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Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Michael Bassett: Child and teen-age criminal offending


Have you noticed what an extraordinary number of children and teenagers have lately been pinching cars, fleeing police, driving the wrong way down motorway exits, and having to be tracked by the Police Eagle helicopter? They are almost always caught. Most seem to be south or west Aucklanders, although Hamilton and Christchurch have had their share. When arrested and charged, we seldom these days find out their names. Of recent times, name suppression seems to be being used to disguise the fact that all-too-many of the offenders are from our most-favoured racial group to which Jacinda’s and Chippy’s governments awarded special privileges.

I’m old enough to remember when the Court looked into an habitual young offender’s background and would quiz parents over what they knew about their children’s whereabouts at the time of the offence. It was all reported in the newspapers. No longer does this happen. These days, the Courts seem more interested in any Police transgressions against offenders. There’s no mention of the parents who in most cases are being paid by the State through an array of benefits to bring up these children.

Why do we tolerate this state of affairs? After all, many peoples’ lives are seriously affected by the actions of these young trainee crims. Working folk and little old ladies with Mazda Demios and Nissan Tiidas that are easily broken into, then used in ramraids or for joyrides down the wrong side of the road, seldom find their cars in prime and plummy order when returned to them. The shopkeepers whose stores have been broken into have always sustained damage, often injury, and usually lost stock as well. The Police risk life and limb to catch the offenders, but the parents escape scrutiny. Some turn up in Court to blow kisses to their offending progeny or to abuse the Police whose lives they have endangered by their parental neglect.

Society tolerates all this because of a misguided narrative that permeates the community; the young offenders and their families are the victims of colonialism, racism, poverty, and consequent neglect. In fact, the explanation for the steadily increasing juvenile crime wave can be laid at the doors of do-gooders and feckless politicians. The Royal Commission into Social policy of 1970-72 recommended the introduction of a monetary benefit that could enable a solo mother to bring up her child. Both National and Labour embraced the suggestion and a Domestic Purposes Benefit (DPB) became payable from 1974. It’s a fair bet that Sir Apirana Ngata, had he still been alive, would have warned against its likely impact on Maori society, just as he had cautioned Micky Savage and Peter Fraser against paying cash unemployment benefits for Maori in the late 1930s. Ngata knew his own people well enough to realise that they would rapidly avail themselves of easy money that came without any requirement to work. And they did, along with lots of Pakeha as well. The number of DPBs quickly grew from around 17,000 in 1975 to more than 100,000 by 2000, with at least 40% of them Maori. This meant there was a huge increase in the number of children born to solo parents, and in practice with absent fathers.

For a time there were checks on recipients of DPBs. A woman had to name the father of her child who was then pursued by the Social Welfare Department for a “liable parent contribution” to the child’s welfare. Gradually the department gave up that chase and the Minister (Carmel Sepuloni) who did more to destroy the reputation of the welfare system than any other, removed the requirement for the father to take any responsibility. Feckless sex, no parental accountability, and for boys, no father figure, or any meaningful sense of a father’s role in a family or society. When mother has another child often by a different father, she gets a pay rise. If the children fail to attend school, and more than 60% of Maori children truant regularly these days, the mother’s grant payable to her to look after the child keeps on being paid, no questions asked. It’s an absolute recipe for social chaos. Schools can’t do much for children who don’t darken their doorsteps, and in any event, good behaviour has always started at home – where too often chaos reigns with a new de-facto in residence, and often drugs as well.

Parenting begins at home. These children are the real victims. They are being robbed of their futures while Ministers and District Court Judges who should know better, are wringing their hands and looking the other way.

Social chaos on the current scale will never reduce until politicians, who gave it such a boost in the first place, take steps to make welfare recipients realise that cash assistance comes with mandatory costs attached. Many schools now have daily registers and can identify which children are absent. With a little computer ingenuity, the identities could be linked to the welfare payment of the parent whose child doesn’t get to school. Her benefit should then be reduced. Appropriate penalties for other antisocial behaviour like possession of drugs could also be devised. Government money doesn’t grow on trees. Those who pay taxes earn their money. Until such time as welfare is viewed more strictly, the kinds of children’s and teenagers’ offences we have been witnessing of late are unlikely to diminish.

All the easy solutions to child and teen-age crime have been tried and have failed. To carry on paying welfare to people who regard it as an entitlement, no responsibilities attached, is the height of irresponsibility.

Historian Dr Michael Bassett, a Minister in the Fourth Labour Government, blogs HERE. - where this article was sourced.

6 comments:

EP said...

If David Seymour has his way, these young offenders will be given some genuine "parenting", taught to read and become civilised for a change. That will depend on the justice system, which can only contemplate punishment rather than rehabilitation.

Empathic said...

Yes, important considerations.

I would change the policy up front. Firstly, incentives (e.g. tax breaks) for parents to maintain intact families. At present it's much more profitable for many parents to separate so that (mostly) Dad maintains the minimum wage job or unemployment benefit while (mostly) Mum receives a sole parent benefit plus accommodation and other allowances. So we are incentivizing parental separation, often initially as a sham living apart but this soon degenerates into two separate lifestyles, infidelity and estrangement. Indeed, the current rules disallow the parents from maintaining a supportive relationship if Mum is to continue receiving the free money. Ridiculous on so many levels, based on feminist propaganda about mothers needing to escape violent relationships when that accounts for only a small proportion of separations.

Secondly, discourage sole parenthood by instituting a stand-down period, say 6 months, except when domestic violence is alleged (with corroborating evidence) of sufficient severity to justify immediate protection through separation. (This would also be accompanied by a strict policy of prosecution for perjury or any falsehood in allegations, all currently tolerated, indeed encouraged.) Those for whom it seems truly important enough to deprive their children of the security and identity of a biological family unit will rise to the occasion, moving in temporarily with family or friends and so forth. That will discourage those separating for financial gain or other frivolous reasons such as wanting a new more exciting partner or not bothering to work through current relationship disagreements, such reasons making up a large majority of separations.

Thirdly, restore authority to parents. Currently, children are in charge. Calling for parents to be punished for their children's truancy, offending and/or misbehaviour is unfair and ineffective when those parents are reluctant to assert authority in case they are then prosecuted for using force in discipline. It's all very well for university graduates a small number of whom will understand more sophisticated behavioural training methods, but a large majority of the population will be left without the knowledge to use effectively other discipline methods when they are not allowed to use force. Under current rules, what are parents to do when the large young teenage male tells them to "f-off" when told to stay home at night or when woken for school after being out all night with associates looking for mischief? Lock the child out of the house? Then some feminazi social worker will come and remove the child to a future of almost certain lifelong criminality, prosecuting the parents (especially any father figure) in the process. Only agents of the state such as police are currently allowed to assert dominance over children of any age. Even when a father is still present he cannot take the risk of asserting authority only to have his relationship with the children wrecked through a family law system that will define almost any male effort to maintain authority as abusive 'patriarchal power and control'. Time to become sensible by providing parents with the legal right to be in charge. Time to allow children to develop some fear of adult authority before an age at which the lack of such fear can lead to life-damaging consequences such as criminal records or imprisonment.

Anyway, there's a start.

Peter said...

You are most certainly correct Michael. Just when are we going to wake up and realise pouring more welfare at the problem is just going to continue exacerbating it?

From the likes of yourself, Denzel Washington to Prof Thomas Sowell, many have identified that the problem 'starts in the home' or what poorly substitutes for it. Until the so-called 'under-privileged' or indigent start taking some personal responsibility, we will never come close to curing society of this plague of indolence.

As with the vaccines and the filling out of the census forms we do need to start incentivising better behaviour, but not by giving additional benefits, but as you suggest, by disincentivising non-compliance.

The biggest issues 'purportedly' facing us and the world are the shortage of 'housing' and 'climate change'. Both would benefit from a curtailment of feckless breeding as you rightly put it - so why do our useless politicians continue fueling it with poor policies?

Gaynor said...

I agree entirely with all that Michael has written and the first three contributors give some very practical advice. I don't however believe in forced vaccinations.

Licentiousness and lack of discipline are, however not just present in homes but also in our schools of progressive education with their emphasis on being 'child -centered 'and having 'permissive discipline'. As a tutor I experienced ratbag children who defied parents over certain things but these same students appealed to school counselors who sided with the child .Apparently children were not to be 'pressured' ie submit to reasonable parental authority.!

Our whole society and institutions need a shake--up over where these foolish and prevalent ideas based on a sentimental view of human nature and lax child rearing, came from. Many are in fact from the Romantic Era of for example Rousseau who sent his five offspring into orphanages.No example of parental responsibility there.

Dewey, the main influencer of progressivism also wanted a very liberal amount of freedom of choice for children and dumped most traditional values and look where that has got us We now have the very highest rates of illiteracy in the English speaking world along with the longest tail of underachievement which started last century with the progressive whole language reading method.
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Shoving children into our schools is not the answer as long as these institutions abound in so many destructive elements like little emphasis on academic achievement as well as good discipline.I would actually advise responsible parents not to send their children to some schools even in higher decile areas. They counter good parenting.

Robert Arthur said...

We have got into a position near impossible to back out of whn the beneficiary classes have such voting power.I have recently read books by Brian Edwards, Bromhead and Tom Scott. All had what would now be called deprived or disadvantaged childhoods but it does not necessarily lead automatically to anti social attitudes.

Anonymous said...

A massive problem needs a massive, systematic response. Establish a number of ‘youth training centres’. Carefully select and induct those who are likely to become the next generation of criminals. Train, educate and socialise these youths over the next 6-7 years. Graduate them, with trade certificates, into guaranteed work, in association with existing major companies. This process is a kind of expanded national service, such as many countries use to provide for their military requirements. We don’t need it for our military (yet) but we certainly need it for our society. Who should operate this system? Well, certainly not social welfare. Think about it!