Odd how the mobs are always leftists.

 

B

 

  

 <http://www.nypost.com/> Description: Description: New York PostUpdated:
Sun., Aug. 14, 2011, 4:08 AM Description: Description: home

Mob mentality

By PEGGY NOONAN

Last Updated: 4:08 AM, August 14, 2011

Posted: 11:50 PM, August 13, 2011

The riots in Britain left some Americans shaken. In the affluence of the
past 40 years, and with the rise of the jumbo jet, we became a nation of
travelers. We have been to England, visited a lot of those neighborhoods.
They were peaceful; now they're in flames. But something else raised our
unease as we followed the story on TV and on the Net. I think there was a
ping on the national radar. We saw something over there that in smaller ways
we're starting to see over here. 

The British press, left, right and center, was largely united in a refusal
to make political excuses for the violence. Almost all ag reed on the cause
and nature of what happened. The cause was not injustice; this was not a
revolt of the downtrodden masses, breaking into stores looking for food. The
causes were greed, selfishness, a respect and even lust of violence, and a
lack of moral grounding. Conscienceless predators preyed upon the weak. The
weak were anyone who happened to be passing by, and those, many of them
immigrants, who tried to defend their shops and neighborhoods.

The iconic scene was the 20-year-old college student in East London who was
beaten for his bicycle and fell bloody to the ground. His tormentors, with a
sadistic imitation of gentleness, helped him up. Then they rifled through
his backpack to get his phone and wallet. It was cruelty out of Dickens. It
was Bill Sikes with a million YouTube hits.

The denunciations were sw ift and fierce. Max Hastings, in the
conservative-populist Daily Mail: "The depressing truth is that at the
bottom of our society is a layer of young people with no skills, education,
values or aspirations. . . . Nobody has ever dared suggest to them that they
need feel any allegiance to anything, least of all Britain or their
community. . . . Not only do they know nothing of Britain's past, they care
nothing for its present."

In the left-tilting Guardian, youth worker Shaun Bailey called the rioters
opportunists. "Young people have been looting the shops they like: JD Sports
and mobile-phone shops have been hit, yet Waterstone's [a bookstore] has
been left alone. These young people like trainers [sneakers] and iPhones;
they are less interested in books. This is criminality in a raw form, not
politics."

More stinging and resigned was the brief essay by Theodore Dalrymple in the
intellectually bracing City Journal. The subject - the decline of Western
society - has been his for 20 years. He has written what he saw as a doctor
working in British prisons. "The ferocious criminality exhibited by an
uncomfortably large section of the English population" in the riots did not
surprise him. "To have spotted it required no great perspicacity on my part;
rather, it took a peculiar cowardly blindness, one regularly displayed by
the British intelligentsia and political class, not to see it and not to
realize its significance."

At fault in the riots were the distorting effects of the welfare state and a
degenerate British popular culture: "A population thinks (because it has
often been told so by intellectuals and the political class) that i t is
entitled to a high standard of consumption, irrespective of its personal
efforts; and therefore it regards the fact that it does not receive that
high standard, by comparison with the rest of society, as a sign of
injustice." Much of what they have is provided by others, but they are not
grateful: dependency doesn't encourage gratitude but resentment.

What does this have to do with America? What we're seeing on the streets in
Britain right now is something we may be starting to see here. It hasn't
come together in a conflagration, but it is out there, and I think it's
growing. And as in Britain, it doesn't have anything to do with political
grievances per se.

Philadelphia right now is under curfew because of "flash mobs." Young people
send out the word on social media, and suddenly dozens or hundreds of them
hit a targeted store, steal everything on the shelves, and run, knowing no
one will stop them or catch them. There were the fights and attacks last
weekend at the Wisconsin State Fair. You've seen the YouTubes of fights on
the subways.

Some of these young people come from brokenness, shallowness and terror, and
are bringing those things into the world with them. Here are some statistics
of what someone last week called a new lost generation. In 2009, the last
year for which census data are available, there were 74 million children
under 18. Of that number, 20 million live in single-parent families, often
with only an overwhelmed mother or a beleaguered grandmother. Over 700,000
children under 18 have been the subject of reports of abuse. More than a
quarter million are foster children.

These numbers suggest the making - or the presence - of a crisis.

Some of these youngsters become miracle children. In spite of the hand they
were dealt, they learn to be constructive, successful, givers to life. But
many, we know, do not. Some will wind up on YouTube.

The normal, old response to an emerging problem such as this has been: The
government has to do something. We must start a program, create an agency to
address juvenile delinquency. But governments are tapped out, cutting back,
trying to avoid bankruptcy. Which means we can't even take refuge in the
illusion that government can solve the problem. The churches of America have
always helped the young, stepping in where they can. That will continue. But
they too are hard-pressed these days.

Where does that leave us? In a hard place, knowing in our guts that a lot of
troubled kids are coming up, and not knowing what to do about it. The
problem, at bottom, is love, something we never talk about in public policy
discussions because it's too soft and can't be quantified or legislated. But
little children without love and guidance are afraid. They're terrified -
they have nothing solid in the world, which is a pretty scary place. So they
never feel safe. As they grow, their fear becomes rage.

What's needed can't be provided by government. When the riot begins or the
flash mob arrives, the best the government can do is control the streets,
enforce the law, maintain the peace. After that, what? Britain is about to
face that question. We'll likely have to face it, too.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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