*my opinion* - Philly, New York, Atlanta, Chicago, Detroit, L.A. - everyone says the same damn thing in certain parts of the city. There is a total sickness going on in this country - my opinon. People (such as this young gent below) are so fucking spoiled in the richest country in the world they have no fucking idea what it's like to live in a poor- third world country.
If you are free, english speaking, have at least a highschool education - you have a choice! Specifically you have a choice when you turn 18. Nobody has to live this way forever.
People like Andre are chemically addicted in their brain to feeling this way. Not kidding. It's like
the partner in an abusive relationship that keeps going back. Dysfunctional relationships (probably like many parents of these kids - trust I came from one) are amplified in to the way neighborhoods destroy themselves. There's no real community, no respect, no trust and seemingly no hope. Education sucks in inner-city public schools (I also went to one)
but education doesn't begin and end in the classroom. Welfare does not solve problems. Teaching skills, trades and new perspectives will. But tell young Andre that.... nope, he's too busy blaming other people, feeling like a victim, addicted
to feeling dispair.
If you think I'm being a little extreem, ask a socialogist, ask a neurologist, ask a kid who came from that neighborhood
who rose above it, ask Chris Rock, ask Barak Obama. My sister grew up in South Philly and I grew up in West Philly - ask us!
I'm so fucking sick of the cycles that I see happening over and over again. Kids fall in to crime because they think it's the
only was to "survive", "get ahead", "go get what's mine" - then they get innocent people shot and killed, even family. Then
they go to jail. Then they get out and mostly get looked up to by the younger kids. The culture Andre is talking about
is a culture that emulates and glorifies jail culture. It's a a badge of honor. Even worse lame-ass entertainers sell that
shit right back to them. They're paying money for the stories of their own deaths. That's fucking sick!
Does Andre or Anderson Cooper or the editor of this article mention Health Care? Education? Religion?
Nope. Dumb asses. It's a shame. I feel bad for the state of things. I feel bad that people like Andre see no positive way out.
I've lived in Philly, Chicago and New York and it's the same sad story everytime. What is going to take to change
the way these kids get neurologically hard-wired?
Here's the article:
PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- On the streets of Philadelphia's toughest neighborhoods, just trying to get ahead can get you killed.
Andre, a 17 year-old from Philadelphia, has seen his brother shot and killed, and has been wanted for armed robbery.
"You got a good-looking girlfriend, you're going to get shot; someone wants her," said 17-year-old Andre, who asked his last name not be used for this article.
"If you're getting a little money, you're going to get shot -- someone wants that. Any way you look at it, it's just a bad situation."
Andre is caught up in the tough life on the streets of Philadelphia's Southside neighborhood. At 13, he watched his brother get shot and killed in front of his home by another teenager. By 15, he was wanted for two counts of armed robbery and theft.
"It makes you feel stronger, powerful, a bigger man," he said of having a gun. "You even walk differently when you have a gun on you."
He and others like him are the new face of violence in Philadelphia -- a younger, harder generation that lives and dies by the gun. Though it's spread throughout the city, the problem of youth violence is most acute in the southern, southwestern and northern parts.
Over the past couple of years, Philadelphia's murder rate reached highs not seen since the 1980s, according to the Philadelphia Police Department. So far this year, more than 315 people have been killed, a pace of well over a murder a day, police said. That's a higher rate, according to FBI statistics, than much larger cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York.
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But Philadelphia's situation is different today from years past in that more and more of the killers are teenagers, according to the Philadelphia Police Department and the Philadelphia District Attorney's office.
"They just shoot at anything and everybody, without even looking," said Shawn Banks, a former drug dealer and gang member. Now in his 30s, he said the new generation that rules the streets is made up of kids who shoot first and never consider the consequences.
"They [are] not respecting themselves and they don't have any value for human life," he said.
Nineteen percent of those held at Philadelphia's overcrowded juvenile detention center, The Youth Study Center, are guilty of committing violent crimes. This is in addition to those juveniles serving time at a nearby adult facility for more serious violent crimes like murder. Nearly one in four juveniles at the center become repeat offenders.
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Staff members at the youth facility said whenever a teenager makes headlines, chances are it's someone they know.
Helping kids at the center can be difficult, according to some.
"Maybe they're here for 9 -12 months, but if they spent 13 years in an environment that maybe isn't good and has a bad influence on them, you're going to lean on those 13 years," said counselor Nelson Walker.
But the office of Philadelphia Mayor John Street said the city works hard to reach high-risk kids.
"We are not going to deny that we have a problem here," said Joe Grace, spokesman for the mayor's office. "And we work aggressively to work with young kids who we consider high risk."
Grace touts the Philadelphia anti-violence, anti-drug program, which targets kids who have been through the justice system and are on probation. The city tries to help them avoid becoming repeat offenders.
As a caseworker meeting on a daily basis with juvenile offenders, Shondell Revell knows what the streets can do to a young person.
"These kids are hard, because their neighborhoods are hard," he said. "They don't see the other side of life."
Reaching out to younger siblings of juvenile criminals is particularly important to stopping the cycle of violence, said Revell.
But Andre says the pull of violent street life is strong and that offenders often end up going back to the life they knew in order to survive.
"Shooting, stabbing, killing, whatever it is -- whatever you gotta do to survive," he said.
Friday, October 12, 2007
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4 comments:
is your real name will smith? we shall overcome.
damn. thats something else entirely. I agree that the cycle of violence is an addictive one.
Marina and I were talkin glast night about how everything hinges on the humilation factor. We were watching "The Wind Through the Barley" and it is striking how conflicy arises out of feelings of humilation more often than anything else.
Look at the Middle East. . .
i linked to your "spokes snacks" post on my own blog last night, and someone suggested i send you here:
http://suicidefood.blogspot.com/
hahaha!
The worst part about these scumbags is that they are such bad shots that they don't kill each other. Instead they shoot up innocent bystanders, little kids, and people's cars and homes.
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