Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
A Growing Epidemic
Stories of violence by and against youth explode from the news like gunshots from a passing car. It would seem that America is under attack by armed teenagers.
During the early 1980s, about a thousand murders were committed by teens each year in the United States. By the middle of the 1990s, that had grown to over three thousand per year, or almost 10 percent of all murders.
Numbers like that make it sound like teen violence is a growing epidemic, an impression that is given further validity by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, which now identify teen violence as a major public health problem.
Talking about teen violence in terms of murder is the obvious thing to do because of the dramatic finality and loss that death brings, but the epidemic—if that is actually what it is—encompasses much more than murder. The statistics for armed robbery, assault, rape, and carjackings by juveniles in the United States are higher than in any other country in the world. The teenage perpetrators and victims come from every walk of life and every ethnic background. People of all ages are shocked, saddened, and frightened by this news, but no one is more immediately affected by the epidemic of teen violence than teenagers themselves.
So as a young adult I beg people to get more involved in the lives of our youth. There is no for sure way to end teen violence but there are certainly ways that any individual can make a positive influence on a young adult. Please visit your local boys and girls club, YMCA, or any outreach program. It only takes one to teach one.
During the early 1980s, about a thousand murders were committed by teens each year in the United States. By the middle of the 1990s, that had grown to over three thousand per year, or almost 10 percent of all murders.
Numbers like that make it sound like teen violence is a growing epidemic, an impression that is given further validity by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, which now identify teen violence as a major public health problem.
Talking about teen violence in terms of murder is the obvious thing to do because of the dramatic finality and loss that death brings, but the epidemic—if that is actually what it is—encompasses much more than murder. The statistics for armed robbery, assault, rape, and carjackings by juveniles in the United States are higher than in any other country in the world. The teenage perpetrators and victims come from every walk of life and every ethnic background. People of all ages are shocked, saddened, and frightened by this news, but no one is more immediately affected by the epidemic of teen violence than teenagers themselves.
So as a young adult I beg people to get more involved in the lives of our youth. There is no for sure way to end teen violence but there are certainly ways that any individual can make a positive influence on a young adult. Please visit your local boys and girls club, YMCA, or any outreach program. It only takes one to teach one.
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