-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
From:                   "Michael Albert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                ZNet Commentary, June 7 Sandy Carter
Date sent:              Sun, 6 Jun 1999 22:29:29 +0100

Here is today's ZNet Commentary Delivery from Sandy Carter. The
attached
file is the same material in nicely formatted html so that you can
read it
in your browser if you wish.

To pass this comment along to friends, relatives, etc. please note
that
the Commentaries are a premium sent to monthly donors to Z/ZNet and
that
to learn more about the project folks can consult ZNet
(http://www.zmag.org) and specifically the Commentary Page
(http://www.zmag.org/Commentaries/donorform.htm).

Here then is today's ZNet Commentary...


------------------------------------------


When Kids Kill
By Sandy Carter

Since the school shootings in Littleton, the nation's print and broadcast
media have unleashed a sensational outpouring of analysis and concern
aiming to explain why boys kill and what can be done to save them.

Once we get by the headlines, however, we find our questions and
compassion are being directed toward "our boys."  As Harvard psychiatrist
Alvin Poussaint has noted, "When white middle class kids kill, there is
always a public outcry of why and a search for what went wrong, but when
inner city minority kids kill, the public is warned of demons and super
predators."

Stepping back some from the spin of the moment, it is easy to see a double
standard.  According to FBI statistics, the overall rate of homicide has
remained relatively constant for the past 30 years.  However, in the
period from the mid-80s to the mid-90s when youth homicide soared 168
percent, media and political leaders turned a blind eye to deteriorating
conditions in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, Detroit, and Houston.  As
the inner-city industrial base disintegrated, family and social services
cutback, schools worsened, and hope disappeared, juvenile arrests for
weapons, aggravated assault, robbery and murder jumped 50 percent.  Yet as
long as the face of violence was black or brown, a simple solution of more
prisons and more police seemed the best answer to violent youth.

But today, the issue is more "complex."  What's happening in the
heartland? What's gone wrong in our small towns and suburbs?  Where are
the parents of these kids?  What values are we teaching?  It's time to
censor violent media.  Can we get some gun control?  White upper and
middle class boys from "good families" have committed mass murder and
stirred the national conscience.

Predictably several timely books have arrived to meet the demand for
serious soul searching.  By far the most useful is James Garbarino's Lost
Boys:  Why Our Sons Turn Violent And How We Can Save Them (The Free
Press).  A professor of human development at Cornell University, Garbarino
has been studying violent youth of all races and socio-economic
backgrounds for 25 years.  As a result, he has developed a class and race
perspective on violence that won't allow the issue to be reduced to family
and emotional problems.

While sharing in the conventional wisdom regarding risk factors for urban
youth violence (a family history of criminal violence, physical and sexual
abuse, gang membership, drug use, gun use, parental abandonment),
Garbarino has seen enough to weight social inequality and community
breakdown primary causes of youth homicide.  Criminal justice stats from
California and New York indicate that black and Latino teens had murder
rates 10 to 20 times higher than white teens during the early to mid
1990s.  Nonetheless, the violence of lost boys of color sparked few cries
of compassionate intervention.  Beyond the hip-hop nation, race, poverty,
and despair wasn't news.  In 1999, it still isn't.

And with that in mind, Garbarino's book is drawing national attention
because of what he has to say about the lethal violence of white youth of
relative economic privilege.  Citing interviews with middle class boys
jailed for homicide and recent data suggesting a rising murder rate for
small town/rural youth, Garbarino concludes that boys really are angrier
and more violent these days.  And why are America's more favored sons
losing their way?

While keenly aware of class and race differences, Garbarino finds
"profound similarities" between boys who kill.  Most all have experienced
parental abandonment, abuse, and rejection.  Most all live with no meaning
beyond self and money.   Absent family and community ties, they fall
victim to "violence, crude sexuality, shallow materialism, mean spirited
competitiveness, and spiritual emptiness."  In other words, lost boys are
a by-product of everyday pathologies of American life.

The lost boys of the white small town/suburban middle class are, of
course, not provoked by the harsh economic and social conditions of the
inner city. And Garbarino is very weak on nailing "risk factors" for more
upscale youth. He trots out much the same bad environment list (which is
not wrong, just incomplete) we've been getting from the mainstream media:
adult neglect, violent media images, gun availability, emotional blocks,
lack of limit setting, etc.  But when he points a finger at the lack of
"affirmative values" in society as a whole, Garbarino starts to sound like
a social revolutionary.

Calling for parenting and cultural teaching that stress democratic values,
social equality, universal human rights, and human purpose beyond material
goods and "me," he is describing what's needed in the lives of lost boys
everywhere.  Unfortunately, dressed as the professional advice of a mental
health expert, Garbarino's book will not likely be read for its radical
political implications.  And most certainly, it will not stir attention on
the lost boys demonized and forsaken in the country's urban jungles. Z











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