Watching the news in the last couple days about a pair of teenagers who very purposefully ran over a man on his bicycle reminded me of a proposal I first made in a late 1970s Atlanta Constitution (since merged with the Atlanta Journal) Letter to the Editor in the midst of that city being embroiled in debate about an uptick in young teenage crime, which included everything from breaking & entering to car-jackings and murder. I was still very much a hard-core leftist, and this was before my foray into university dormitory administration, so I was more of a rule breaker than a rule follower, but I could later see this as one of the straws that eventually broke the camel's back of blaming everything on society, because I observed the incongruency that is inevitable to this day when teenagers have committed heinous crimes: of course, usually, the miscreant teens are products of homes run by single mothers, so the media rush to interview the budding criminals' hapless mothers (and fathers, if they can find them, who typically have a different last name from the little crook).
What almost always happens?: some frequently-hysterical display by a woman who couldn't make it any more obvious that it's been years since she last paid any real attention to her kid. "This just isn't like my Tyrone/Bucky/Albert/Ricardo/Nikita; he's a good boy," which inevitably shifts over into blaming anyone but herself or the teenager for (usually) his actions. Nothing's fair. The schools are bad, the police are out to get these kids, they're poor, blah, blah, blah. Ultimately, the reporters -- and soon the public defenders -- gravitate into blaming the conditions these teenagers are raised in (poverty, fatherlessness, in many cases racism, discrimination, etc.), essentially portraying the criminals as the victims in the situation -- as if they were just destined to act out in ways that were beyond their control -- and should therefore receive leniency. After all, we don't want to break they mommy's hearts, now, do we?
The end result is generally a perpetuation of the narrative that it would be unfair to hold these young feral dogs and cats fully responsible for their crimes, and, worse yet, when they do become adults, their records get expunged -- while the real victims fail to receive justice.
So I wrote a published letter (don't have a copy now, so can't quote it perfectly and won't try) asserting that it just might be total bullshit that any of the scapegoated social ills actually ever cause anyone to commit violent crimes -- given that the majority of people who live under the exact same conditions turn out just fine. So, (a) the criminals are responsible for their crimes, and if they've managed to organize themselves well enough to commit those crimes, they should be held fully accountable for their actions, but (b) if societal forces do have either influence or responsibility in the crimes these hoodlums commit, then we're consistently ignoring the biggest social influence of them all: the mothers and fathers of these punks. Why are they let off scot-free? And, for those of us who assert that parents should have full power over how their children are raised, why do we not also expect ourselves to be held accountable for the negative actions of our children, just as we could lay claim to being proud of their accomplishments?
So, this was my proposal:
This system would be operative until the death of one's parents. A 65-year-old could step in to serve a 38-year-old's 10-year sentence. However, senior citizens would be barred from taking on life sentences or death sentences.
My thinking is that this would incentivize parents to keep a much closer eye on what their children are up to.
Your thoughts?
What almost always happens?: some frequently-hysterical display by a woman who couldn't make it any more obvious that it's been years since she last paid any real attention to her kid. "This just isn't like my Tyrone/Bucky/Albert/Ricardo/Nikita; he's a good boy," which inevitably shifts over into blaming anyone but herself or the teenager for (usually) his actions. Nothing's fair. The schools are bad, the police are out to get these kids, they're poor, blah, blah, blah. Ultimately, the reporters -- and soon the public defenders -- gravitate into blaming the conditions these teenagers are raised in (poverty, fatherlessness, in many cases racism, discrimination, etc.), essentially portraying the criminals as the victims in the situation -- as if they were just destined to act out in ways that were beyond their control -- and should therefore receive leniency. After all, we don't want to break they mommy's hearts, now, do we?
The end result is generally a perpetuation of the narrative that it would be unfair to hold these young feral dogs and cats fully responsible for their crimes, and, worse yet, when they do become adults, their records get expunged -- while the real victims fail to receive justice.
So I wrote a published letter (don't have a copy now, so can't quote it perfectly and won't try) asserting that it just might be total bullshit that any of the scapegoated social ills actually ever cause anyone to commit violent crimes -- given that the majority of people who live under the exact same conditions turn out just fine. So, (a) the criminals are responsible for their crimes, and if they've managed to organize themselves well enough to commit those crimes, they should be held fully accountable for their actions, but (b) if societal forces do have either influence or responsibility in the crimes these hoodlums commit, then we're consistently ignoring the biggest social influence of them all: the mothers and fathers of these punks. Why are they let off scot-free? And, for those of us who assert that parents should have full power over how their children are raised, why do we not also expect ourselves to be held accountable for the negative actions of our children, just as we could lay claim to being proud of their accomplishments?
So, this was my proposal:
- Shore up parental power to control the whereabouts of their children.
- Shore up parental power to control the manner in which their children are disciplined.
- Create full parity regarding punishments for crimes without basing punishment on the ages of criminals; i.e., e.g., if an 11-year-old has the wherewithal to commit murder, consider him worthy of a life sentence in prison -- or the death penalty.
- However, after conviction and sentencing, give each biological or adoptive parent of convicted young thugs the freedom to substitute themselves in regard to carrying out the sentences.
This system would be operative until the death of one's parents. A 65-year-old could step in to serve a 38-year-old's 10-year sentence. However, senior citizens would be barred from taking on life sentences or death sentences.
My thinking is that this would incentivize parents to keep a much closer eye on what their children are up to.
Your thoughts?