Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
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Riots
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Anna
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostI would go so far as to state that the culture surrounding football matches is the single most pernicious influence in society today. Five minutes watching the average game will convince you that there is no respect for authority among players, managers and spectators alike. Can we be surprised that this spills over into society at large with the inevitable outcome we are now witnessing?
However, if we are looking for principle root causes for the recent thuggery and looting, and other problems in society, I suspect that widespread drug-taking and the need to feed the habit has played a much larger part.
After all, we are already regularly informed by the police that this is the principle cause of much crime, especially burglaries, knife and gun offences.
But how to stop or even reduce it, and then we're back to a quite separate and just as problematic discussion already well-aired on these boards ..
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostPlease don't blame the schools for the inadequacy of some parents.
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAlthough I'm a football fanatic, I believe there is some truth in what you say, but your use of the word 'single' is rather OTT?. :
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yes Panjandrum and would you accept that the lack of discipline applies in the senior levels of the cabinet in this government [BSkyB Murdoch discussions] [several nasty spins in the Brown Blair reigns] ... the Met Police [NI relationships and cash for stories, indulging preferences on sus stops, sickies ] and the City [insider dealing, speculation and the usual run of casino and the bonus culture] ... there is a strong sense of entitlement without responsibility in many boardrooms as well, not to mention the BBC ....
i find that nothing in what you, or any other of the 'moral responsibility' school of thought making statements, say that can be uniquely applied to the kids and others looting and rioting .... if there is a malaise it is one they share with all other elements of society ... just as there are many youngsters living on ghetto estates with dysfunctional families who d not break the law .... circumstance is a great driver of human behaviour and i think that we shall come to see that the events unfolded from Saturday - peaceful protest and witness sparked into riots and some looting into organised riots and looting on a growing opportunistic basis through Tuesday and Wednesday ... with gangs, contagion and competition all fuelling disorder ... it is not that 'they' are sick, we are sick; not 'they' are criminal, we are .... and we do little effective to reform and hold responsible those who exploit system to their own benefit ... as a middle rank policeman said on the news about the Met leadership .. "it is supposed to be Public Service, not Self Service" he was referring to how they reward themselves [one could add that the salaries of local government senior executives are well beyond their just deserts ... is this not a form of greed and criminality?]
i am not arguing that policing the streets and arresting the criminals is not an absolute priority, but punishing them will not offer much in the way of improvement, and the only moral improvement that will really work is one that we all have to adopt ... it sometimes strikes me that the greatest sin of the rioters is to disturb our blithe ignorance of how they live while we pursue our own lives ... how dare they interrupt?
btw not my list just my reference ... two criminologists produced it for BBC i thought it was a handy little list ...According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Mahlerei
Having watched today's Parliamentary debate and listened to the endless loop of moral outrage and self-righteous posturing I am struck by the hypocrisy of a House that has little right to use words like 'responsibility' and phrases like 'the differenec between right and wrong'. And then for Macaroon to box it all up, dump it on the estates and call 'them' sick is, frankly, sick-making in itself. As calum says, the malaise is everywhere, from crooked politicians, bankers and tax evaders to scroungers and benefit cheats. And I heard some pompous twit going on about role models, too. Where are they I wonder? It's not just about absent fathers but about corrupt politicians, police and football 'stars' who earn and squander obscene amounts of money (when they're not fighting in the streets or shafting their friends' wives or girlfriends).
I didn't think today's Parliamentary would yield anything useful, and it didn't. A parliament of fowls, clucking and squawking, beady eyed, sharp beaked and essentially aimless. Depressing.
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Anna
Originally posted by Mahlerei View PostAs calum says, the malaise is everywhere, from crooked politicians, bankers and tax evaders to scroungers and benefit cheats. And I heard some pompous twit going on about role models, too. Where are they I wonder? It's not just about absent fathers but about corrupt politicians, police and football 'stars' who earn and squander obscene amounts of money (when they're not fighting in the streets or shafting their friends' wives or girlfriends).
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by Anna View PostBut Mahlerei, as I asked before, aeons of posts ago, what is the difference between those on the estates in similar circumstances, deprivation, no fathers, etc., who don't loot? What stops them, what makes them study, want to make a life for themselves?
Personality counts for something here obviously. Throughout history there have always been those endowed with more than the average amounts of testerone, bellicosity etc. We can't expect everyone to behave the same in every circumstance, but only that their range of behaviour will fit between certain parameters or "norms". Some will no doubt feel scared and disgusted by the violence: others will be attracted.
That's a fact.
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Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostPersonality counts for something here obviously. Throughout history there have always been those endowed with more than the average amounts of testerone, bellicosity etc. We can't expect everyone to behave the same in every circumstance, but only that their range of behaviour will fit between certain parameters or "norms". Some will no doubt feel scared and disgusted by the violence: others will be attracted.
That's a fact.
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Originally posted by Anna View Post. . . I do know, as children, we were taught not to swear, lie or thieve both by our parents and by the school, the penalty being a clip round the ear. . .
Originally posted by Simon View Post. . . However, the real root causes of most of society's ills - these riots included - lies with a) the philosophy of rights becoming more important than responsibilities and b) the lack of boundaries to freedom. . .My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
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Simon
But Mahlerei, as I asked before, aeons of posts ago, what is the difference between those on the estates in similar circumstances, deprivation, no fathers, etc., who don't loot?
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I was subject to frequent corporal punishment at school, by prefects and masters, often for the slightest of transgressions, often without explanation. It probably gave much satisfaction, sadistic, sexual or both, to the dealers in it; anyway it probably did more than anything else to turn me into, first, an anarchist, then a communist (small c). It turned another lad into the savagest bully, out to exact revenge on anyone smaller than himself he could lord it over. I didn't have his physical build, and so had to choose another route. My favourite film remains Lindsay Anderson's "If" (1968), for its near-exact portrayal of the sub-fascist kind of regime that probably existed in most if not all public schools in England in the 1950s and '60s.
No doubt it also shaped many who came to run politics in this country at the time of Thatcher, and their benighted offspring.
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMy own view however is that, for the child to develop into the disturbed individuals for whom violence is a welcome thrill, some kind of brutalisation has to take place, whether it be physical punishment or repeated humiliation.
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Mahlerei
Originally posted by Anna View PostBut Mahlerei, as I asked before, aeons of posts ago, what is the difference between those on the estates in similar circumstances, deprivation, no fathers, etc., who don't loot? What stops them, what makes them study, want to make a life for themselves? Now, if the politicians could find out why, we may get somewhere as what needs to be done. I don't like all youngsters being tarred with the same brush
Yes, there are some who defy the odds and come out of the swamp but I can only imagine how difficult that must be in an environment where learning is held in such low esteem. Conversely, my son has a number of friends from well-off middle-class families who are frittering their lives away in a haze of weed and worklessness, despite getting all the opportunities others would kill for. No easy answers, it seems.
On the thorny issue of schools and the clip around the ear I think it's shortsighted to think that is/was in any way healthy or character building. Growing up in a (boarding) school system modelled on the British exemplar, where caning and random battery was the norm merely made me resent authority and despise bullies even more. Humiliation was merely the physical manifestation of an uncommunicative and domineering authority structure.
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