Good parenting strengthens families, communities, and nations. When children and teenagers are taught and disciplined (another word for taught) properly at home, they are much less likely to have negative run-ins with civil authorities. This is shown in three recent deaths of young teenagers. The best parenting comes from the two biological parents, but it can be done by others, such as stepparents, foster parents, teachers, or coaches.
Adam Toledo, 13-year-old boy
from Chicago, was shot and killed around 2:30 a.m. on March 29, 2021, in a
confrontation with police. Eric Stillman was pursuing members of the Latin King
Gang, who had been shooting at cars. Toledo was with a 21-year-old man, and the
two of them fled. Toledo refused to stop when ordered by the cop. A gun was
seen in his hand a split-second before the shooting, even though he tossed the
gun and was in the process of raising his hands. Numerous people failed Adam as
expressed in an article by Mateo Zapata.
At a young age, Adam was categorized as a
special education student and separated from everyone else at school.
Surrounded by the same six students with varying degrees of severe learning
disabilities, Adam didn’t have the chance to develop strong friendships with
any of his classmates….
“He once tagged in the school and everyone
was obsessed with needing to paint over his tag, but no one took the time to
ask why he was tagging in the first place,” one teacher told me. “It was clear
he needed someone to talk to and the space to socialize himself better. He
really liked to draw, his penmanship was perfect. I think if we offered an art
class, he would’ve taken it, but we don’t even offer that to our students. He
just needed one friend, one classmate or one other student he could connect
with …”
School staff also noticed changes in Adam
the past few years. Another educator said he showed up to school with an earring
on, shaved a line in his eyebrow and during a crafts activity one day he cut a
gun out of paper. Staff tried bringing up concerns, they said, but nobody cared.
“He was just one kid, but that one kid mattered to me.
“I don’t think he knew how dangerous his
environment was, he was so young. I think there were a lot of factors,” this teacher
said. “A lot of people failed him. A lack of socialization around other
students is going to lead to something bad. The easy way out was hanging out
with people that he thought cared about him.”
At school, Adam described his friends from
the neighborhood as “family” and said they “cared a lot about him.”
The article did not say anything about Adam’s
parents or family. Where was he living? Who was his guardian? Why was he
running around with a 21-year-old man and shooting at cars with a gun at 2:30
a.m.?
The second case shows the loss of two
young girls. Nyaira Givens, age 13 years, was a freshman in a high school
in Cincinnati, Ohio. She was stabbed to death with a pocketknife by another
13-year-old girl about 9:00 p.m. on Monday, April 19, 2021. The stabbing took
place near the victim’s home during a fight. One girl is dead, and the other
girl faces a murder charge. Family members said the two girls were former
friends, but no one knew why they were fighting.
The questions about this case include why
the girls chose to solve their problems with a knife fight. Why were the girls
out at 9:00 p.m. on a school night? Why were the girls fighting rather than
discussing the problem with parents?
The third involves another cop shooting. Ma’Khia Bryant, age 15-16, was shot by Officer Nicholas Reardon (age 23), while she
was in the act of lunging with a knife at two people. The shooting took place
in Columbus, Ohio, about 4:30 p.m. on April 21, 2021, after police were called
to the scene by a would-be victim. Bryant was living in a foster home and got
upset at two former foster sisters who came to visit their mother on her
birthday. The foster mother later said that Bryant became angry with the two
foster sisters when they indicated that she should make her bed and clean up
the house.
I have not read why Bryant was not living
with her biological parents. However, the fact that she was in a foster home
says that something in the parental home was not right. One girl is dead, while
other girls say the officer saved their lives. Even though the officer shot
Bryant to save the foster sisters, Black Lives Matter (BLM) members are
demanding his arrest for murder. It is one more case of White cop shooting Black
teenager.
Most children and teenagers being reared
in loving homes with intentional parenting by their biological parents do not
join gangs or have knife fights. This statement applies in cases of disabled, average,
or gifted children: most members of the rising generation reared with
intentional parenting do not get in serious trouble. When parents are present
in the life of a young person and acting for the good of the child, they can
strengthen their family, community, and nation.
No comments:
Post a Comment