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Subject: IP: more on : singling-out of non-conformists from the Financial Times -- I agree with them



>From: "the terminal of Geoff Goodfellow" <geoff@iconia.com>
>To: <farber@cis.upenn.edu>
>
>
>this Financial Times article said it best for me:
>
>THE AMERICAS: Denver tribes make their own rules: Columbine High School
>children handle their grief, arrange their wake and try to explain their life
>to an outsi world that had left them to their own devices but will soon bring
>fences and metal detectors to curb their freedom
>Financial Times ; 23-Apr-1999 03:14:56 am ; 791 words
>
>Almost everyone wears a uniform at Columbine High, the latest and probably not
>the last US school to taste bloody mayhem.
>
>The Jocks, the tough-guy games players who predominate among the boys, sport
>numbers on their baggy shirts and caps tight on their cropped heads. Worn
>back-to-front or sideways, the baseball hats alone are enough to badge them as
>members of the dominant male group.
>
>The Preps, studious boys and girls set on university, are differentiated by
>sweaters knotted around their waists. The Goths affect black garb and eyeliner
>in imitation of pop stars. The Drama, aspiring actors, dress for the camera.
>
>Then there is the Trenchcoat Mafia, distinguished by trailing, black,
>cowboy-style "duster" coats and swastikas scribbled on their clothes and school
>folders.
>
>Two of them, hitherto considered merely obnoxious and if anything less abrasive
>than the Jocks, brought at least four guns and 30 pipe bombs unhindered to
>school on Tuesday, killed 13 people, then shot themselves dead.
>
>Next day, children in their uniforms poured in a constant stream to a roadside
>grass bank on the school perimeter. Until the early evening, when the work day
>was over, and the last corpse was removed, there was hardly a parent to be
>counted among the thousands.
>
>Even now, the tear-stained children were fending for themselves. While most
>adults looked on and complained of inadequate supervision and lack of respect,
>the students choreographed and conducted their own impromptu wake and prayers.
>They handled the media with calm aplomb and patiently filled in the gaps in
>adult understanding of their world and its rituals.
>
>A cluster of Jocks recalled with tear-filled eyes how they had first thought
>the disruptions came from seniors carrying out a threatened rough-house prank
>code-named "Annihilation".
>
>Few had understood when, earlier in the day of the killings, according to
>eyewitnesses, a message had scrolled across school-network TV screens warning:
>"Today's the day you wish you weren't here." It was written in German.
>
>But even as the body count revealed that two of the dead were black - there
>were only 16 African Americans (compared with 1,783 whites) among Columbine's
>1,965 students - the youngsters discounted the media's race-hate theories.
>
>Blacks, whites and Latinos alike paid little heed to the Trenchcoats' reputed
>fascination with "the holocaust, Hitler and a lot of German history". By their
>reckoning, "they didn't like anybody", and picked fights to draw attention to
>themselves because they were so few.
>
>A band of a dozen or less, they were, by common consent, the smallest and
>least-regarded of the tribes which comprise Columbine's microcosm of fractured,
>self-conscious US society. Adults at the scene, police included, had not heard
>of the group until the day of the killings.
>
>Like many of Columbine's children, they were left to their own devices, which
>produced murderous consequences and another deadly warning for the US school
>system.
>
>Fashion and factionalism - freedoms clearly treasured at Columbine - played a
>part, as was tacitly acknowledged yesterday when local school authorities
>banned the wearing of the stigmatised trenchcoats.
>
>By omission, the ruling approved the rest: the heavy chains some wear at their
>waist, and the swaggering manners of the Jocks. They, after all, are seen by
>many parents and teachers as the archetypal clean-cut all-American boys.
>
>Who cares that they wear their hats in class, and freely admit to harassing and
>bullying anyone they deem inferior?
>
>Will their freedoms come under scrutiny when the time comes to rewrite the
>rules of conduct? Without doubt, many privileges will be lost when, as now
>seems inevitable, the menacing paraphernalia of inner-city school life comes to
>this green and pleasant suburb, a 20-minute drive from central Denver.
>
>On the surface, Littleton still represents the clean and orderly ideal of the
>New West, where people come to start over. There are vast green fields where
>patches of buckled asphalt serve as yards in city schools. There are no metal
>detectors at the entrances to its campuses. There are no wire mesh fences
>locking children in and keeping predators out. The walls are not plastered with
>city-style posters warning against carrying guns or knives.
>
>Columbine's only defences against itself and outsiders are one fatherly deputy
>and a handful of security guards.
>
>But all that is about to change. When the metal detectors are installed,
>Littleton and towns like it will be one step further from the New West paradigm
>and one step closer to the US norm, which demands ironwork and muscle to police
>rather than protect its unfathomable young.
>
>
>Copyright © The Financial Times Limited


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