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This should not be in MY United States !
Posted On 02/19/2013 17:59:50 by oppsgal

I have posted below a recent article I read, its about a PBR (public broadcasting radio) special that will be aired his weekend and next.  It is about Harper High School in Chicago.  The worst High School in the nation for crime.  Parents caution children in bad areas to not join a gang.. that its dangerous.  but what happens if there is no choice.. you say no choice??? the article will tell you why  And it saddens me and deeply troubles me as a citizen that this happens in my country. !!!  thanks for reading.. sue...

But the question is what can be done about this ????

 

 

 

If it had been any other high school, you would know this story by now. Had some other "kind of school" logged a year that saw 29 current and recent students shot, eight fatally, "we would all know the name of that school," says radio show host Ira Glass in a new episode of "This American Life" on NPR. "If you grafted those facts onto another high school -- in a wealthier place, maybe a suburb ... it would be national news."

But it wasn't another school. It was Harper High, in Chicago, during a year when the murder rate in that city climbed to 506 while it plateaued or fell in New York and Los Angeles. Three "This American Life " reporters spent five months in that school last fall, and beginning this weekend, Glass hosts the remarkable two-part program that results from their immersion.

One early section of the first hour finds reporter Linda Lutton laying out of "the rules" of Harper High. It is a chilling lesson. Parents everywhere think they set the do's and don'ts of their children's lives: Do your homework, don't talk to strangers, don't join a gang. Parents in places that aren't like Harper tend to think that parents in places that are somehow slack in the rule department. "I would never allow my child to ..." we say when the news report mentions that the latest Lutton laying out of "the rules" of Harper High. It is a chilling lesson. Parents everywhere think they set the do's and don'ts of their children's lives: Do your homework, don't talk to strangers, don't join a gang. Parents in places that aren't like Harper tend to think that parents in places that are somehow slack in the rule department. "I would never allow my child to ..." we say when the news report mentions that the latest dead student was a member of a gang. And then we go about our day feeling safe.

But as Lutton makes clear, the parents of Harper don't make the rules, and the kids don't really "choose" to follow them. She says:

When I ask kids what their parents don't understand about gangs these days, they say it's this: their parents tell them not to join a gang -- as if there's some initiation to go through, some way to sign up. Today, whether or not you want to be in a gang, you're in one. If you live on pretty much any block near Harper High School, you have been assigned a gang. Your mother bought a house on 72nd and Hermitage? You're S-Dub. You live across the street from the school? That's D-Ville.

There are more than 15 gangs in the neighborhoods around Harper, she reports, and while being part of one puts kids in danger, it also keeps them safe. You don't dare walk to school, or anywhere else, without the company of a gang. And, no matter what your parents say, you don't find a way to stay neutral. As Aaron Washington, a police officer assigned full-time to the school, tells Lutton:

It used to be if you played sports or you were academically better than the average kid, they didn't bother you. Now it's different, it doesn't matter. If you live here, you're part of them. You know, you live on that block, or you live in that area, you one of them. The way they get to school, they have to come to school with one of these factions, one of these gangs. They gotta come to school with them. They don't have a choice.

The reality took the journalists of "This American Life" by surprise. "I've done other reporting on gangs and neighborhoods like this," Glass said in an interview from his Manhattan office. "I am not new to this subject. But what we learned was how little we knew."

Among the many moments that made this clear, he said, was a conversation the team recorded between the father of a murdered teen, and the boy's friends. That dad, Glass said, did "all the right things, everything that every parent really does, like signing the kid up for citywide football leagues and trying to keep him out of trouble." But the friends tell the father -- gently but definitely -- that the gangs are stronger than any parent. "You reach a certain height and people start shooting at you," Glass said. "You are in the game."

Added Alex Kotlowitz, who has made a career of writing about life in "bad" neighborhoods, and who reported through the prism of Harper's on-site social workers, said this series made him see that just as parents can't protect their children, they can't heal them, either. "In the wake of Newtown," he said in an interview from his Chicago home, "we asked all the right questions. Why did this happen? How do we help the children who witnessed and were traumatized by it? What is going to happen in Newtown going forward?"

And yet, Kotlowitz said, "we don't ask those questions at a place like Harper. Virtually every kid in that school has seen someone who was shot or knows someone who was shot but we have never really dealt with the issue of trauma in the inner-city."

Instead, Kotlowitz said, we leave parents and children, teachers and students to navigate terrain that is impassable. And we convince ourselves that their presence there is somehow their own fault.

"What this illustrates in a really vivid way is that all of us hear on the news that a kid got shot and he was a gang member," Glass said, "but we really don't understand what they mean. The feeling we have that well, that couldn't be my kid? You hear these stories and realize, yes, it could."

Tags: Gangs Crime Children Murder Chicago



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Viewing 1 - 4 out of 4 Comments

02/25/2013 11:17:07

Carol I agree with all you have said.  There are places on this earth that Satan has a hold of I have always believed that, Hatti is one such place. 



02/22/2013 09:19:50

I am not a Bible Thumping Zealot, first off. But Harper High is being run by satan, and his followers; leave it immediately even if you have to sleep in a tent in the South. The residents probably aren't aware of satans presence and I believe I can sense his presence. People aren't aware anymore that there are even words in our Bibles, they so seldom touch one, seemingly. The hopelessness that some people allow to govern their lives, is a people that have no idea of God's promises. So, when God was pushed away and refused, that action caused smiles all around in camp satan.


This is one of the areas of our country that has the toughest gun laws. Nobody but the lawless have a gun there. Expect more deaths and vile things to happen in a situation like this. It is like the animal kingdom- one of a flock becomes injured, the others sometime kill it. Anything vulnerable gets treated badly. No way to fight back causes us to be vulnerable. Thank the anti-gun lobbyists, and wait until they take our kitchen knives.    "NO KNIFE LONGER THAN 2 INCHES IS ALLOWED"        That could be our future, unless we fight back. And we fight back!


I would take my chidren and move. When God's people became vile and evil doing, He scattered them. These folks need to be seperated. They will have to do it themselves; I don't think anything outside of being Militarily Occupied, with patrols and curfews would work. This Harper is like the Amityville Horror- leave Harper, Chicago to satan; he is running it now. Him and his followers.


Can delete if you want Sue; it is my belief, my opinion.



02/20/2013 12:05:45

Yes it is so true and wonder what else is out there going on that we don't know about. So many inocent children getting hurt.



02/19/2013 20:31:58

Gangsta's Paradise_ Lyrics by Coolio...


As I walk through the valley of the shadow of death
I take a look at my life and realize there's nuttin left
Cause I've been blastin and laughin so long that
Even my mama thinks that my mind is gone...
But I ain't never crossed a man that didn't deserve it
Me be treated like a punk, you know that's unheard of
You better watch how you talkin, and where you walkin
Or you and your homies might be lined in chalk
I really hate to trip, but I gotta loc
As they croak I see myself in the pistol smoke, fool
I'm the kinda G the little homies wanna be like
On my knees in the night
Sayin prayers in the street light

We've been spending most our lives
Living in the Gangsta's Paradise


Look at the situation, they got me facin
I can't live a normal life, I was raised by the state
So I gotta be down with the hood team
Too much television watchin got me chasin dreams
I'm a educated fool with money on my mind
Got my ten in my hand and a gleam in my eye
I'm a loc'ed out gangsta, set-trippin banger
And my homies is down, so don't arouse my anger, fool
Death ain't nuthin but a heart beat away
I'm livin life do-or-die-a, what can I say?
I'm twenty-three now, but will I live to see twenty-fo'?
The way things is goin I dunno

Power and the money, money and the power
Minute after minute, hour after hour
Everybody's runnin, but half of them ain't lookin
It's goin on in the kitchen, but I dont know what's cookin
They say I got ta learn, but nobody's here to teach me
If they cant understand it, how can they reach me?
I guess they cain't -- I guess they won't
I guess they frontin; that's why I know my life is outta luck, fool


Tell me why are we -- so blind to see
That the ones we hurt -- are you and me





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