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Whipping Boys
louth |
rights, freedoms and repression |
opinion/analysis
Saturday April 30, 2005 15:34 by Sean Crudden - impero sean at impero dot iol dot ie Jenkinstown, Dundalk, Co Louth. 087 9739945
Anti Social Behaviour
Are politicians jumping on the bandwagon pursuing anti-youth policies merely to enhance their own status before a mislead and increasingly gullible public?
Sean Crudden "Ill fares the land to hastening ills a prey
Where wealth accumulates and men decay."
Oliver Goldsmith (1728 - 1774)
You know the shitty, po-faced attitude which many administrators - both high and low in Ireland today - like to adopt. Well I often worry that it is too easily copied and transmitted to the classroom, the consulting room, the pulpit, the TV screen where politicians and would-be politicians pontificate, and even to the very fireside in our own homes. Where that attitude reigns in human affairs I suggest strongly that disaster does not lag very far behind.
Then again, as a woman said to me today, the Irish are snobbier than the English (who are renowned for snobbery). In the old days we used to call it "Tuppence looking down on three ha’pence." Indeed some of the snobs in 4xD wagons give the impression that not only are they worth "tuppence" but that they come from some kind of superior race of human beings.
I blew my top about Blueshirt politics in these columns a few weeks ago. At the same time we see the politicians trying to out-gun one another in the race to oppress young people with Anti Social Behaviour Orders, On-the-spot fines, withdrawing grants, etc., in the effort to rid the community of "anti-social-behaviour." This type of quick-fix, right-wing, totaliarian, "law-and-order" approach definitely comes under the heading of "Blueshirt Politics" as far as I am concerned.
In the long term I suggest it would be more progressive to reflect on the deficiencies in community life which are giving rise to this disorder. What way are our family values pointing? How are our schools functioning? (Personally, I believe the school has an even greater role than the family in developing the outlook of people young and old. And, incidentally, I believe that one of the most important educational establishments for a very important segment of the young people of Dundalk and its environs is "The Tech" i.e. the school that is now known as "O’Fiaich College").
It seems to me to be invidious to try to nail down young people and pin them to the wall as the hue-and-cry among politicians seems to want to do now. Young people should not be caged-in like circus animals. They should be consulted in every sphere and treated like human beings.
Indeed, paradoxically, it might spell personal and community disaster for older folks if the young people learn from present attitudes and grow up to be didacts and dictators like ourselves.
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Comments (4 of 4)
Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4Sean
I enjoyed your article.
The quote of Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774) really grabs me attention.
For others:
'Ill fares the land to hastening ills a prey
where wealth accumulates and men decay'
This bodes an apt warning as Ireland moves forth supposedly to a knowledge economy. Wealth, as the Wall Street Crash in 1929, taught fianciers; investors, property elites; is mercurial and can fade to nothingness. The question is have We learnt!!!
On another note:
Restorative Justice is my theme today. We note that Dr. McDaid, TD, has had his name bandied through the press again. Suffice to say is that his case will be presented to the Courts and the Judge who presides makes a Judgement.
However, given the nature of the charges and given the timing of the Minister for Justice's, Minister McDowell's, onslaught relating to Anti Social Behaviour, maybe it is time to channel people's attention to a more Restorative Justice Path. (I would highly recommend the Irish Council for Civil Liberties website and that of the Irislh Penal Reform Trust).
Back to Minister McDaid. The media have shamed the man enough. Perhaps the Judge would consider another route that might create riples in the Restorative Justice pond and be a learning process in society.
By chance I found this site last night. The coincidence is that The Mediation Bureau is situated in Tallaght and is a Victim Offender Mediation Service. This service receives referrals from the Tallaght and Naas district courts and is managed by an independent board representing the main stakeholders in the Criminal Justice System.
The website: www.extern.org/restorative/Tallaght.htm
Manager Peter Keeley made the following description
'Offenders go through due process and before a final decision is taken by the judge, mediation is used to explore what form of apology, reparation or resolution can be explored and agreed by the victim and offender. The mediators work through this process towards reaching some form of agreement. The service then reports back to the court, where the Judge makes a decision'
Economists speak of Economic value but I tend to personally feel that social value is of signficance and particularly when Judicial sentences have to be made.
The corruption scandals see former Minister like Ray Burke demeaned to imprisonment. A laterally thought out plan could see both economic and social capital enhanced.
The old adage comes to mind
'Justice ought to be seen to be done'
The question here is the effective definition as to what is Just, in these special circumstances.
Sean, I agree with your point about what example are we leading to the young generation......'Young people should not be caged in like circus animals. They should be consulted in every sphere and treated like human beings'
Given the media coverage, it appears that Dr. McDaid's alleged offences, added to his profession, his governmental experience and no doubt life experience, could add greatly to a social capital choice.
Michelle Clarke
the world we (your generation & ours) have inherited is one which systematically puts everyone in their little box.
we live in categories.
of consumption, of purchasing power, of credit card records, of points on the driving license, of library book profiling...
you don't really need to look up at the sky and think you see nerve gas, to know its no laughing matter.
the corporations such as Manpower, Adecco, Randstad and others which specialise in "outsourcing" employment contracts, to further divide the workplace amongst true company workers and the people who guard the doors, clean the toilets, count the bills, serve the coffee, type the letters, have brought us the age of short-contract work.
they have built precarity.
And they need it to survive, they profit on worker insecurity, they thrive on glass ceilings, invisible criteria of worth.
They activily work to undervalue experience over qualification in the cases of older workers, (as perversely they also) undervalue qualification and over-value qualifications in other fields.
These corporations of the "job market", insist on constant worker records, no shirking the task of building that pyramid. They work hand in dirty glove with the corporations that pressure national state governments to accept yet more strategies for control of the unemployed, of those seeking work, of migrants, of prisoners.
They work to create a world of privatised citizens, where everyone is caught in the net of the corporations. That no person may trade outside their system, and all control is held by a tiny minority whose shareholder meetings have more power than national executives, and whose decisions are affored legal protection under the rights our ancestors fought for.
Theirs is not the world of small business.
theirs is not the world of equal opportunity.
theirs is not the truth of job seeking.
Write out your CV! leave it with us, there's a pyramid to build!
I sure agree, it is not only the young that we need concern ourselves with.
We sure have lots of categories and pigeon holes and glass ceilings now.
I wonder what is the problem with being individual and accepted......
Michelle
I once was a fully qualified teacher but even at the height of my powers in that profession (a long time ago) I would have considered myself ill-equipped for "youth work." Now, when a scheme for training dedicated youth workers has been mooted locally, reactionary forces including members of my erstwhile profession have jumped in (it is whispered) to smother and stifle development.
No-one wants a modern day "Hitler Youth" and regimentation and restriction were too common even in the halcyon days of the 1950’s when nothing was organised around Ardee (where I come from) except street leagues. We all want to see young people healthy, relaxed and happy.
Every individual, young and old, needs free time and their own individual space to develop their own ideas and their own interests. However without even thinking about it it seems obvious that communal activity and organised recreation and formation could undoubtedly help young people in both town and country to lead more fulfilling lives. I am not thinking of anything very elaborate - for example Macra Na Feirme and Bellurgan United AFC have done useful work around here over many years.
No. There is definitely a need for trained youth workers. Training costs money but it is one of the most important arteries of the community and we should be prepared to spend as much money on it as was spent on The Clinton Highway.
I have already castigated my own political party (The Progressive Democrats) for espousing the cause of legislation, police, judges, jails, and courts as the preferred apparatus for straightening out youth behaviour. Candidly I don’t want to spend the remainder of my life in a land where the streets are saturated with police and there is a closed-circuit TV camera attached to every window-ledge and door-post.
Of course we have a Department of Health and Children. It would be an even greater tragedy if the community were to seek the solution for problem youth behaviour (as Sinn Féin seems to want to do) in providing "adolescent beds" and engaging the psychiatrist.