Another "mother" weighs in


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Monkeyleg
July 7, 2003, 12:30 AM
Rather than accept it, let's target gun violence

By MADISON SHOCKLEY

Last Updated: July 6, 2003

It is the call every parent dreads. "Your son has been shot." Well, maybe not every parent. But many black parents of teenage boys think about it every day. My call came a couple months ago.

Five boys were in the car at a stop sign in southwest Los Angeles. The driver noticed a car behind them with two other young men in it. Without so much as an exchange of words, not even a honk of the horn, 16 shots riddled the first car. Three of the boys were hit, one through the shoulder, one grazed across the back and my son shot through the arm.

None of the injuries was life-threatening. But the incident certainly was. The driver's hat has a hole in it, but it was a size too big and his head was not hit. My son sat up after the shooting stopped and saw a bullet hole in the windshield where his head would have been if he hadn't had the "ghetto good sense" to duck when the shots rang out.

"To live and die in L.A., it's the place to be," said Tupac Shakur. "You've got to be there to know it, what everybody wanna see."

Isn't it just another day in the 'hood when we hear about another black boy shot? To be shot at, to be shot, to be killed are the only chambers in this urban version of Russian roulette. Fortunately, my son suffered no permanent physical damage. Any untold psychological damage may not be apparent for years. Actually, psychological damage may have begun before his own shooting; he had already witnessed two shootings down the street from his school - one a fatality. So when it was his turn, his calm demeanor and general aplomb would not betray what was going on inside. Was it aplomb, or is he just numb?

As is often the case, there were no witnesses identified in my son's shooting, and no progress is expected in the investigation. I can't even get a return call from the detective.

What can be done? What must be done? I try to do my part as a parent by keeping a short leash on an ever-adventurous young man. It has become a real tug of war as he has grown deeper into his teens and stronger in his desire for autonomy. I often tell people that "in my house, I am the CIA." He has no civil rights in my house. I tell him in advance: "All contraband I find belongs to me." Beyond the downright illegal items, this includes clothes I didn't buy, video games he didn't get for Christmas, jewelry of unknown origin or cash he didn't earn. I am no longer his friend and playmate as I was when he was in Little League or Pop Warner. Now, I am his parole officer.

And the shooting has only reinforced my role and my dictum: "This is why I must know where you are every minute of the day!" Indeed, he was not where he was supposed to be. He had left campus with some friends for lunch. Although not an unusual occurrence for high school students, it carries an enhanced burden of danger in the inner city. It seems ironic but true. White kids get shot on campus, while black kids get shot off campus.

Gun violence seems to be ingrained in our culture and cannot be willed away. The United States attacks Iraq (pre-emptively). One gang retaliates against another (or believes it is doing so). A student kills teachers and other students at school. These are things you just can't do as effectively with a knife. We must do all we can to eliminate gun violence - its psychology, its technology, its acceptability and its regularity.

So what do we do now? Move? My son says, "I don't want to let one incident make me run away from my whole life here." We have enjoyed our lives here. I grew up three blocks from where we live now.

Was it like this when I was in high school? Well, yes. The final football game of my senior year was canceled because there had been a shooting at the homecoming parade at the school where we were to play.

I had hoped things would be different when I had kids. I was never shot at - just the old-fashioned broomstick-across-the-neck-and-back attack. I survived, and so will my son.

My prayer for him and all the other "boys in the 'hood" is that they will find their way out of this wilderness of violence and grow to be whole and thriving adults.

Unless lightning strikes twice, I've got this boy put to bed. He dodged his bullet.

But I can't relax. I can't rest.

His brother just turned 13.

Madison Shockley is a member of the board of directors of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference of Greater Los Angeles. This article originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

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jsalcedo
July 7, 2003, 01:21 AM
Then pack up and move to a small town if you are so worried about your kids.

My parents gave up everything to get me someplace where I would be healthy, safe and in a good environment.

They are still suffering for the choice made 25 years ago and I owe them a great deal for their sacrifice.

What is wrong with parents that won't pull their kids out of the ghetto?

I would rather live at the YMCA in Nebraska than continue to live in a
gang and drug infested slum.

vmi93
July 7, 2003, 06:53 AM
This article is not as bad as it seems. The author seems to blame his own substandard parenting and his son's bad choice in friends for what happened rather than the government, "the man", or a gun manufacturer. He also seems to be groping towards blaming the inner-city "culture" for what happened, but probably does not dare to do so.

jsalcedo hit the nail on the head though. Moving is the best solution to a crime-ridden neighborhood, the author seems to almost reach this conclusion, but avoids it, too. I guess its just better for his son to stay and be another "innocent teen murdered" headline than to grow up out in the "uncultured" sticks.

Standing Wolf
July 7, 2003, 09:12 PM
"To live and die in L.A., it's the place to be," said Tupac Shakur. "You've got to be there to know it, what everybody wanna see."

Sounds awfully stupid to me.

HBK
July 7, 2003, 10:08 PM
JSalcedo nailed it. If you don't like it, move.

jimpeel
July 7, 2003, 11:45 PM
Then pack up and move to a small town if you are so worried about your kids.That's how Omaha got a good portion of its Bloods and Crips population. LAPD started cracking down on the gangs in South Central L.A. and they started moving to "get away from it all".

I don't care what this woman says, someone in that car was a member of a gang even if her son wasn't the one. He was targeted by his association just like LAPD Police Chief Park's granddaughter was when she was killed. If you lay down with dogs, you are sure to get up with fleas.

http://www.thefiringline.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=27334

Don Gwinn
July 8, 2003, 01:37 AM
When she says that "beyond the downright illegal items" she has confiscated all the jewelry, CDs, etc. that he hadn't earned or that were too expensive for him to have bought, that says clearly to me that she knows her kid is involved in illegal stuff and probably a thief as well.

But it was all the just random violence. :rolleyes:

When you live life gangsta style, you must never forget what happens at the end of a gangsta's life.

Carlos Cabeza
July 8, 2003, 09:53 AM
When you live life gangsta style, you must never forget what happens at the end of a gangsta's life.

Well stated Don.

Funny the woman quoted a verse from a song of a known "gangsta rappa" who died from gunshot wounds. Oh the irony.

Tropical Z
July 8, 2003, 11:48 AM
Gun violence is NOT the problem in the good ole USA.What IS the problem is liberal doctrine and parental stupidity!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:banghead:

Nightfall
July 8, 2003, 12:16 PM
Maybe this parent isn't doing such a great job if said son is coming home with stolen goods, mysterious cash, and hanging out with gang bangers (if not one himself). Maybe, just maybe, it's not the 'culture of gun violence' that is responsible for him being shot. Maybe it's because you live in a bad neighborhood with a gang banger thief for a son... :rolleyes:

keithernTN
July 8, 2003, 12:47 PM
Don't raise little crooks and you won't have to be a parole officer.

Get your kids out of the bad enviroment and it will be easier not to raise little crooks.

LoneStranger
July 8, 2003, 04:42 PM
Get your kids out of the bad enviroment and it will be easier not to raise little crooks.

Sounds great until you realize that all the suburban wannabes, of all flavours of colour, will still try to imitate the "Gangsta" lifestyle cause it looks so neat and keen.

This however has been a recurring phenomena since well before the recent rise of the "Gangsta Rappers". Examples would be Damon Runyon's numerous stories, Bret Harte and similiar authors of the time.

Ultimately, you can offer and instruct on the World all you want but the final decision on how your children end up is in their hands.

Monkeyleg
July 8, 2003, 06:22 PM
Don Gwinn, I was wondering how long it would take before someone commented on the contraband; that's what jumped out at me when I read the story the first time. She knew the kid was in "the life," but chose to seize the goods, not change the kid.

Her comments about the clothes, jewelry, etc remind me of the scene from "A Clockwork Orange" when young Alex opens a drawer in his room, and it's filled with all sorts of stolen loot. The difference between that movie and the reality of today is that in the movie, the government tried to alter Alex's mind, which was portrayed--rightfully so--as being fascist. The reality of today is that the government just tries to alter the minds of the honest citizens by making them think the tool did it.

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