poor powerless person by politicians and police and journalists.
Roy Bercaw, Editor ENOUGH ROOM
The violence virus
Boston Globe
By Susan C. Scrimshaw
April 22, 2007
IN URBAN areas across our nation, hardly a day goes by without news of a
shooting. Many such incidents start with a rash argument between young people
armed with guns. The typical response, when shootings increase, is to enhance
law enforcement, but that is only part of the solution.
This deadly cycle of shootings is a public-health epidemic. By approaching it as
such -- as a contagious disease of underlying expectations and pressures, one
that is both treatable and preventable -- we can make significant progress
toward halting it.
Urban violence is spread largely by expectations among youths in many gangs: If
you insult or harm me, I must harm you. That powerful peer pressure and behavior
is transmitted, like a virus, from person to person and gang to gang -- until
there's a violent outbreak, and someone is killed. Then the virus is quiet until
another outbreak .
[...]
Susan C. Scrimshaw is president of Simmons College in Boston.
Susan C. Scrimshaw says, "law enforcement, [...] is only part of the
solution" to youth violence. (Susan C. Scrimshaw, "The violence virus," Boston
Globe, April 22, 2007)
One element is the role of psychiatric drugs. Psychiatric drugs created a
generation of violent monsters from chemicals ingested under advice of the adult
community that should know better.
Another element is the effect of elected officials and police on setting
standards for young people. Police treat victims as suspects. Politicians ignore
abuses of police and the FBI.
Young people recognize hypocrisy in application of the laws. Public
officials ignore inconvenient laws. University development offices pressure
local communities to approve projects contrary to laws. There is no outrage
among the educated voters in eastern Mass. The one party-system permits abuses
of law and power not usually tolerated under a democratic republic.
There is no accountability for harms by wealthy and powerful persons. Young
people know this as well as adults. They join gangs for self protection. The
police do not perform their primary function, i.e., to protect citizens from
harm. Gangs fill the vacuum.
Respect for individuals will end much violence. But there is no respect for
poor powerless person by politicians and police and journalists.
Roy Bercaw, Editor ENOUGH ROOM
The violence virus
Boston Globe
By Susan C. Scrimshaw
April 22, 2007
IN URBAN areas across our nation, hardly a day goes by without news of a
shooting. Many such incidents start with a rash argument between young people
armed with guns. The typical response, when shootings increase, is to enhance
law enforcement, but that is only part of the solution.
This deadly cycle of shootings is a public-health epidemic. By approaching it as
such -- as a contagious disease of underlying expectations and pressures, one
that is both treatable and preventable -- we can make significant progress
toward halting it.
Urban violence is spread largely by expectations among youths in many gangs: If
you insult or harm me, I must harm you. That powerful peer pressure and behavior
is transmitted, like a virus, from person to person and gang to gang -- until
there's a violent outbreak, and someone is killed. Then the virus is quiet until
another outbreak .
[...]
Susan C. Scrimshaw is president of Simmons College in Boston.
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