1

(6 replies, posted in Action)

I sent this exact letter to Board member Ryan Luchs's school when he had the same problem (I had the issue myself before that).

I represent a youth rights organization called Americans for Society Free from Age Restrictions (ASFAR), and we regret to inform you that we have received several reports of a number of random drug searches with canine units recently having been conducted at Newbury Park High School. If these searches were indeed conducted, we have reason to believe that they may be in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. That public school students possess some degree of constitutional rights was established in the Supreme Court Case Tinker v. Des Moines, 393 U.S. 503, 506 (1969).

As to this specific Fourth Amendment issue, school officials are required to possess reasonable suspicion of illegal contraband or criminal activity in order to conduct searches of students, as established by the Supreme Court case New Jersey v. T.L.O, 105 S. Ct. 733, 469 U.S. 325 (1985). It has traditionally been interpreted that reasonable suspicion must be individualized; hence, mass, random searches would violate the Fourth Amendment. It was confirmed in the court case Horton v. Goose Creek, 690 F.2d 470 (CA5 1982), that a dog sniff constituted a search, with a parallel confirmation in the court case B.C. v. Plumas, 192 F.3d 1260 (9th Cir. 1999), that a random, mass search of students by dogs was unconstitutional.

Accordingly, it was the opinion of then California Attorney General Bill Lockyer ("Opinion of the California Attorney General 99-1103"), written in 2000 regarding this issue that “[s]chool administrators at a public high school may not [boldface mine] implement a policy requiring on an unannounced, random, and neutral basis that (1) pupils be directed to vacate their classrooms and leave behind their personal belongings, including backpacks, purses, jackets, and outer garments, for sniffing by canines trained in the detection of drugs, (2) the pupils would proceed to a location not within the immediate vicinity of the canines and would remain away from the canines at all times, and (3) if a canine’s behavior indicated the presence of drugs, the pupil’s personal belongings would be searches by the school administrators without the pupil’s consent.”

As such, it is necessary to inform you of our strong opposition to this policy of random mass drug searches of students’ belongings, and our doubts as to its constitutionality, considering the confirmed unconstitutionality of such searches of students themselves. Please ensure that this policy is dismantled, bearing in mind that students subject to violations of their constitutional rights may reasonably seek injunctive relief against your school or district, as well as compensatory and/or punitive damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

It can be sent again, under current president Max Harmony's name. Contact him at maxh@sdf.lonestar.org (email and AIM screen name).

2

(14 replies, posted in Action)

Aristippus wrote:

One way we can do this is to create a fund that will purchase literature, e.g., Harmful To Minors or Teen 2.0 which would be sent to all major media outlets, as well as judges, government leaders, legal services, and social organizations serving youth.  It is my belief that the studies done by Levine, Epstein, Kincaid, and others are all too often read by those already committed and involved in liberation, but never find their way into the social networks or mainstream thinking.  This has to improve.

This is the right way to be thinking. Literature distribution fits with my personal aim (which I hope is shared by others) of establishing ASFAR as the "think tank" of the youth rights movement. Another idea is republishing old classics, such as Holt's Escape From Childhood and Farson's Birthrights, as well as promoting smaller essays and literature among people likely to have affinities for youth rights, such as political radicals.

3

(11 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

I think ASFAR should serve primarily as a "liberationist" think tank organization. I wouldn't have a problem with it being primarily Web-based, and focused on research rather than large-scale "real world" presence, because that is the role that NYRA serves, and while we speak of "NYRA vs. ASFAR" as though they are two opposing organizations, almost all of the people in this small incarnation of ASFAR are NYRA members, and there have been people that have served as directors for both organizations simultaneously. Hopefully Max will too if we can get him elected this year.

4

(4 replies, posted in Action)

IDK where the ASFAR leadership is, but if one of them re-admins me, I would probably have time to periodically clean up a bit.

There's sort of a laughable perception in that parents think of their own teenagers (and usually, their friends) as chaste, with some ambiguous larger group as promiscuous, at least from what I can see.

Apologies that your post wasn't replied to in a timely manner; we really need to monitor this forum more closely.

6

(7 replies, posted in Education)

Hyperbole for hyperbole's sense. We have a member from Georgia who we sometimes make fun of with the usual redneck stereotypes, but who himself despises Southern rednecks more than any of us ever could...because he lives among them. So, of course that kind of remark doesn't equate to advocacy of actual discriminatory state policy based on regional residence (which would be incredibly stupid, since people don't choose the regions that they're born into and raised in), and no, there's not really much hypocrisy. wink

7

(17 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

If there weren't many people involved, then what expenditures would have been involved in moderation and supervision anyway? What would there have been to moderate and supervise that would have cost time and resources? There will never be enough "interest" as you define it in whatever forum you set up because there's not enough "interest" in your delusions to begin with.

P.S. Lindsay banned you, and I removed the ban because I support free speech n' shit. wink

8

(1 replies, posted in Action)

I was able to get the high school of director Max Harmony to stop an unconstitutional policy of searching the property of students who wanted to use computers (because of vandalism), with a confirmation that it had been dismantled issued by the principal shortly after she received my letter. I've sent a similar letter about searches to director Ryan Luchs's school:

[Ryan's Principal]

[Ryan's School]


Dear Ms. [Principal]

I represent a youth rights organization called Americans for Society Free from Age Restrictions (ASFAR), and we regret to inform you that we have received several reports of a number of random drug searches with canine units recently having been conducted at Newbury Park High School. If these searches were indeed conducted, we have reason to believe that they may be in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution. That public school students possess some degree of constitutional rights was established in the Supreme Court Case Tinker v. Des Moines, 393 U.S. 503, 506 (1969).

As to this specific Fourth Amendment issue, school officials are required to possess reasonable suspicion of illegal contraband or criminal activity in order to conduct searches of students, as established by the Supreme Court case New Jersey v. T.L.O, 105 S. Ct. 733, 469 U.S. 325 (1985). It has traditionally been interpreted that reasonable suspicion must be individualized; hence, mass, random searches would violate the Fourth Amendment. It was confirmed in the court case Horton v. Goose Creek, 690 F.2d 470 (CA5 1982), that a dog sniff constituted a search, with a parallel confirmation in the court case B.C. v. Plumas, 192 F.3d 1260 (9th Cir. 1999), that a random, mass search of students by dogs was unconstitutional.

Accordingly, it was the opinion of then California Attorney General Bill Lockyer ("Opinion of the California Attorney General 99-1103"), written in 2000 regarding this issue that “[s]chool administrators at a public high school may not [boldface mine] implement a policy requiring on an unannounced, random, and neutral basis that (1) pupils be directed to vacate their classrooms and leave behind their personal belongings, including backpacks, purses, jackets, and outer garments, for sniffing by canines trained in the detection of drugs, (2) the pupils would proceed to a location not within the immediate vicinity of the canines and would remain away from the canines at all times, and (3) if a canine’s behavior indicated the presence of drugs, the pupil’s personal belongings would be searches by the school administrators without the pupil’s consent.”

As such, it is necessary to inform you of our strong opposition to this policy of random mass drug searches of students’ belongings, and our doubts as to its constitutionality, considering the confirmed unconstitutionality of such searches of students themselves. Please ensure that this policy is dismantled, bearing in mind that students subject to violations of their constitutional rights may reasonably seek injunctive relief against your school or district, as well as compensatory and/or punitive damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

Sincerely,

______________________________

Julian E. Gutierrez

President

Americans for a Society Free from Age Restrictions

Now, our problem is that dog searches are conducted relatively infrequently and with no set pattern (which is the point; they're supposed to be random). So, we won't know if the policy's actually been dismantled unless there's an announcement. The other problem is that at Max's school, there was a relatively informal pattern of searches being conducted by order of a single teacher; dog searches are arranged for beforehand and are conducted with law enforcement. So I'll probably need to email the principal to ask her about the status of the issue. Updates to come soon.

9

(2 replies, posted in General Youth Rights Discussion)

Just to gauge this trend, how many posters here are abolitionists (or liberationists)? As in, who advocates the eventual abolition of age restrictions in an ideological sense? ASFAR's core philosophy is based around abolitionist ideas, of course.

10

(0 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

On our workplan is the revival of our newsletter, Youth Truth, which our glorious former president halted production of. Since one of the greatest problems with our earlier publication was the enormous toll placed on Susan in its upkeep, I'd like to hear from volunteers willing to contribute through authorship of content and proposal of ideas for the newsletter. I'm personally going to be involved if it gets restarted, so I'll be the first to step up. smile

11

(8 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

maxh wrote:

To be fair, it wouldn't be THAT odd for one of the other thirty-five thousand students to have spoken to Svag.

I know; that's why I didn't accuse him of anything. I believe him, if only because it would be kind of a new low for Svag to impersonate a Marine.

WesternUSA wrote:

Why do you change his name, which is sorta laughable to begin with, to "Svag"? what is that supposed to mean, are you calling him a "swagman" = a bindlestiff, or do I not get it?

His birth name is Sean. He used the name "Svend" when Sean was still his legal name, and then formally changed it for whatever reason. As for "svag," it's a term used by a fellow ASFAR member on his own forum, so his wordfilter was just copied for one reason or another. Wiktionary indicates that it's a Swedish term meaning:

1. weak; lacking in force or ability
   2. weak; dilute
   3. (grammar) weak; regular in inflection

So...yeah. smile

12

(8 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

I'm sure that you've spoken with him, given that you share his UC Berkeley IP address.

Thanks for your contribution.

13

(8 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

We've been discussing the prospect of acquisition of 501(c)(3) status, though it may be the case that we automatically qualify through our effectively nonexistent revenue as of late and consequent lack of taxable income...what small projects we've taken part in are funded through personal donations from ideological supporters...as in Susan. :\

Any more knowledge about this from anyone here?

Dear Allah and Xenu above, Mike Carona clearly wasn't the most idiotic public official in Orange County. I feel bad that the Hull-Richters live among this utter absurdity...though I'm not far off. :\

15

(10 replies, posted in Voting Age)

maxh wrote:

You realize the Universal Declaration of Human Rights didn't exist in 1874, right?

I'm a bit dubious of what application that will have to our Constitution, particularly given the prevalence of vulgar nationalism here.

16

(7 replies, posted in Education)

You could drop the entire population of the Deep South into Saudi Arabia, and the only way they'd realize that they were there is that cousin marriage would be slightly less prevalent.

17

(10 replies, posted in Voting Age)

You've noted that this argument failed as an assertion of womens' suffrage rights in the SCOTUS case Minor v. Happersett, haven't you?

18

(7 replies, posted in Education)

That's pretty standard of the Deep South, though I can't imagine that it'll stand up to constitutional scrutiny.

19

(5 replies, posted in Drinking Age)

(Sorry about the improperly formatted BB code; much of that was copied and pasted from NYRA's vB forum.)

20

(5 replies, posted in Drinking Age)

Those of us who debate the topic of the drinking age frequently run into the assertion of MADD and other similar groups that the establishment of MLDA 21 allegedly saved 20,000+ lives since 1984. This is an assertion that Alex KP was challenged with during his appearance on the Mike and Juliet Show (since canceled, ha ha! tongue).

However, as we've theorized, the drop in fatal crashes that occurred both in the U.S. and Canada might be better attributed to the numerous vehicular safety improvements have been made in cars since the 1980's, and the fact tgat auto accidents in general have decreased. Hence, it is not so implausible to suggest that alcohol-related auto accidents would decrease as part of this trend. In fact, I'd say it's more implausible to suggest the opposite, considering that, again, alcohol-related fatalities among drivers under 21 have fallen by a similar proportion in Canada, despite the fact that the drinking age remains 18 or 19 depending on the region. Incidentally, this is also NHTSA data.

http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/ … caused.htm

Fatal crash data. Data from 1982 to date from the seven provinces for which these data are available (Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, and Saskatchewan) were provided by the Transport Injury Research Foundation (TIRF). The data differ slightly from the United States FARS data in three ways. First, they record driver fatalities rather than driver involvements in fatal crashes. Second, they aggregate drivers age 16-19 rather than drivers under 21 as has been used for the United States. Finally, the TIRF file does not estimate alcohol presence for a driver without a BAC test. The proportion of fatally injured drivers with a positive BAC is calculated only for the drivers with a BAC test. Most drivers are tested: 76 percent of the age 16-19 driver fatalities in 1982 and 93 percent in 1997.
 
These differences may affect comparisons between the Canadian and United States data somewhat. For example, if BAC tests are available less frequently for sober drivers than for drinking drivers, then the proportion of fatally-injured drivers with a positive BAC calculated only from the tested drivers may overstate the proportion for all fatally-injured drivers. But these differences should not affect the trends over time or trend comparisons between the two countries.
 
Figure 31 shows the trend in Canadian fatally-injured drinking drivers aged 16-19. It looks rather similar to the United States trend of Figure 1, with a rapid decrease through about 1993 and no substantial change since then. (The Canadian trend fluctuates more from year to year than the United States trend since the absolute number of Canadian traffic fatalities is much smaller.) Figure 32 shows how very similar the two trends are by plotting both using a base of 1982 = 100 percent.
  [CENTER]
[FONT=Arial]Figure 31.
  Canadian Driver Fatalities, Age 16-19, with Positive BAC
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/research/FewerYoungDrivers/images/figure31.gif
[/FONT] 

[FONT=Arial]Figure 32.
  US and Canadian Trends, Percentage Change from 1982
US:  drivers under age 21 in fatal crashes with positive BAC (FARS)
Canada:  driver fatalities age 16-19 with positive BAC (TIRF)
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/research/FewerYoungDrivers/images/figure32.gif
[/FONT]  [/CENTER]


Figure 33 shows the trend in the proportion of fatally-injured Canadian drivers with a positive BAC. The trend is similar to the corresponding United States trend of Figure 3. The absolute percentages are higher in Canada: 67 percent in 1982 (compared to 43 percent in the United States) and 39 percent in 1997 (compared to 21 percent). Some of this difference may be a result of the different methods used to estimate alcohol involvement in the two data files. Some may in fact reflect higher drinking and driving rates in Canada. But the trends in the two countries again appear very similar. Figure 34 compares the trends directly.
      [CENTER]
[FONT=Arial]Figure 33.
  Percent of Canadian Driver Fatalities, Age 16-19, with Positive BAC
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/research/FewerYoungDrivers/images/figure33.gif
[/FONT] 

[FONT=Arial]Figure 34.
  US and Canadian Trends, Percentage Change from 1982
    US:  percentage of drivers under age 21 in fatal crashes with positive BAC (FARS)
Canada:  percentage of driver fatalities age 16-19 with positive BAC (TIRF)
http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/people/injury/research/FewerYoungDrivers/images/figure34.gif
[/FONT]  [/CENTER]


Figures 32 and 34 show the same thing: as measured by fatal crash data, youth drinking and driving decreases in the United States and Canada from 1982 to 1997 were virtually identical. Other data strengthen this conclusion. In both countries, the number of young drinking drivers in fatal crashes decreased more rapidly than the number of older drinking drivers. A roadside survey in British Columbia produced results similar to Roeper and Voas (1999): a much smaller proportion of drivers age 16-19 than older drivers had a positive BAC, or a BAC exceeding the legal limit of 0.08 (Mayhew and Simpson, 1999).
 
Survey data. Smart, Adlaf, and Walsh (1994) report on biennial surveys of about 4,000 Ontario high school students similar to the Monitoring the Future surveys in the United States. Table 17 summarizes self-reported drinking changes from 1979 to 1991 from the two surveys.
  Since the Ontario data come from a sample of students in grades 7-13, while the United States data come from high school seniors, it's no surprise that overall self-reported drinking levels are lower in Ontario. The reductions, though, are generally similar: a modest reduction in annual drinking, substantial reductions in binge drinking, and reductions close to 50 percent in both daily drinking (at low levels in both countries) and driving after drinking.

The NHTSA attributes this to alcohol education programs in Canada, (which would still question the necessity of a high drinking age), but has essentially no evidence to validate this claim. It could very well be true, of course, but I'm inclined to believe that vehicular safety improvements in industrialized countries resulted in these overall decreases.

Be sure to refer to this data in debates.

21

(0 replies, posted in Curfews)

Many curfews contain 1st Amendment exemptions typically worded along these lines:

"Defenses: It is a defense to prosecution under subsection that the minor was:
[...] exercising First Amendment rights protected
by the United States Constitution, such as the free exercise of religion, freedom of speech, and the right of assembly."

(If there isn't an exemption specifically included, it should be implied, as the entire nation is governed by the Constitution.) Hence, is it possible that one could simply claim protection under the constitutional exemption if, for instance, they were wearing a sticker or button that said "I'm Protesting the Curfew" and argued that this was a valid exercise of their 1st Amendment rights?

Also, police officers are currently permitted to detain people if they have reasonable suspicion that they've committed a crime. (Hence their ability to detain youthful looking people for curfew violation.) Since police officers inetivably must ask the age of a suspected curfew violator, couldn't they claim that this violated their 4th or 5th Amendment rights against unreasonable search and self-incrimination? Stop and identify statutes that require a suspect reveal their name (and possibly address) have been ruled to be constitutional in Hiibel v. Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada, but couldn't the requirement that a person reveal their age be ruled unconstitutional? I understand that some states and municipalities have exemptions that address this also.

22

(17 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

I just added new forums related to youth rights issues based on the old format...that forum was lost during Svag's presidency. wink

Feel free to offer suggestions.

23

(17 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

I agree; maybe David S-J would have DB copies.

24

(17 replies, posted in Organizational Discussion)

I'm not even sure we can retrieve the content from the old forum. The index was archived, but individual forum contents weren't, and I'm not sure if there were any preservation attempts on the part of Svag or Susan. I never posted on that forum myself.

This is the position paper that I've written on the topic of youths' right to bear arms, having just finished it today. It's in rather splintered form here, and it looks much better as a Word document, but I sometimes have trouble sending Word documents out to people since I have a newer version of Word and people with older versions often can't open what I send. sad

ASFAR Position Paper-Youths’ Right to Bear Arms

The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution ensures that it is our position as Americans for a Society Free from Age Restrictions that “the right to keep and bear arms should not be restricted on the basis of age.”  To the individual unfamiliar with the complexity and rational basis of advocacy of various youth rights, this may seem a lunatic proposal. In reality, we draw from historical precedent in our own society, research into other more “primitive” societies, and mere logical analysis to support the view that age restrictions on firearms (and other weapons, for that matter) are arbitrary and ultimately unnecessary, and that those alleged risks that do presently exist are to some extent bred by arbitrary and relative societal conditions that could be altered.

Regardless of what conclusions present analysis yields about the alleged dangers of youth access to firearms, it’s imperative to keep in mind that this analysis is conducted in conditions where youth have been specifically deprived of rights and corresponding responsibilities from early childhood, and there is thus little basis for concluding that there exists some inherent inability of youth to responsibly exercise a right to bear arms as a result. Indeed, as mentioned, research into the practices of more “primitive” societies reveals a substantially different picture of youth access to lethal weapons in daily life. One of the more insightful analyses into this phenomenon was that of Jean Liedloff (1978), who engaged in a fascinating study of the Yequana Indian tribe of South America. She noted this of the access of young children to what weapons the tribe possessed:

“The boys, from about the age of about 18 months, practiced archery with sharp arrows, some enthusiasts carrying their bow and arrows about most of their waking hours. Shooting was not confined to designated places, now were any ‘safety rules’ in effect. In my two and a half years there I saw only one arrow wound.”

No doubt many will be greatly skeptical (to put it very lightly) of the prospect of 18 month old children handling dangerous or lethal weapons. To be clear, that is not the precise nature of our proposal here. We expect that the majority of very young children will not be capable of independently using lethal weapons, but neither do we see a need to establish an age restriction to prevent them from doing so, and instead propose that an alternate means of competence measurement be used, as with our proposals in regards to other age restrictions. We do not imagine that we can establish an injury-free utopia in an environment that differs substantially in various social arrangements from that of the Yequana, and readily acknowledge that there will certainly be youth who irresponsibly handle weapons, and will inevitably injure or kill themselves or others. However, if appropriate measures of cautious training are established from an early time in a youth’s life, this problem will likely not be so pervasive as to warrant a general rule that prohibits youth access to or ownership of firearms or other weapons.

That said, we must acknowledge that presently existing concerns about youth and firearms are limited not only to fears of them accidentally injuring or killing themselves or others due to ineptness, but fears of them deliberately injuring or killing others due to emotional immaturity or volatility, regardless of their actual competence to handle firearms, or worse yet, fears exacerbated by their ability to competently handle firearms and thus increase the abundance and lethality of their attacks. This concern seems to us similarly misguided for several reasons. Firstly, the alleged risks of youth violence seem greatly exaggerated to begin with. While media reports perpetuate popular sentiments that youth crime levels are skyrocketing and constitute a savage bloodbath on the part of the young, a Department of Justice Report instead notes that “[t]he growth and decline in violent crime by juveniles between 1980 and 2003 are documented by both victim reports and arrests” (Snyder and Sickmund 2006). 

Secondly, it’s again imperative to note that whatever pattern of youth violent behavior does exist exists in an environment in which youth are subject to deliberate infantilization and authoritarian restrictions that likely play a role in the development of personality disorders or other deficiencies among many. It’s certainly not the case that all forms of youth violence are caused merely by this environment; even in far preferable settings, it seems likely that many youth (and adults) would continue to assault, injure, kill, and generally brutalize others for one reason or another, or perhaps for no conceivable reason at all. But alongside this persistent pattern exists the reality that sharp increases in youth violence or emergence of different varieties that did not previously exist seems to be interestingly correlated with the emergence of parallel restrictions that may reasonably be expected to inhibit certain developmental capacities.

For example, school violence is widely feared as a terrible epidemic of youth dysfunction generated through exposure to unsavory entertainment media, and worse, under-restricted youth access to firearms. The topic is intensely focused on by tabloidist media sources (which typically include the majority of the television and print media in the case of youth) as an example of the inherent recklessness and volatility of the young, with the 1999 Columbine High School shootings having provoked a national fervor about youth access to vice, and the entire American political spectrum almost unanimously adopting an anti-youth position of some sort, with liberals consequently favoring more draconian restrictions on Second Amendment rights and conservatives consequently favoring more draconian restrictions on First Amendment rights in the aftermath of that incident. And yet, the origins of school violence are far more complex and thus, the potential solutions consequently far more nuanced than any mere prohibitive restriction on youth freedoms. Gordon Crews (1997) offers interesting insights into the nature of those origins.

“Throughout the Middle Ages and as late as the seventeenth century, children participated in acts that, if committed in modern times, would result in not only their being defined as delinquent but also in requiring their parents and other adults to be charged with contributing to their delinquency. As soon as they could talk, most children learned and used obscene language and gestures; many engaged in sexual activity at an early age, willingly or otherwise; they drank freely in taverns, if not at home; few of them ever went to school, and when they did, they wore sidearms, participated in brawls, and fought duels (Newman 1980).*

As a socially accepted concept of childhood grew and expanded, the meanings attached to it significantly altered. The acts of children that in previous centuries were not seen as particularly deviant suddenly became unique problems. New norms and expectations developed as childhood became a special phase in the life cycle (Newman 1980). In this phase, school violence would find its origin.”

On the one hand, it’s apparent that during an era in which age boundaries were not clearly set and age restrictions themselves were minimal and/or unenforced, youth still “wore sidearms, participated in brawls, and fought duels.” This can obviously by no means be called a utopia in which youth violence was nonexistent thanks to the absence of those age boundaries. And yet, the comment that “the acts of children that in previous centuries were not seen as particularly deviant suddenly became unique problems” suggests that modern perceptions of youth misbehavior (including youth violence) are regarded as more problematic today than is reasonable. There are, for instance, many who hold the impossibly rigid position that a single person injured or killed because of youth access to weapons is grounds for denying them all such access, while few would presume to adopt such an extremist stance in the case of adults. The earlier comment that “there will certainly be youth who handle weapons irresponsibly, and will inevitably injure or kill themselves or others” may be regarded by some as a sufficient basis for adopting even more draconian policies as they relate to youth and weapons. However, we must acknowledge that though such problems will indeed occur, there’s no basis for believing that youth established as competent will somehow be more endangered than similarly competent adults to any significant extent.

But more than that, the last sentence of that excerpt is of particular interest because of the claim that the emergence of school violence was caused by or at least related to the fact that “childhood became a special phase in the life cycle.” This is a curious comment, and one that indicates that the establishment of more rigid age restrictions and more correspondingly paternalistic legislation did not have the effect of creating or maintaining peace and stability in the schoolhouse, the institution wherein the rigid hierarchies and age-based boundaries that govern the lives of the young manifest themselves more plainly than in all other contexts. Instead, it had the effect of perpetuating and intensifying previously existing violent conditions, as well as creating new forms of violence where they had not previously existed. While broad correlation of the emergence of school violence with the expansive process of the development of childhood as a firmly defined phase of the life cycle may not be (and indeed, probably is not) sufficient evidence of some causative link between the two, there is more specific evidence that the expansion of school violence is connected to the parallel establishment of compulsory schooling. As put by Elizabeth Midlarsky and Helen Marie Klain (2005):

“School violence appeared to be particularly widespread during periods wherein education became compulsory for previously unschooled students. Neither the students nor their teachers had any positive attachment to one another nor to the schools. Disciplinary problems were rampant and were addressed through corporal punishment. In contrast to the opinion that leniency leads to chaos, the harsh discipline found in earlier times led, quite literally, to chaos.”

We thus again see the pattern of coercive and authoritarian restrictions and disciplinary methods having the effect not of ending problems, but instead of producing a greater amount and more intense form of the very behavior that its application was intended to stymie. This is due to the fact that legitimately harmonious relations cannot be bred by coercion or force, and must instead be produced by voluntary association. Utilization of coercion or force will have the effect of producing contentious and hostile relations rather than peaceable ones, a reality acknowledged by the authors’ quotation of an astute observer's comment that “[t]here is as little disposition on the part of American children to obey the uncontrovertible will of their masters as on the part of their fathers to submit to the mandates of kings.”

As Midlarsky and Klain note, openly authoritarian methods were among those detailed in pamphlets circulated by those favoring authoritarian approaches to childrearing and education. They included the following advisories:

“(1) Never permit children to be alone, since they are not fit to govern themselves.
(2) Discipline, do not pamper children.
(3) Teach modesty.
(4)Train children to work; teach them diligence in some lawful trade.
(5) Above all teach respect and obedience to authority. Disobedience leads inevitably to dishonor, disease, and death.”

While many laud these methods even today, it’s apparent that their consequences were not those of preserving order and discipline, but instead of provoking hostile and openly violent reactions from those who regarded them as excessively restrictive. And it’s necessary to point out that such restrictions are not merely present in schools and nowhere else, but are facets of the daily lives of the majority of American children and adolescents.

The psychologist Robert Epstein (2007) has conducted an analysis of the degree to which adolescent youth are infantilized and subject to authoritarian restrictions compared to other regular adults and heavily restricted groups of adults (specifically prisoners and active-duty military personnel), the list of restrictions having included such items as compulsory schooling, confiscation of private property, corporal punishment, forced medication and medical treatment, allowance cutoffs, and grounding. As he notes:

“To find out how adults score on the infantilization scale, I administered it recently to twenty-five noninstitutionalized adults in the San Diego area, twenty-four United States Marines on active duty (at Camp Pendleton in Southern California), and thirty-two incarcerated felons (at a county prison in the San Diego area). One would think that military personnel-obligated to follow orders without question-and prisoners-stripped of most of their rights by the criminal justice system-would be far more encumbered than noninstitutionalized teens.

But that’s not what I found. Noninstitutionalized adults indeed scored near zero on the scale (2.3 out of a possible 42), but teens outscored prisoners and soldiers by a large margin (26.6 for teens vs. 14.6 for prisoners and 10.9 for soldiers). Even with these small samples, the differences in these scores were, from a statistical standpoint, highly significant. In other words, teens appear to be subject to about twice as many restrictions as are prisoners and soldiers, and to more than ten times as many restrictions as are everyday adults (italics his (I had to use boldface to distinguish here)).

Troubling though this is by itself, we also must recall that our focus is not only on individuals fully competent to possess full rights of self-determination (almost all adolescent youth would be included in that category), but those other, likely younger persons whose development of such abilities may be inhibited by excessive restrictions. As noted by John Darling (1992):

“[There is a] common-sense perception, endemic in our culture, of children as rather silly and immature, unfit to be given responsibility. Yet such a view is clearly in danger of being self-confirming; for where children are seen as silly and immature, they will not be given responsibility, and where they are not given responsibility, they are likely to remain silly and immature.”

This idea has and continues to form a cornerstone of our philosophy. With not only this age restriction on youth but every other, we attempt to emphasize the reality that we’re confronted with a vicious cycle of the medicine causing the illness, an ailment for which the same medicine of a greater amount and stronger intensity is prescribed. Hence, though we’ve acknowledged that media reports into youth violence are ridiculously exaggerated and designed to capture higher ratings at the costs of fairness and objectivity, we also have cause to believe that what abnormally elevated levels of youth armed violence and youth violence in general do exist are in fact intensified and exacerbated by the very authoritarian restrictions intended to curtail them. The legitimate solution is hinted at by Liedloff:

“The operative factor seems to be placement of responsibility. The machinery for looking after themselves, in most Western children, is in only partial use, a great deal of the burden having been assumed by adult caretakers. With its characteristic abhorrence of redundancy, the continuum withdraws as much self-guardianship as is being taken over by others. The result is diminished efficiency because no one can be as constantly or as thoroughly alert to anyone’s circumstances as he is to his own. It is another instance of trying to better nature; another example of mistrust of faculties not intellectually controlled, and usurpation of their functions by the intellect, which does not have the capacity to take all relevant information into consideration.

Besides causing civilized children to have more accidents, this propensity of ours to interfere with nature’s placement of responsibility where it works best also gives rise to innumerable other hazards.”

Our ultimate goal does not involve withdrawing all influence from youth and naively hoping that they’ll stumble down the right path, but in withdrawing authoritarian and coercive influence, and instead maximizing voluntary influence through reduced restrictions and more “libertarian” training (or self-training) methods. Lest this course of action seem too intangible to even comprehend, we must again emphasize that we favor the specific policy objective of the abolition of age restrictions on firearm and weapon ownership, as well as the imposition of additional restrictions upon youth that do not exist in the case of adults. Parallel to this must exist a more freely structured means of learning about firearms that would ensure general knowledge, but that would not collapse into a rigid and authoritarian means of compulsion that mirrored our current state of affairs. Keeping in mind Darling’s warning about the withdrawal of responsibility playing a significant role in keeping children “silly and immature” and Liedloff’s declaration that placement of responsibility is “the operative factor,” implementation of such policies can hopefully function as a facet of maximizing youth responsibility and autonomy, and in conjunction with the reduction and ultimate abolition of other age restrictions, nurturing capacities for self-governance in all areas of life.

*To clarify further, we do not wish to infer that we support the prospect of children and adolescents engaging in the sort of irresponsible or reckless activity described in the first section of that excerpt, but rather to indicate that they generally possess a toughness and an ability to cope not typically attributed to them by adults, and indeed, their peers. Our purpose is thus not to plague youth with burdensome and dangerous living conditions, but rather to create conditions in which they can use their toughness and durability when they encounter the difficulties of modern life, which may be substantially reduced in danger but substantially more complex also.

References

Crews, Gordon A.  The Evolution of School Disturbance in America: Colonial Times to Modern Day. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 1997

Darling, John. “A. S. Neill on Democratic Authority: A Lesson from Summerhill?” Oxford Review of Education, Vol. 18, No. 1 (1992), pp. 45-57

Epstein, Robert. The Case Against Adolescence: Rediscovering the Adult in Every Teen. New York: Quill Driver Books, 2007

Liedloff, Jean. The Continuum Concept: Allowing Human Nature to Work Successfully. Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley, 1985.

Midlarsky, Elizabeth and Klain, Helen Marie.  “A History of Violence in the Schools.” In Violence in Schools: Cross-National and Cross-Cultural Perspectives, edited by Florence Denmark. New York: Springer, 2005.

Snyder, Howard N., and Sickmund, Melissa. 2006. Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 2006 National Report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.