London: burning again

Riots and looting across the capital, now spreading to other English cities.  Why?

The shooting by police of a Tottenham man as he sat in a cab led to a peaceful protest by relatives and friends.  And an inquiry by an independent police commissioner into the circumstances surrounding Mark Duggan's death is underway.  Yet Duggan's demise sparked war-zone-like devastation of Tottenham High Road as youths rampaged.  Now copycat arson, looting and theft in Enfield, Hackney, Battersea, Peckham, Walthamstow, Brixton, Ealing and other parts of the capital have ensued.  Is this opportunistic vandalism and greed or something far more serious?  Maybe there is underlying frustration fuelling this mayhem.

It's likely there is boredom and a lack of ambition at the root of much of this.  CCTV is everywhere, and many perpetrators will be picked up and charged.  As culprits are rounded up, questioned and taken before the courts, it's important for authorities to differentiate between anarchists and leftists who've taken advantage of the situation to provoke and incite, and undervalued and disengaged youths who've ventured onto the streets to enjoy a spree of excitement to alleviate their dull and ineffectual lives.

Where are the sporting facilities, youth clubs and projects to engage these young people?   Sports grounds have been transformed into expensive apartment blocks over the past thirty years.  Factories which used to employ the unskilled and under-educated have closed, while Chinese manufacturers produce cheap products to feed the insatiable appetites of debt-addicted consumers.  As companies have sought to decrease cost, call centre jobs have moved offshore.  Graduates from English universities, often with commercially obscure degrees, have languished on the sidelines, some resorting to low-level jobs to develop other careers in an attempt to pay off student debt.

Fast-food outlets have peppered England's high streets to entice an increasingly obese population.  Yet, where does the cash come from to buy this cheap food if not mainly from welfare?   Single parenthood has been encouraged by decisions taken long ago to provide free housing to unemployed teenagers, many of whom deliberately became pregnant to free themselves from their parent's oversight.  


Many teenagers who now loot and riot with apparent impunity were raised by overstreched and stressed mothers in a fatherless environment.  In certain districts gangs harrass and extort, enticing otherwise engaging youths into criminality and social exclusion.  


Hard-pressed working parents have lived for now, many freelance and buying for today in a consumer-driven society.  Adults have lost respect, as jobs have become as disposable as the products they buy.  Kids have too often been raised in an environment with no hope, and entered teenage with no dreams of their own.

With little respectable ambition and few decent role models on whom to base their prospects, it's unsurprising that disorientated youths are now binging in an orgy of destruction.

Tenets of the Church have passed into history, as the Established religion presents no answers and provides no structure in modern society.

Jobs which could have been offered to some of these people have instead been presented to migrants.  The result has been the creation of an undervalued and disregarded underclass of English people, of whatever colour.

This time, it seems it's not a race issue.  But a huge problem affecting as much as ten to twenty percent of the population.

The re-introduction of conscription to provide stability, skills and order to this generation would be expensive, and a policy which would drop like a lead balloon with the professionals in the military.  But incarcerating these people in jails only to educate them into hardened criminals is not a great idea either.

It's impossible to undo the damage done by thirty years of rotten political doctrine.  But Home Secretary Teresa May, PM David Cameron, Mayor Boris Johnson and the rest of the elite had better start developing workable long-term strategies to productively engage the young, or in a decade's time this will flare up again, albeit in another form and perhaps in a more vehement fashion.  It's 2011, and the Riot Act is not an option.  Taking a hard line if only in tone, as Tottenham MP David Lammy has, may play to the Labour Party gallery and assuage the concerns of middle-aged locals, but it offers no guidance.  And a solution is what is required now. 



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