Sunday, August 4, 2019
Juvenile Psychopaths :: Violent Crimes Teenagers Morals Essays
Juvenile Psychopaths    What is the "super predator"? He or she are young   hypercriminals who are committing acts of violence of unprecedented  coldness and brutality. This newest phenomena in the world of crime is   perhaps the most dangerous challenge facing society and law   enforcement ever. While psychopaths are not new, this breed of super   criminal exceeds the scope of psychopathic behavior. They are younger,   more brutal, and completely unafraid of the law. While current   research on the super predator is scarce, I will attempt to give an   indication as to the reasons a child could become just such a monster.    Violent teenage criminals are increasingly vicious. John   DiIulio, Professor of Politics and Public Affairs at Princeton   University, says that "The difference between the juvenile criminals   of the 1950s and those of the 1970s and early 1980s was the difference   between the Sharks and the Jets of West Side Story and the Bloods and   the Crips. It is not inconceivable that the demographic surge of the   next ten years will bring with it young criminals who make the Bloods   and the Crips look tame." (10) They are what Professor DiIulio and   others call urban "super predators"; young people, often from broken   homes or so-called dysfunctional families, who commit murder, rape,   robbery, kidnapping, and other violent acts. These emotionally damaged  young people, often are the products of sexual or physical abuse. They   live in an aimless and violent present; have no sense of the past and   no hope for the future; they commit unspeakably brutal crimes against   other people, often to gratify whatever urges or desires drive them at   the moment and their utter lack of remorse is shocking.(9)     Studies reveal that the major cause of violent crime is not   poverty but family breakdown - specifically, the absence of a father   in the household. Today, right now, one-fourth of all the children in   the United States are living in fatherless homes - this adds up to 19   million children without fathers. Compared to children in two parent   family homes, these children will be twice as likely to drop out of   school, twice as likely to have children out of wedlock, and they   stand more than three times the chance of ending up in poverty, and   almost ten times more likely to commit violent crime and ending up in   jail. (1)    The Heritage Foundation - a Conservative think tank - reported   that the rise in violent crime over the past 30 years runs directly    					    
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