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Our youngsters
Violence is up again on the London streets. A gay man was brutally murdered last week-end for no apparent reasons. Few weeks ago a man was murdered in his own house following a burglary. On both occasions the killers were young people, some were teenagers. I am at loss at the thought that those people will one day will be part of the movers and shakers of Britain. And I am not going even to discuss the yobs culture and the high rate of teenager's pregnancies. Shouldn't schools/parents/government do something about it?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree that parenting has changed over the last 20 years or so, and that that has had an impact on the attitude and behavior of youngsters today. For those of us in our late 30s and beyond, most of us came from two-parent families, where Dad worked, and Mom kept house, and was home we when got home from school. She made sure we *did* come home from school (weren't hanging out somewhere), and had us buckle down and do homework and household chores. Dad was there to supply the discipline when we got out of line. Entire neighborhoods acted as watchdogs - if we were misbehaving somewhere down the street, nosy Mrs. Smith would stick her head out the door and threaten to tell your parents.
Fast forward to the late 1970s/early 190s and beyond...suddenly punishing children is frowned upon. Inflation means that usually both parents have to work outside of the home, and a generation of "latchkey" children emerged. Touchy-feely "experts" warned us that it crushed the child's self-esteem to ever criticize them, so suddenly *everyone* won a medal in the contest, so no one felt left out. Kids were praised no matter what, to always bolster their feelings. This spawned a generation of kids with a sense of entitlement, who couldn't understand why they couldn't have everything they wanted, and thought everything they did was OK. The line between right and wrong was forever blurred.
Just my two cents, of course.
A few things contribute to the state of this present younger generation, but the main thing is the breakdown of the basic social unit, the family. Andy and Ouisch exactly mirrors my views in their answers.
The lack of any sort of discipline is beginning to manifest itself with the gradual breakdown of law and order. No (or very little) deterrents also contributes to this and the yoghurt knitters and tree huggers can't see this and espouse greater liberalism and and even less discipline for our youngsters. This, coupled with the PC brigade putting their oar in, means that ordinary decent people can't even express their truly held opinions and views for fear of offending homosexuals, coloured people, ethnic minorities, illegal immigrants, single mothers, criminals, people with curly hair, smokers, drinkers, left handers, Scousers etc etc ad nauseum.
I'd better shut up now before I start on the state of education standards in this country.
Chrisd, I would be very interested to know where you are living now.
Fortunately where I live in England the yob culture has not yet proved a great problem, but it's very rural here. I certainly would not have wanted to bring my child up in an urban area of the UK. (I originate from London)
I don't mean to offend anybody because I am not saying that all youngsters in urban areas are part of the yob culture. Far from it; I think the majority of our young people are great, but unfortunately, as always, the minority are the ones that get noticed.
On both occasions the killers were young people, some were teenagers. I am at loss at the thought that those people will one day will be part of the movers and shakers of Britain.
To be honest, I doubt that the killers will be movers and shakers of the future. I think the movers and shakers will be from the MAJORITY of young people who aren't "yobs". I don't think the fault or the providor of the solution should come solely from government. If it did, then the same people that constantly fill the daily mail with stories of "bad youth" will then only go on to complain about the "nanny state" yet again. The schools have enough on their plates I would think tryoing to bring in new educational styles to combat complaints of easier exams. I think therefore the blame should lay with the parents.
And ChrisD, where exactly did you move to? Or was the statement that you moved because of the youth, just a bold comment made to add fuel to the discussion? I find it hard to believe that you couldn't find somewhere "nice" to bring a child up in the UK!?! If that was realy the reason you left the UK then thats more a reflection perhaps of the media in which you have chosen to believe. For example if you read the daily mail then i could imagine people running scared from this country scared for their lives due to the threat from youngsters, the internet, immigrants, modern life, not drinking enough wine, drinking too much wine, getting addicted to heroine after one puff of a spliff, europe, gambling etc etc
I'm sure that many crimes are made by non-youngsters. So should i therefore be frowning upon and running scared of ALL people beyond teenage years just because of the minority??
What a debate. Thanks to all the replies. I personally think its due to education, discrupted family life, uneducated parent/s and so on. Liljooz I agree with you and I was not blaming all teenagers. Thank god there are wonderful people like you out there, we just hope you are not in the minority. Anyway I remember when I was a kid in the 70s it was the same, older people judging and blaming us (kids) for most things; we were all drug users, thieves etc.
Arrggh, I wrote a thesis and it was lost. Perhaps for the best. In summary, Thatcher said there was no society, people believed greed was good (terminally dull conversations about house prices, Harry Enfield becomes a household name). Liberals and Tories (Mike 1222, please note) don't deal with the breakdown of morality, ho hum, we are where we are.
It's never too late to change things, it merely becomes harder and more necessary