Societies Scapegoat Youth crimes are on a continual rise. It seems that everyday violent offenders keep getting younger and more aggressive. We turn on the news only to hear that a ten year old mugged, shot, stabbed, beat or blew up one of his peers. With crimes on the rise involving children, people begin to look for a cause. Society, when looking for a scapegoat, becomes worse than a blood thirsty lynch mob at a witch trial. Usually the most obvious source of violence within a home is the television.
However, in most cases it is not the true cause. With the Twin the forefront of virtually every home in the civilized world, it’s no wonder that it’s the easiest target for criticism. It’s elementary to blame the tube for a child’s behavior; it’s a quick and easily identified source of violence within a youths confined world. The TV many times is identified as the cause of aggressive acts to avoid dealing with other underlying issues. Society today has an entire array of different afflictions that plague us from day to day. The television is of very little significance alongside the landfill of troubles that influence children today.
Besides, trying to get networks to cut out violence and aggression entirely would be like trying to get Jesus Christ to write a top ten list of reasons why Christianity sucks. (It’s not going to happen. ) TV is not the reason that our youth courts are filled to capacity with court dockets so hideous you would swear that you were looking at the start of the apocalypse. Television programs are not the reason for the apparent increase in adolescent crime. If you find yourself picking up your kids from the police station all the time, it’s not the TV’s fault! ! ! There are no significant consequences for youth crime in our justice system. Maybe we should impose stiffer penalties on violent offenders, instead of more censorship on TV.
The Term Paper on Youth Crime
Through out history, sociologists have conjured different perspectives on society and social behavior, and from these observations sociological theories have been established. This paper will be focusing on one of these theories, which is the symbolic interactionist perspective. According to symbolic interactionist perspectives, society is the sum of the interactions of individuals and groups ( ...
Kids would not have such a tendency to mug, beat, strangle or shoot their peers if there were tougher consequences for doing so. The Japanese are responsible for some of the most violent cartoons ever created to date. I mean these things make our R rated movies look like a walk in the park. Japanese cartoons display bloodshed and drug induced murdering sprees as if they were nothing. Even with all this vicious behavior on Japanese televisions, the youth crime and aggressive behavior is one tenth of ours. How can this be? Because the Japanese have adopted a zero tolerance policy for criminal behavior and reprimand criminals with a vengeance.
Japanese society realized that blaming things like TV for violent behavior is unacceptable. Instead, the Japanese have taught their public that aggression in reality and on TV do not go hand in hand. (Or as I would say, ‘it’s not the TV’s fault! ! !’ ) A healthy amount of violence within children’s programs in my mind is perfectly acceptable and necessary. Violence in moderation teaches children about situations that may be encountered outside of their home, and helps them to deal with such incidents. Kids are aggressive in nature, and a child who grows up on Barney, the Purple Dinosaur, and Mary Poppins is likely to have a difficult time dealing with other kids. Face it, children need a certain amount of bellicosity to balance out all the bubbly behavior that some of these idiotic child role models portray: like Barney, who should be committed to an asylum.
The Essay on What do children learn from observing behavior
Many of us have seen an angry person. Anger is a form of depression where the person focuses negatively on the outside world, thinking they have been treated unfairly. Therefore one state of anger could be Road Rage, which is the aggressive behavior by a driver of a car or any vehicle. We ride in the car since we are children. Moreover, we learned how to drive by watching our parents and other ...
(I know if I was forced to watch Barney at an early age I probably would have blown up the house. ) You may ask, ‘why do children need a balance of violence and aggression at all, why don’t we just program happy shows all the time?’ Because human kind has always been an aggressive species and probably will continue to be. By not preparing your children for acts of rabidity you are preparing them to be future victims. And if your child is beat up at school, it’s not the TV’s fault! ! ! (Maybe it’s time to let little Jack or Jill watch the Power Rangers, or a Rocky episode or two. ) I do, however, agree with one of the points people are trying to make against children viewing violence. A five year old child should not be witnessing Freddy hack off human extremities with chain saws and axes.
This is where the parents should be stepping in to filter out what their little bambino is taking in. Certain programs are oriented to different age groups and viewing should be controlled, not removed through censorship. Parents want strict censorship because they don’t think it’s possible for them to control what their children watch. After all there are TV’s at friends houses and probably at least two within your own. So what’s the point? Even if you forbid your child to view certain material they can watch it somewhere else. The point is, once you have told the child not to watch something it becomes taboo or wrong to watch it in their minds.
Sure it will probably prompt him / her into viewing it some time or another; but now watching the program is, ‘wrong’ and they know it. As a result little Jr. will be less likely to chase his sister around the house with an axe and blame it on Freddy Crouger. After all, blaming Freddy would get him busted for watching Mr. Crouger in the first place. And if your child does turn into Freddy later in life, it’s not the TV’s fault! ! ! (It’s probably because of all the times they fell on their heads.
) It’s ridiculous that cartoons like the Road Runner were taken off the tube in certain parts of north America, because of their vile illustrations. This is preposterous. Wily Coyote illustrated to children that dropping anvils off cliffs, using explosives, guns, and running things over with trucks didn ” the lp him catch that annoying Road Runner. As a matter of fact Wily Coyote showed kids that his aggressive manner never paid off.
The Essay on Children And Tv Child Television Watch
As a normal routine the first thing a child does when he / she arrives home is to cut on the television. I have a 4-year-old child, and he does this on an everyday basis. If he acts disobedient, I would tell him that he cannot watch television for that day and he will begin to apologize for his disobedience. Everything that I see on television for my children is a reflection of somebody's vision. ...
Everything Wily Coyote tried literally backfired in his face. And in Bugs Bunny, I don’t believe Elmer Fudd ever managed to blow away, ‘that washily wabbit’. But I guarantee that some parent with an over active imagination saw the Bugs Bunny show as a promotion for their kids to join the N. R. A… Or how about Bambi, another violent film.
Bambi’s mother is shot by a gun toting maniac, and is forced to live with his dysfunctional father. (Let me guess, this is a subliminal message to shoot wildlife or your mother) Films like this in my mind can act as a buffer for the detection of warped children. If your offspring expresses any interest in wanting to be Wily Coyote, Elmer Fudd or the hunter that killedBambie’s mother, you should have him her committed to a mental hospital. If your child does however pick up a gun and proceeds to blast the family rabbit or kill a deer in the backyard, it’s not the TV’s fault! ! ! Fault lays in your lap again for not keeping your firearm locked up. Guns in children’s programming is a big issue today. Society is so upset over the surge of gun related incidents among our youth.
Once again some individuals blame it on the TV for instigating these ideas within a child’s mind. This is not true. Maybe one in every million kids that watch violence on the television will actually use a gun because of the program. In these isolated incidents people would probably find that the child had easy access to a firearm and no education as to what could happen if misused. Children that do pick up guns and massacre family members usually do so with complete ignorance of the consequences.
And of course when confronted the youngster will probably say he saw someone on TV do the same thing. In fact the correct response should have been: My parents were idiots for leaving a shiny and loaded Smith and Wesson hand gun on the coffee table for me to play with. In these incidents firearm education and proper storage is the real underlying issue. Because it’s not the TV’s fault people can be so stupid. In certain cases there have been instances where children have re-enacted scenes from programs they have seen, and been badly injured. Without sounding sadistic, I believe in these few isolated incidents it probably worked out best for the child.
The Essay on Children and the Single Parent
Single parenting begins with the divorce of a couple who have children. Approximately ninety percent of all minor children live primarily with their mothers. Non custodial fathers usually have less than biweekly contact with their children, and involvement usually declines as time goes by. Since most single-parent households are mother-headed, and have only one income, often below that of a man. ...
Having a bad incident occur at an early age opens up parents eyes to whatever field they have neglected to teach the child about; at the same time it also gives the youth an eye opening experience to their own stupidity. After all children learn best from trial and error, and it’s better for them to figure out what not to do early in life. And if Jr. jumps off the roof of the family home to be like a super hero, it’s not the TV’s fault! ! ! (Your kid probably has less common sense than a lemming. ) Violence on TV is both unavoidable and necessary for children to learn about their ever changing hostile world. The only question to be asked is,’ when is a child mature enough to watch certain programs?’ A change in children’s programming is not likely to occur any time soon.
It’s up to the parents to regulate and censor what they deem appropriate. Through better education of violence, children will be better equipped to realize what is intended for entertainment and what actions are not acceptable in day to day life. Censorship is not the answer. It’s way too easy to blame TV for dirty deeds that may have been caused by other unseen sources. What it all comes down to is, if your little Jack or Jill wants to be Wily Coyote or Elmer Fudd, chances are they have a real problem that has to be addressed because, IT’S NOT THE TV’S FAULT YOUR CHILD IS DERANGED! ! !.